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Justin Verlander is a Detroit Tiger again, hoping to lead his original team to a third trip to the World Series.

Verlander, the 266-game winner who will celebrate his 43rd birthday this month, agreed to a one-year, $13 million contract with the Tigers, the club announced Feb. 10.

That presumably wraps up a Tigers off-season that finished with plenty of fireworks: The three-year, $115 million agreement with left-hander Framber Valdez, Tarik Skubal’s historic $32 million arbitration victory and now Verlander.

The presence of Skubal, set to become a free agent this season, Valdez, Jack Flaherty and 2025 All-Star Casey Mize ensures the Tigers won’t need to lean on Verlander for much more than 150 innings. He’s made no secret that he’d like to get to 300 wins, yet playing for an offense-poor club in San Francisco last season, posted a 4-11 record with a 3.85 ERA.

He finished particularly strongly, with a 1.96 ERA and 3.72 fielding independent pitching over his last seven starts.

The Tigers would take that. They reached the 2006 World Series in Verlander’s rookie year, and again in 2012, when they were swept by the San Francisco Giants. Last year, Detroit blew a 14-game lead and lost the division title to Cleveland, yet advanced to the American League Division Series as a wild card, losing a five-game thriller to Seattle.

Perhaps an old hand can help nudge them over the top.

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CORTINA, D’AMPEZZO, Italy — Well, that’s an upset. Breezy Johnson and Mikaela Shiffrin finished fourth in the Alpine team combined, missing the podium by 0.06 seconds.

Johnson gifted Shiffrin a slight lead, winning the downhill portion of the event by 0.06 seconds for a time of 1:36.59. Shiffrin led at the first timing interval of the slalom, but then looked progressively slower. She finished 15th out of 18 with a time of 45.38, a full second slower than Germany’s Emma Aicher, who won the slalom run. That’s a shocking gap for someone who has won the first seven World Cup slaloms and finished second in the other.

Johnson and Shiffrin finished with a combined time of 2:21.97. But, Americans did take home a medal. Jacqueline Wiles and Paula Moltzan upstaged their Olympic champion teammates for the bronze medal with a combined time of 2:21.91. Austria’s Ariane Raedler (1:36.65) and Katharina Huber (45.01) won gold with a time of 2:21.66. Germany’s Kira Weidle-Winkelmann (1:37.33) and Emma Aicher took silver in 2:21.71.

Johnson and Shiffrin, who have been good friends since they were kids, won the team combined at last year’s world championships, when the event made its debut. It was not certain if they’d be paired up again for the Olympics because U.S. Skiing uses previous results to create the teams, and Lindsey Vonn is higher in the downhill standings than Johnson.

But Vonn broke her left leg in a crash during the Olympic downhill and Johnson won gold in the race, ensuring she and Shiffrin would team up together again.

‘It’s been something that I’ve wanted ever since they announced this event,’ Johnson said of being paired with Shiffrin. ‘To be able to have a moment where you win a gold medal with one of your best friends is not something that a lot of people get to experience in their life and it’s really cool.’

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MILAN — Officially, Russia is banned from the Olympics because Russian president Vladimir Putin ordered the invasion of Ukraine in 2022. At the 2026 Winter Games in Milano Cortina, there will be no Russian flags, no Russian anthems and no Russian national colors incoporated in the competition. (The same holds true for Belarus, which has supported Russia in the war.)

But there will be athletes with Russian and Belarussian passports competing as ‘Individual Neutral Athletes,’ or AINs for short, if they meet specific conditions. That contingent will include 13 Russians and seven Belarussians, the International Olympic Committee (IOC) announced Jan. 29.

If any of the AIN athletes were to win gold, a wordless anthem commissioned by the IOC would play. And none of the them will be allowed to participate in the Opening Ceremony Feb. 6. The IOC used the same procedure for the 2024 Summer Olympics in Paris.

How do ‘neutral’ athletes qualify?

Russia and Belarus were banned from competing in the Olympics for violating the Olympic truce. The truce stems from a tradition of laying down arms to allow athletes to compete in peace. But now athletes have an avenue to compete even if their own countries have been banned.

