Breaking 09:20 Trump attacks UK energy policy over North Sea drilling ban 09:17 Freight train derailment in North Bergen shuts Route 3 09:01 Honda recalls over 440,000 minivans in the United States over airbag software issue 08:40 James Webb spots massive exoplanet challenging planet formation limits 08:20 Iran war accelerates global shift toward China-led energy future 08:15 American-Kuwaiti journalist detained in Kuwait amid regional tensions 17:20 Oil shock splits forecasts as inflation outlook grows uncertain 17:00 ASML to stop reporting bookings ahead of closely watched earnings 16:40 Alibaba’s Qwen3.6 Plus tops AI benchmark as rivals dispute results 16:20 Amazon to acquire Globalstar in $90 per share satellite deal 16:00 Blood test detects Alzheimer’s risk years before brain scans 15:40 Cocoa prices plunge as global supply rebounds and demand weakens 15:20 Macron urges renewed US Iran talks as Hormuz tensions rise 14:40 Us imposes naval blockade on iran ports as talks stall 13:50 Oil supply shock drives global shift as China boosts clean tech exports 12:00 Amazon nears Globalstar acquisition to challenge Starlink dominance 11:30 Trump’s defamation case against the Wall Street Journal rejected in Epstein dispute 11:00 Airlines face lasting fuel pressure as Virgin Atlantic warns on costs 10:00 Elon Musk appears on TikTok and Instagram ahead of SpaceX IPO 09:40 Hackers threaten Rockstar data leak after ransom refusal 09:40 UK regulators review Anthropic AI model kept out of public release

US considers sending long-range Tomahawk missiles

Monday 29 September 2025 - 11:00
By: Sahili Aya
US considers sending long-range Tomahawk missiles

The United States is weighing the possibility of supplying Tomahawk cruise missiles to Ukraine through European allies, according to senior officials in Washington. The move would represent a significant escalation, as the missiles have a range of up to 2,500 kilometers and carry a 450-kilogram warhead, potentially capable of striking Moscow.

US Vice President J.D. Vance stated on Sunday that Washington is "examining several requests" from European partners. Under the plan, the missiles would be sold to allied countries, who could then transfer them to Kyiv — a formula designed by President Donald Trump, who has insisted that American taxpayers should not directly bear the cost of the war.

The request for such weapons was first reported by Axios during the UN General Assembly. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky argued that advanced long-range missiles could "force Russia to accept peace," though he did not explicitly name the Tomahawk system. Security sources in both Ukraine and the US have since confirmed the request.

If approved, the delivery would mark one of the most powerful conventional weapons provided to Ukraine since the start of the conflict, underscoring both Washington’s strategic calculations and the pressure to support Kyiv without direct US financing.


  • Fajr
  • Sunrise
  • Dhuhr
  • Asr
  • Maghrib
  • Isha

Read more

This website, walaw.press, uses cookies to provide you with a good browsing experience and to continuously improve our services. By continuing to browse this site, you agree to the use of these cookies.