Russia and Ukraine hold talks after drone strike hits Russian bombersNew Foto - Russia and Ukraine hold talks after drone strike hits Russian bombers

Ukraine's shockdrone attack on Russian military air bases, including some deep inside Russian territory, which President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said was secretly planned and coordinated from inside Russia over the past 18 months, seemed on Monday to have left the Kremlin speechless. Russia's state-run media cited the country's defense ministry as saying Monday that forces had struck Ukrainian drone production, launch and storage sites, and claiming to have shot down hundreds of Ukrainian-launched drones over the past 24 hours, but there was no direct public response from Russian authorities to the Ukrainian strike. While Ukraine haslaunched drones at Russia, including the capital Moscow, for months, as well as staging othercovert operations on Russian soil, the attack on Sunday was notable for its scope and scale. Ukraine claimed it had damaged or destroyed 41 Russian bomber aircraft at bases across the vast country. Ukrainian officials said the attack did not endanger any Russian civilians. It was also notable for its timing, a day before the two sides sat down face-to-face in Turkey for a second round of direct talks. Ukraine gains support as U.N. panel accuses Russia of war crimes The head of Ukraine's SBU intelligence agency said in a statement on Tuesday that Russia "thought that it could bomb Ukraine and endlessly kill Ukrainians with impunity. But that is not the case. We will respond to Russian terror and destroy the enemy everywhere — at sea, in the air, and on land." SBU chief Vasyl Maliuk claimed in the statement that Ukraine had hit aircraft at four Russian bases, inflicting more than $7 billion worth of damage on Russia's bomber fleet. The Ministry of Defense in Moscow said Monday that Russia's air defenses had intercepted a total of 316 Ukrainian drones in 24 hours, which encompasses the time of Ukraine's attack. The Russian ministry said 205 of those drones were hit outside the "special operation zone," a term the Kremlin uses to refer to land it has seized since launching its full-scaleinvasion of Ukrainein February 2022. Ukrainian authorities said that, before dawn on Monday, Russia launched two ballistic missiles and a series of drones at the northeast city of Kharkiv, just miles from the Russian border, wounding at least six people, including a child. Separately, Russia's military claimed more than 1,400 Ukrainian troops were killed in northern Ukraine over the preceding day. Russia and Ukraine hold 2nd round of talks in Turkey Despite the sharp escalation in the war making any breakthrough appear even less likely than it had before, Russian and Ukrainian delegations did sit down opposite each other Monday in Istanbul for the second round of negotiations in a bid for peace. Ukraine's representatives, led by Defense Minister Rustem Umerov, were expected to present a plan demanding a "full and unconditional ceasefire in the sky, on land and at sea as a necessary background and prerequisite for peace negotiations," the Reuters news agency said, citing a text of the Ukrainian proposal it had viewed. The proposed truce would last a minimum of 30 days, in line with calls made by the Trump administration previously. Ukraine was also expected to demand the unconditional return of all Ukrainian children and civilian hostages taken during the war, and that territorial gains made by Russia since February 2014, when Russia first invaded and illegally annexed the Crimean Peninsula, not be recognized by the international community. In return, Ukraine is open to the lifting of "some sanctions" imposed against Russia by the U.S. and its allies, "but in stages and only gradually, with a mechanism for resuming sanctions if necessary." The Ukrainians also want Russian sovereign assets frozen by Western nations to be used for reconstruction, or to remain frozen until reparations are paid. Moscow did not, going into the second round of talks on Monday, reveal any new conditions or terms for a hypothetical ceasefire. President Vladimir Putin's government has insisted for months that the only way to end the war is to address what it vaguely calls the conflict's "root causes." Russia insists the war, which Putin calls only a "special military operation," was caused by NATO's ambitions for further eastward expansion, and by Moscow's desire to defend Russian-speaking Ukrainians in the eastern part of the neighboring nation. Putin and his senior aides routinely dismiss pro-Europe, pro-NATO Zelenskyy as an illegitimate leader of Ukraine. The Russian president has refused to accept his Ukrainian counterpart's challenge to hold direct personal talks, face-to-face. Turkish Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan said Monday as the talks got underway that discussions over such a Putin-Zelenskyy meeting "will be considered." But there was no confirmation from either Ukraine or Russia that such a high-level dialogue was imminent. Instead, reports from Turkey suggested the second round of talks had concluded in just over an hour. Zelenskyy, who did not attend the negotiations, told reporters during a visit Monday to Lithuania, however, that a new prisoner swap between the warring sides was being organized. He did not say how far the planning for a swap had gone, but a significantexchange late last monthof about 1,000 captured civilians and prisoners of war was the only tangible result of the first round of talks between Russia and Ukraine. President Trump has voiced frustration with both Zelenskyy and Putin for failing to agree to a truce. During last year's election campaign, Mr. Trump vowed repeatedly to broker an end of the war within hours of taking office. The U.S. president recently issued rare sharp criticism of Putin,calling him "absolutely crazy"for continuing to hammer Ukrainian cities with missiles as the U.S. and its partners push for a peace agreement. Mr. Trump wondered in a social media post during the last prisoner swap whether it, "could lead to something big?" Russian officials were quoted by the country's state-run media as saying the two sides agreed on Monday to hold a third round of talks, but no date was set. The officials acknowledged that future prisoner swaps had been a key point of discussion, but Ukrainian officials said Russia had rejected the call for a broader 30-day ceasefire. There was no immediate reaction from the White House to the second round of negotiations in Turkey on Monday, but the Trump administration did make it clear that Ukraine had given no advance warning of the Sunday drone attack ahead of those talks. The wonderfully weird world of artist Luigi Serafini Fans turn out for estate sale at home of Tom Petty Watch: Italy's Mount Etna volcano erupts, spewing hot ash and lava