At the request of the IOC, the international federations in each sport determine whether to allow Russian athletes to compete in their events. That resulted in opportunity from some and bans from others.

Next comes the screening process. A panel created by the IOC reviews the athletes’ activity and posts on social media. Any public support for the war against Ukraine or ties to the war is supposed to disqualify athletes.

Athletes from team sports are not eligible to compete.

Who blocked the Russians

The International Bobsleigh and Skeleton Federation (IBSF) did not offer Russians a chance to qualify as through the neutral athlete pathway.

‘I agree with and support the IBSF’s decision,’ Elana Meyers Taylor, a five-time Olympic medalist, told NBC. ‘Sport should be used to promote peace and fair play, and we need to stand firm against those that don’t support those values.’

Athletes from banned countries are barred from playing in team sports, so the World Curling Federation and the International Ice Hockey Federation had no decision to make regarding the Milano Cortina Games.

The Russians fought back through the Court of Arbitration for Sport to overturn bans from the International Ski and Snowboard Federation and International Luge Federation. The International Biathlon Union has fought to maintain its ban of the neutrals

The International Skating Union and International Ski Mountaineering Federation allowed Russians a chance to qualify as neutrals.

Impact of the bans

For Russia, the bans began with the 2020 Tokyo Olympics and the 2022 Beijing Olympics for state-sponsored doping. So-called ‘clean’ Russian athletes got to compete.

More than 200 Russians participated at the 2022 Winter Olympics and they won 32 medals, including five gold. Four days after those Olympics ended Jan. 20, Russia invaded Ukraine.

The subsequent ban was far stricter.

Under ‘Individual Neutral Athletes’ screening process, 15 Russians competed at the 2024 Summer Olympics in Paris and two won medals. Belarussian gymnast Ivan Litvinovich was the only neutral athlete to win a gold with his victory in the men’s trampoline.

Will Russian athletes compete in ice hockey and ice skating?

NHL players will compete in the Olympics for the first time since 2014 but Russian stars such as Alexander Ovechkin and Evgeni Malkin won’t be on the ice. Russian and Belarussian athletes are excluded from competing in team sports because their countries are banned. Russian figure skaters have won gold and silver in the women’s singles in the past two Olympics. But this year only one Russian woman figure skater, Adeliia Petrosian, has qualified as an Individual Neutral Athlete.

Which Russian athletes will compete at the 2026 Winter Olympics?

Alpine skiing (2): Yulia Pleshkova, Simon Efimov
Cross country skiing (2): Savelii Korostelev, Daria Nepryaeva 
Figure skating (2): Adeliia Petrosian, Petr Gumennik
Luge (2): Daria Olesik, Pavel Repilov.
Short track speedskating (2): Ivan Posashkov, Alena Krylova
Ski Mountaineering (1): Nikita Filippov
Speed Skating (2): Kseniia Korzhova, Anastasiia Semenova

How are Ukrainians responding?

In December, the International Luge Federation withdrew eligibility of three Russian athletes whose neutrality came under question, according to the Associated Press. But that didn’t end the controversy when days later other Russians competed in a World Cup event in Lake Placid, New York.

Ukrainian luger Anton Dukach told reporters he doesn’t think any Russian athletes should be allowed to compete.

 ‘They are not neutral,’ Dukach said. ‘They are supporting the war against Ukraine, against civilians, against family members, against me.’

Two Russian lugers will compete in the Games.

On Dec. 10, the International Ski and Snowboard Federation granted neutral status to two Russian cross country skiers. That same day, a group called Base of Ukrainian Sports (Ukrsportbase) used its X account to accuse one of the skiers of having ‘illegally visited annexed Crimea, where she participated in training camps.’

Ukrsportbase’s mission: ‘We inform about Ukrainian sports and the criminal support of Russian aggression by athletes outside of politics.

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Hockey fans have had Feb. 10 circled on their calendars since the 2026 Winter Olympics women’s hockey schedule was released.

The USA women’s national hockey team will face off against Canada in a preliminary matchup on Tuesday, marking the latest edition of the nations’ rivalry and a possible preview of the gold-medal match.

