Tomahawk, Donald Trump and Ukraine
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"In Chernihiv and Sumy oblasts, restoration work is underway across all affected areas following Russian strikes on our energy infrastructure. In Zaporizhzhia Oblast, (Russian forces) even used FPV drones to target transformers,
The Tomahawk is the workhorse of the United States’ missile arsenal. It’s been deployed in strikes in Syria and Libya and was used extensively against former dictator Saddam Hussein’s regime in Iraq,
Tokyo and nearby Seoul both have expressed concern over North Korea's development of long-range, nuclear-capable ballistic missiles in defiance of multiple U.N. prohibitions. North Korea conducts frequent missile tests that send projectiles over Japan or into nearby waters.
The Tomahawk cruise missile has been in the U.S. military’s inventory since the 1980s. While slow by missile standards, the cruise missile flies around 100 feet (about 30 meters) off the ground, making it harder to detect by defense systems.
Kremlin tyrant Vladimir Putin “is in a weak position” and fearful that the US will finally send Ukraine some Tomahawk missiles that can cut deep into Russia, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky
At the White House, President Volodymyr Zelensky of Ukraine made the case for why a weapons sale would help end the war. Mr. Trump at first seemed receptive, then expressed reservations.
Axios on MSN
Launcher questions haunt Ukraine's Tomahawk talk
Days of Tomahawks-for-Ukraine discourse at the highest levels publicly elided one topic, arguably the most critical: how they'd actually fire them. Why it matters: A bullet is nothing without a gun. Likewise,
Zelensky met with Trump in Washington last week for what the Ukrainian president described as a “positive” meeting, despite not obtaining a US pledge to provide the long-range missiles capable of striking targets up to roughly 1,