Russia and Ukraine hold talks after drone strike hits Russian bombers

Russia and Ukraine hold talks after drone strike hits Russian bombers Ukraine's shockdrone attack on Russian military air bases, includi...
National Weather Service adding around 125 new hires after laying off hundredsNew Foto - National Weather Service adding around 125 new hires after laying off hundreds

Afterlosing more than 560 employeesto layoffs and early retirement incentives earlier this year, the National Weather Service has received permission to hire about 125 new meteorologists and specialists for its forecast offices around the country, sources tell CNN, as anactive hurricane season looms. The temporary lifting of the federal hiring freeze for the agency could reduce the number of weather forecast offices that must cut back on their hours or no longer staff the overnight shift during periods of non-threatening weather. About half a dozen forecast centers are in that predicament right now, including facilities in Goodland, Kansas, and Sacramento, California. The news comes amid concerns that neither the NWS nor the Federal Emergency Management Agency are nearly as prepared for hurricane season as they have been in past years, and after a spate of deadly severe weather in the Midwest and South prompted speculation the staffing issues might have negatively affected tornado warning lead times. The new hires would not make up for all the personnel lost in the Trump administration's cutbacks to the NWS and its parent organization, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. More offices are slated to transition to less-than-24/7 operations if additional staffing is not secured. The additional staff might allow the agency to boost the number of data-gathering weather balloon launches after a pronounced downturn due to the staffing shortage. Weather balloons are typically launched all over the world twice a day to provide crucial data for computer models used to help predict the weather, and fewer launches have sparked concern forecasts are being made less accurate. The weather service is also still moving forward with a stopgap measure of transferring meteorologists from well-staffed offices to ones that are down multiple meteorologists, radar technicians and other specialists. NOAA announced last month it was seeking 155 transfers to fill these "critical" positions. An NWS employee told CNN it is not yet clear if they will succeed in filling all the transfer positions, but they have received many applications. The new hiring will take place after the transfers are processed, the employee, who requested anonymity for fear of retribution, said. The new hires may include technicians, hydrologists and physical scientists in addition to meteorologists, according to Tom Di Liberto, a former NOAA employee with knowledge of the situation. The NWS is still seeking broader hiring authority under a public safety exemption, given the agency's mission to protect lives and property. Such a step, which has support among some lawmakers on Capitol Hill, could allow for a more significant recovery in staffing levels. Hurricane season officially began on Sunday. For more CNN news and newsletters create an account atCNN.com

National Weather Service adding around 125 new hires after laying off hundreds

National Weather Service adding around 125 new hires after laying off hundreds Afterlosing more than 560 employeesto layoffs and early retir...
US Supreme Court won't review assault weapon, high-capacity magazine bansNew Foto - US Supreme Court won't review assault weapon, high-capacity magazine bans