‘It’s going to be a dog fight,’ forward Hannah Bilka said after USA’s 5-0 shutout of Switzerland. ‘They’re a really strong team. It seems like all those players are super experienced, but at the same time we’re a really energetic group. Yeah, so it’s going to be a really good game.’

The Canadians will be without captain and five-time Olympian Marie-Philip Poulin, who exited Canada’s 5-1 win over Czechia in the first period due to a lower body injury suffered on an illegal hit.

Canada and USA have met in all but one gold medal match since the women’s event was added to the Olympic program at the 1998 Nagano Winter Games. The American and Canadian women each have seven Olympic medals, but Canada has the edge with five gold medals, compared to two for Team USA.

However, the tide has appeared to turn in the Americans’ favor. Team USA is riding a six-game win streak over the Canadians, including an overtime win in the 2025 World Championship and a sweep of Canada in the 2025 Rivalry Series, something neither team has done in the tournament’s six-year history.

American captain Hilary Knight is one goal away from setting the U.S. Olympic all-time scoring record and one point away from tying Jenny Potter for the most career Olympic points in U.S history.

USA TODAY Sports is on the ground in Milan and is providing live updates from the showdown between USA and Canada. Follow along:

End of first period: USA 2, Canada 0

The first period belonged to the Americans, who thoroughly dominated and kept the Canadians on defense a majority of the time. The U.S. women are outshooting the Canadians 11-4 and have already built a 2-0 lead heading into the second period. Team USA could be leading by more, but they were unable to convert on a power play opportunity after Canada’s Blayre Turnbill was called for an illegal hit. 

USA goal: Hannah Bilka scores

Team USA recorded a Sportscenter-worthy goal to extend its lead to 2-0 over the Canadians. Caroline Harvey connected with Abbey Murphy, who found Hannah Bilka in front of the net with an insane pass. Bilka found the back of the net at the 17:18 mark for her second goal of the 2026 Winter Olympics. USA 2, Canada 0

Midway through first period

USA leads 1-0 and leads 9-2 in shots.

USA power play

Blayre Turnbull is called for an illegal hit. Canada kills it off.

USA goal: Caroline Harvey scores

Caroline Harvey got the Americans on the board early in the first period at the 3:45 mark. Harvey buried a perfect pass from Haley Winn that to give USA a 1-0 advantage over Canada. It marked Harvey’s second goal of the 2026 Winter Olympics. She also has three assists. USA 1, Canada 0

Game underway

USA’s Aerin Frankel vs. Canada’s Ann-Renee Desbiens in net. It’s the second consecutive start for Desbiens. Frankel was rested on Monday.

What time is USA women’s hockey vs. Canada today?

Date: Tuesday, Feb. 10
Time: 2:10 p.m. ET
Location: Santagiulia Ice Hockey Arena (Milan)

Puck drop between the U.S. women’s hockey team and Switzerland is set for 2:10 p.m. ET on Tuesday, Feb. 10 from Santagiulia Ice Hockey Arena in Milan.

Where to watch USA women’s hockey vs Canada today

TV channel: USA Network
Streaming options: NBCOlympics.com | NBC Olympic App | Peacock

USA Network will broadcast Monday’s U.S. women’s hockey Group A matchup against Canada at the 2026 Winter Olympics. Streaming options for the game include NBCOlympics.com and the NBC Olympic App (with a TV login).

You can also stream the game on Peacock, NBC’s subscription streaming service.

2026 Milano Cortina Winter Olympics ice hockey scores, results today: Monday, Feb. 10

This section will be updated as games are finished

Group B (Women’s): Japan vs. Sweden | 6:10 a.m. | Peacock (digital only) and NBCOlympics.com | Sweden 4, Japan 0
Group B (Women’s): Germany vs. Italy | 10:40 a.m. | Peacock (digital only) and NBCOlympics.com | Germany 2, Italy 1
Group A (Women’s): United States vs. Canada | 2:10 p.m. | USA Network, Peacock and NBCOlympics.com
Group A (Women’s): Finland vs. Switzerland | 3:10 p.m. | USA Network (starting at 5 p.m.), Peacock (digital only) and NBCOlympics.com

Team USA lines vs. Canada

USA is swapping the left wing on the top two lines.

