(Bloomberg) The threat of Russian aggression towards Ukraine’s Black Sea ports and ships will force the country to export its enormous quantities of grain by river, road and rail — all of which are fraught with challenges.Most Read from BloombergBillionaire Sternlicht Sees ‘Category 5 Hurricane’ Spurred by Fed Rate HikesApple Tests ‘Apple GPT,’ Develops Generative AI Tools to Catch OpenAISelloffs, Inequality, China Tension: Here Are the Next Big RisksNadella’s Microsoft Payouts Top $1 Billion
Ukraine Grain Now Relies on a River That s Drying in the Drought bnnbloomberg.ca - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from bnnbloomberg.ca Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
The latest flareup has shone the spotlight again on a region that’s still dogged by the legacy of the 1990s Balkan wars, and the lack of progress in mending ties between the ethnic-Albanian majority and the Serb minority.
Governments around the world are drawing lessons from Europe’s first high-intensity war since 1945, reassessing everything from ammunition stocks to weapons systems and supply lines.
Governments around the world are drawing lessons from Europe s first high-intensity war since 1945, reassessing everything from ammunition stocks to weapons systems and supply lines. Some nations are reexamining the very defense doctrines that define what kinds of wars to prepare for.