By Andrew Chung (Reuters) -The U.S. Supreme Court declined on Monday to hear a challenge to the legality of state restrictions on assault-style rifles and large-capacity ammunition magazines, passing up for now cases that offered the justices a chance to further expand gun rights. The justices turned away two appeals after lower courts upheld a ban in Maryland on powerful semiautomatic rifles such as AR-15s and one in Rhode Island restricting the possession of ammunition-feeding devices holding more than 10 rounds. The lower courts rejected arguments that the measures violate the U.S. Constitution's Second Amendment right to "keep and bear arms." Conservative Justices Clarence Thomas, Samuel Alito and Neil Gorsuch dissented from the court's decision to reject the appeals. A fourth conservative justice, Brett Kavanaugh, expressed sympathy in a statement accompanying the Maryland case toward the argument made by the challengers that AR-15s are in common use by "law-abiding citizens and therefore are protected by the Second Amendment." Kavanaugh said the court "presumably will address the AR–15 issue soon." In a nation bitterly divided over how to address firearms violence including numerous mass shootings, the Supreme Court, which has a 6-3 conservative majority, often has taken an expansive view of the Second Amendment. In the two cases turned away on Monday, the challengers contended that states and courts are flouting precedents that make clear that the Second Amendment protects weapons that are in "common use." Maryland in 2013 enacted its ban on military-style "assault weapons" such as the AR-15 and AK-47 after a shooter used such a firearm in the 2012 mass killing of 20 children and six adults at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Connecticut. The law carries a penalty of up to three years in prison. A Maryland resident who was seeking to purchase one of the banned guns, as well as three gun rights organizations including the Firearms Policy Coalition, sued. The Richmond, Virginia-based 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals rejected the challenge, saying assault weapons "are military-style weapons designed for sustained combat operations that are ill-suited and disproportionate to the need for self-defense." As such, the "excessively dangerous" firearms are not protected by the Second Amendment, it decided. The 4th Circuit said it refused "to wield the Constitution to declare that military-style armaments which have become primary instruments of mass killing and terrorist attacks in the United States are beyond the reach of our nation's democratic processes." The plaintiffs told the Supreme Court that the term "assault weapon" is a political term that is designed to exploit public confusion over machine guns and semiautomatic firearms. The banned weapons, they said, are "identical to any other semiautomatic firearm - arms that are exceedingly common and fully protected by the Second Amendment." Thomas wrote in a dissent on Monday that the court should not have waited to take up the case. "I doubt we would sit idly by if lower courts were to so subvert our precedents involving any other constitutional right," Thomas wrote. Gun safety groups welcomed the court's decision to let the laws in Maryland and Rhode Island stand. "Courts have repeatedly upheld laws limiting access to highly dangerous weapons," said David Pucino, legal director at Giffords Law Center. "They are proven measures that protect families and reduce gun violence." Rhode Island's law, passed in 2022 as a response to mass shootings, bars most "large-capacity feeding" devices such as a magazine or drum that can hold more than 10 rounds of ammunition. The state calls it a "mild restriction on a particularly dangerous weapons accessory," and that in mass shooting situations "any pause in fire, such as the pause to switch magazines, allows for precious seconds in which to escape or take defensive action." Four gun owners and a registered firearms dealer sued. The Boston-based 1st U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals rejected the claims. The Supreme Court broadened gun rights in landmark rulings in 2008 and 2010 as well as in a 2022 case that made it harder to defend gun restrictions under the Second Amendment, requiring them to be "consistent with the nation's historical tradition of firearm regulation." The court has been buffeted in recent years by challenges to gun restrictions. On March 26, it upheld a federal regulation targeting largely untraceable "ghost guns." The court last year struck down a federal ban on "bump stock" devices that enable semiautomatic weapons to fire rapidly like machine guns. (Reporting by Andrew Chung in New York; Editing by Will Dunham)

US Supreme Court won't review assault weapon, high-capacity magazine bans

US Supreme Court won't review assault weapon, high-capacity magazine bans By Andrew Chung (Reuters) -The U.S. Supreme Court declined on ...
Grammy Winner 'Takes a Tumble' Mid-Performance in New Concert VideoNew Foto - Grammy Winner 'Takes a Tumble' Mid-Performance in New Concert Video