Team Canada lines vs. USA

What USA-Canada game means for the standings

The 3-0 USA has nine points and the 2-0 Canadians have six points heading into the game. If the USA wins in its final game in group play, it clinches the top seed in Group A. Canada would win the group if it wins in regulation. If the Canadians win in overtime, Canada’s rescheduled game against Finland on Feb. 12 would come into play.

Marie-Philip Poulin injury update

Captain Marie-Philip Poulin has been ruled out of Canada’s preliminary round matchup against the United States on Tuesday due to a lower body injury suffered in the team’s 5-1 win over Czechia on Monday, Team Canada confirmed to USA TODAY Sports hours ahead of puck drop at the Santagiulia Ice Hockey Arena in Milan at 2:10 p.m. ET.

Poulin, 34, is listed as day-to-day.

Poulin took a shoulder from Czechia’s Kristyna Kaltounkova in the first period and hit the boards hard. The five-time Olympian appeared to be visibly shaken by the hit and remained down on her hands and knees for several moments. Poulin skated to the bench, but avoided putting any pressure on her right leg while leaving the ice and grimaced in pain on the bench.

U.S. women’s hockey roster for 2026 Milano Cortina Winter Olympics

Here is the full U.S. women’s hockey roster for the Milano Cortina Olympics:

Goaltenders: Ava McNaughton; Aerin Frankel; Gwyneth Philips.
Defenders: Lee Stecklein; Cayla Barnes; Caroline Harvey; Megan Keller; Rory Guilday; Haley Winn; Laila Edwards.
Forwards: Kirsten Simms; Kelly Pannek; Grace Zumwinkle; Hayley Scamurra; Britta Curl-Salemme; Hilary Knight; Tessa Janecke; Hannah Bilka; Joy Dunne; Alex Carpenter; Kendall Coyne Schofield; Taylor Heise; Abbey Murphy.

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MILAN The Canadian women’s hockey team is gearing up for its toughest matchup of the 2026 Winter Olympics and the reigning champions will be without their trusted leader.

Captain Marie-Philip Poulin has been ruled out of Canada’s preliminary matchup against the United States on Tuesday due to a lower body injury suffered in the team’s 5-1 win over Czechia on Monday, Team Canada confirmed to USA TODAY Sports hours ahead of puck drop at the Santagiulia Ice Hockey Arena in Milan at 2:10 p.m. ET.

Poulin, 34, is listed as day-to-day.

Poulin took a shoulder from Czechia’s Kristyna Kaltounkova in the first period and hit the boards hard. The five-time Olympian appeared to be visibly shaken by the hit and remained down on her hands and knees for several moments. Poulin skated to the bench, but avoided putting any pressure on her right leg while leaving the ice and grimaced in pain on the bench.

Kaltounkova received a two-minute penalty for an illegal hit.

Poulin tried to return to the ice during the Canadian power play, but she appeared to be unstable on her feet and returned to the bench less than a minute later in visible pain. The broadcast showed her heading back to the dressing room and she didn’t return with the team following the intermission. She exited the victory with one assist.

Tuesday’s matchup against the USA was supposed to be Canada’s final preliminary matchup in Group A play, but the Canadians will now play Finland on Feb. 12 after the matchup got rescheduled due to a norovirus outbreak among the Finnish team. The USA TODAY app gets you to the heart of the news — fastDownload for award-winning coverage, crosswords, audio storytelling, the eNewspaper and more.

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LIVIGNO, Italy – After his third and final run, U.S. freestyle skier Alex Hall knew he’d be waiting on fate.

But he didn’t wait on the judges. He’d fallen in that last try. Hall knew his only score that counted was his second score, and he also knew that score wouldn’t be enough for him to repeat as Olympic gold medalist in men’s slopestyle.

But the silver? Maybe.

Norway’s Birk Ruud had posted a first-run score of 86.28 that was slightly better than Hall’s second run (85.75), which was slightly better than the 85.15 that New Zealand’s Luca Harrington picked up in the third run to jump into position for the bronze. It was close, delicately balanced.

