The website Global Firepower annually publishes a report and ranking of 140 national armed forces. The final Global Firepower ranking uses over 60 individual factors to determine the PowerIndex (PwrIndx) score of a nation,
Over the past year, countries around the world have risen and fallen in terms of military power. One of the most pivotal factors in this calculus is the overall size of a country’s military. While some countries might have technologically advanced forces,
The gate that goes nowhere is somehow a monument to the Napoleonic genius of the man who enabled the emancipation of the Jews.
Europe has long been known for its military history, partially due to it being ground zero for the largest conflict the world has ever known. Ever since then, the military landscape has evolved into a patchwork of NATO nations and some of the strongest military forces in the world.
Global Firepower shared its latest index of 145 countries, considering over 60 individual factors and ranking Hungary's military.
Tengrinews.kz - More and more labor migrants from Uzbekistan began to choose Kazakhstan in search of earnings, according to Gazeta.uz.
Central and Eastern Europe is home to some of the continent’s fastest-growing economies. The Caucasus and Central Asia, with which many banks in the region have strong ties, feature a mix of mature and rapidly evolving trade finance markets.
Serbia’s populist Prime Minister Milos Vucevic has resigned following weeks of massive anti-corruption protests over the deadly collapse of a concrete canopy in November
Despite EU offers of financing, Kosovo says a ‘peace highway’ to Serbia is no longer a top priority. Its fate speaks volumes about the state of relations between the two countries.
Mass protests across Serbia have exposed the cracks in the more than decade-long rule of President Aleksandar Vucic.
Serbia is boiling with anti-government protests. The protests were initiated by Serbian university students, who are organized in an anarcho-syndicalist manner, where decisions are made at student plenums,
From 2012 to the end of 2024, Serbia lost 543.567 inhabitants due to negative natural population growth. According to data from the Republic Statistical Office, during this period, there were 830.177 live births,