Grammy Winner 'Takes a Tumble' Mid-Performance in New Concert Videooriginally appeared onParade. Ed Sheeranfans are applauding his professionalism after tumbling to the ground during a recent performance. In a new video uploaded to social media by a fan, set to the viral "My Shayla" TikTok sound, the award-winning artist appeared to be heading to his mic stand in the center of a circular stage during one of his Mathematics tour's stops in Madrid over the weekend. His guitar was strapped around his shoulder but left to hang at his side while he held his hands high above his head and clapped along with the crowd. Unfortunately, a platform was rising in the middle of the stage, and the singer missed the lip of the step and went crashing down to the ground. Impressively, though, he bounced back up immediately, returning to his feet and securing his guitar in his hands to dive into the next song in his set. "Happens more than you think," Sheeran himself admitted in the comments, while his social media team quipped in another reply, "This audio is almost word-for-word what we said 🤣🩷." "oh my god, my Sheeran," someone else joked. "I love how quick he got up though," another praised, adding that "Ed is the best to do it." "Carried on like a true pro ❤️," other fans applauded. "We will catch you Ed ❤️," someone else sweetly promised, while another ribbed on him a bit with the comment, "Cant say Im surprised 😂." "Teddy takes a tumble 😙," another joked. Another focused on the important questions, demanding to know, "is the guitar ok tho???" From the video, it appears that that is the case, though there's no official word on any damage—or lack thereof. "poor guitar☹️," another mourned. Related: Taylor Swift 'Threw the Best Shade' at Kanye West With an Old Gift to Ed Sheeran Grammy Winner 'Takes a Tumble' Mid-Performance in New Concert Videofirst appeared on Parade on Jun 2, 2025 This story was originally reported byParadeon Jun 2, 2025, where it first appeared.

Grammy Winner 'Takes a Tumble' Mid-Performance in New Concert Video

Grammy Winner 'Takes a Tumble' Mid-Performance in New Concert Video Grammy Winner 'Takes a Tumble' Mid-Performance in New Co...
Ilona Maher Flaunts 'Legs for Days' and a Little Sideboob in Cheeky PhotosNew Foto - Ilona Maher Flaunts 'Legs for Days' and a Little Sideboob in Cheeky Photos

Ilona Maher Flaunts 'Legs for Days' and a Little Sideboob in Cheeky Photosoriginally appeared onParade. Ilona Maherwas "so hot" in one of her final looks from her time in Miami withSports Illustrated Swim, and fans are crashing out over the "iconic" new photographs that show a little bit of sideboob and a whole lot of leg. The Olympian-turned-swim-model was pictured on the runway during Miami Swim Week inher latestSI Swimmodel shots, uploaded to Instagramby the rugby star on Sunday, June 1. In the first, she looked back over her shoulder to smile brightly at the camera, offering a risquéglimpse of sideboob from underneath the edge of the swimwear. In a second photo, she rocked an itty bitty red string bikini with a black and white pattern underneath a pair of leather belts with metallic accents, posing with her fingers in the shape of a smoking gun that she brought up to her mouth to blow off. "Let's do that again @si_swimsuit #miamiswimweek," she requested in the caption, and we're certain her fans are fully on board with the idea. Fans were absolutely floored over the "Perfect!!!!" images, with one exclaiming, "You slayyyyyed baby 👑👑👑," and another emphatically declaring, "YOU LOOK SO GOOD." "Don't ask us the color of anything," one comment ordered, while another questioned, "hey so just so we're clear R U KIDDING ME." "The back flex was iconic," someone else complimented, as another declared, "you're IT MY GIRL." "Legs for days!!! Here you dropped this 👑," another complimented. "What a lady! Get itttt 🔥❤️," the praised continued. "So hot wowowow,"Katie Austingushed. "IM SAT🧎🏼‍♀️,"Livvy Dunnedeclared. "What in the ancient goddess here to call women back to their whole selves is this?!?! ❤️‍🔥🫠," someone else wrote, which was rather apropros considering one of Maher's other looks from Miami thatleft fans "gasping for air," was reminiscent of a Greek goddess. Related: Ilona Maher Signals Start of 'Hot Girl Summer' in 'Gorgeous' Tomato Print Mini Dress Ilona Maher Flaunts 'Legs for Days' and a Little Sideboob in Cheeky Photosfirst appeared on Parade on Jun 2, 2025 This story was originally reported byParadeon Jun 2, 2025, where it first appeared.

Ilona Maher Flaunts 'Legs for Days' and a Little Sideboob in Cheeky Photos

Ilona Maher Flaunts 'Legs for Days' and a Little Sideboob in Cheeky Photos Ilona Maher Flaunts 'Legs for Days' and a Little ...

 

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