After Hall, there were six skiers (not counting Ruud) left to go who could change any of that.

At the bottom of the hill, Harrington welcomed Hall into limbo with an embrace. Theirs was a position unique in freestyle skiing, emblematic of the odd coupling of their sport into a medal-driven atmosphere like an Olympics:

These two, basically, had to root for friends and colleagues to fail.

As natural as that sounds to any world-class competition, freestyle skiing isn’t like that. At least, it doesn’t wish to be.

‘It’s like a weird, mixed emotion,” Hall said. ‘You don’t want to celebrate when someone doesn’t land, but in some regard, you are happy that maybe you have a better chance at the podium now. But I think I can speak for everyone: We’re always rooting for each other.’

Hall personifies the spirit of his sport well. Because he’s a cool guy. Laid-back. He’s known as an elite freestyle skier who doesn’t take competition all that seriously. He just likes to ski.

After winning his second Olympic medal (and – spoiler – he did end up winning that second Olympic medal in this Feb. 10 competition in Livigno), Hall shrugged off the buildup by saying, ‘The four years in between (Olympics), it didn’t ever feel like there was a day where I was like, ‘Oh, I’ve really got to go train so I can get this medal. I’ve got to go train so I can beat this person.’ It’s just ‘I’m just going to go ski.’

‘I like skiing.’

In freestyle skiing, athletes like Hall root for ‘progression’ of their sport. They want to see and experience something cool, especially in a setting like the X Games or Olympics.

What they don’t do is root for failure (or God forbid, someone getting hurt attempting these crazy flips and twists on skis) just so they win.

‘That’s so rare in a sport,” said Hall, praising the mentality. ‘That’s what’s so cool about freeskiing. Like, yeah, I’m at the bottom (of the hill), and I’m hanging in there, hopefully going to get a medal. But we’re all still rooting for each other, and we’re so hyped when people do good runs.’

Yes.

This was still the Olympics, though.

Six competitors left to go.

Harrington and Hall kept it light. They chatted, joked, looked at phones and warmly greeted peers arriving at the base of the hill as, one after another, none hoisted the duo out of their places.

Two to go. This guy fell. Hall knew he’d at least have a medal.

One to go. That guy fell, too.

So Hall had a silver, combined with his gold from Beijing, and Harrington teared up to learn that he’d won the bronze in what was ‘probably the most emotional moment of my life,” he said.

‘He started crying. I was so happy for him,’ Hall said of Harrington. ‘Like I was starting to cry. I didn’t even care about my medal, really. I was so stoked for him. It was just a cool moment. Harrington teared up to know he’d be taking home a bronze medal.’

As for Hall? Soon as it ended, he got his congratulations, too, as well as a hug from U.S. teammate Grace Henderson, who was watching and cheering Hall alongside other American skiers.

‘I’ve got a gold. It’s nice to have a silver now, too,’ he said. ‘Like the collection is sweet, you know? … The scoring was so close. It could have gone anyone’s way today, and that’s both the curse and the beauty of freestyle skiing.

‘You get to do exactly what you want, but it is a judged sport.’

Such is life, right?

Reach Tennessean sports columnist Gentry Estes at gestes@tennessean.com and hang out with him on Bluesky @gentryestes.bsky.social

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New England Patriots left tackle Will Campbell broke his media silence with a significant revelation on Feb. 10.

After leaving the Patriots’ locker room after the Super Bowl without talking to members of the media, Campbell spoke to reporters a couple of days later. According to Mark Daniels of MassLive, the first-year offensive lineman said he tore a ligament in his knee during the season.

Campbell said he played at less than 100% during the Patriots’ Super Bowl run but also said it was not an excuse for his struggles down the stretch.

Campbell missed all of December after landing on injured reserve with a knee injury he sustained in a Week 12 game against the Cincinnati Bengals. Campbell had to be carted to the locker room after the injury, and he landed on injured reserve the following week. After missing the minimum four games on IR, Campbell returned for Week 18 and the playoffs.

The No. 4 overall pick in the 2025 NFL Draft allowed 14 pressures against the Seattle Seahawks in Super Bowl 60, according to Next Gen Stats. That was the most allowed by a single player in any game during the 2025 season, including the playoffs.

Next Gen Stats also attributed 29 total pressures allowed to Campbell over the course of the Patriots’ playoff run, which is the most of any player since 2016, the beginning of the Next Gen Stats era.

In the days after the Super Bowl, more than a handful of current and former offensive linemen took to social media to analyze Campbell’s struggles. Several pointed to a lack of solid base/foundation in his stance, which could be chalked up to the knee injury he was still recovering from.

Patriots head coach Mike Vrabel said on Feb. 10 that he and the team have no plans to move Campbell to the interior after his rough outing.

‘Will’s 22 years old. He’s our left tackle,’ Vrabel said. ‘He’ll get better and get stronger. (There were) moments where he played well, moments where he blocked a guy. There’s plays he’d like to have back; we’re not moving him to guard or center or tight end or anywhere else.’

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An association representing governors from across the country will not be holding a formal meeting with President Donald Trump after the White House reportedly snubbed Democrats, only inviting Republican governors to attend.

‘The bipartisan White House governors meeting is an important tradition, and we are disappointed in the administration’s decision to make it a partisan occasion this year. To disinvite individual governors to the White House sessions undermines an important opportunity for federal-state collaboration,’ Bandon Tatum, CEO of the National Governors Association, said in a statement provided to Fox News Digital. 

‘At this moment in our nation’s history, it is critical that institutions continue to stand for unity, dignity, and constructive engagement,’ he added.

‘NGA will remain focused on serving all governors as they deliver solutions and model leadership for the American people. Traditionally, the White House has played a role in fostering these moments during NGA’s annual meeting. This year, they will not,’ Tatum added.

Oklahoma Gov. Kevin Stitt, a Republican who is the chairman of the NGA, said in a Monday letter to fellow governors that the association was ‘no longer serving as the facilitator’ for an event scheduled for Feb 20, according to The Associated Press, which obtained Stitt’s letter. Stitt said the NGA was meant to represent all governors — those of the 50 states as well as the governors of American Samoa, Guam, the Northern Mariana Islands, Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands.

In response to the reported snub, Democratic governors from across the country said they would not be attending White House events. The statement was issued by Democratic Governors Association (DGA) Chair Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear, DGA Vice Chair Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer, Wisconsin Gov. Tony Evers, Massachusetts Gov. Maura Healey, New York Gov. Kathy Hochul, Kansas Gov. Laura Kelly, Connecticut Gov. Ned Lamont, New Mexico Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham, Rhode Island Gov. Dan McKee, Maryland Gov. Wes Moore, Delaware Gov. Matt Meyer, Maine Gov. Janet Mills, California Gov. Gavin Newsom, Colorado Gov. Jared Polis, Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker, Pennsylvanie Gov. Josh Shapiro, New Jersey Gov. Mikie Sherrill and Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz.

‘Democratic governors have a long record of working across the aisle to deliver results, and we remain committed to this effort. But it’s disappointing this administration doesn’t seem to share the same goal. At every turn, President Trump is creating chaos and division, and it is the American people who are hurting as a result,’ the statement read. ‘If the reports are true that not all governors are invited to these events, which have historically been productive and bipartisan opportunities for collaboration, we will not be attending the White House dinner this year. Democratic governors remain united and will never stop fighting to protect and make life better for people in our states.’

The White House did not immediately respond to Fox News Digital’s request for comment.

The NGA was scheduled to meet in Washington from Feb. 19-21, according to the AP.

During last year’s meeting, Trump and Maine’s then-Gov. Janet Mills traded barbs, showing signs of tensions between the White House and Democrats, the AP noted. At the time, Trump singled out Mills over his administration’s push to bar transgender athletes from girls’ and women’s sports. Mills retorted, ‘We’ll see you in court.’ Trump then predicted that opposing the order would end Mills’ political career. She is now runing for U.S. Senate.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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Russia’s military has been badly battered by its failure to conquer Ukraine, but Moscow is now rebuilding its war machine for the long haul, according to a new assessment from Estonia’s foreign intelligence service, even as the force it is fielding relies more on mass and attrition than military quality. 

The report says Russia has suffered catastrophic losses since its full-scale invasion of Ukraine, with an estimated 1 million soldiers killed or severely wounded, draining its ranks and forcing the Kremlin to rely on mass mobilization rather than professional military strength.

Despite those losses, Estonian intelligence says the Kremlin is compensating by shifting toward mass and attrition, dramatically expanding weapons production and reorganizing its military around volume rather than quality, even as fighting in Ukraine continues.

Taken together, the assessment portrays a Russian military that has failed to defeat Ukraine, suffered historic manpower losses, and rebuilt around quantity over quality — leaving its true combat effectiveness increasingly in question.

Russia’s military-industrial complex has increased artillery ammunition production more than 17 times that of 2021, a surge the report says points to preparation for future conflicts rather than short-term battle needs, including the rebuilding of strategic stockpiles depleted during the war. Russia produced roughly 7 million artillery rounds in 2025 alone, according to the assessment.

The assessment cautions that Russia remains a diminished force compared with pre-war expectations — reliant on poorly trained recruits, convicts, foreign nationals and aging equipment — but warns that a degraded military rebuilt around attrition still poses a long-term challenge for Ukraine, NATO and European security.

Estonia, a frontline NATO state bordering Russia, has built one of Europe’s most detailed intelligence pictures of Russian military activity through its proximity, regional expertise and intelligence sharing with allies. Its annual assessments are closely read within NATO for its granular focus on Russia’s capabilities, limitations and long-term planning.

Nearly four years into the war, Estonia’s intelligence service says Russia has failed to achieve its core objective of subjugating Ukraine, which it describes as ‘more determinedly independent than ever before.’

President Donald Trump recently mocked Moscow’s performance, calling Russia a ‘paper tiger’ in a Truth Social post and questioning how a superpower could spend ‘four years fighting a war that should have taken a week.’

President Vladimir Putin has dismissed Western assessments of Russian military exhaustion as ‘wishful thinking.’ Speaking in Minsk, Belarus, Putin claimed Russia is actually preparing to ‘reduce defense spending’ starting in 2026, framing the surge in production as a completed objective rather than a sign of desperation. 

‘We keep moving, keep advancing, and feel confident,’ Putin retorted to ‘paper tiger’ claims. ‘If we are a paper tiger, then what is NATO?’

But, the report concludes, ‘Russia remains dangerous despite its incompetence.’

The intelligence service also stresses that Russia is not expected to launch a military attack against Estonia or any other NATO member in the coming year, a judgment it says is likely to remain unchanged if current levels of deterrence are maintained.

According to the report, Russia is ‘merely feigning interest in peace talks,’ using negotiations to buy time, ease pressure on its economy and reset conditions for a longer confrontation rather than to end the war on terms acceptable to Ukraine.

To offset its manpower losses, Russian authorities have built a nationwide recruitment system that increasingly relies on coercion and desperation rather than voluntary service, with regional governments under pressure to meet monthly enlistment quotas at any cost, the report says. 

Recruitment efforts now focus heavily on ‘socially vulnerable groups,’ including the unemployed, chronic debtors, detainees, individuals under judicial supervision, and those suffering from alcohol or drug addiction, according to the assessment. Labor migrants and foreign nationals have also been swept up into the system as traditional recruitment pools dry up.

The report ties Russia’s military strategy to mounting economic and social strain at home, saying the prolonged war has hollowed out civilian sectors of the economy while pushing the state to prioritize defense spending at the expense of living standards. Nearly all nonmilitary sectors are either in recession or stagnation, the assessment says, increasing the risk of social instability in the years ahead.

The intelligence service also documents the use of foreign students — particularly from African countries — who are lured with promises of employment or residency extensions, then redirected into military training and sent to the front. Hundreds of foreign nationals from countries including Zambia, Tanzania, Cameroon and Nigeria have been deployed to Russian combat units, often with little training and limited understanding of the terms they agreed to.

These foreign recruits are frequently assigned to units used to absorb heavy losses, shielding better-trained formations and underscoring what the report describes as Russia’s growing reliance on expendable manpower rather than professional soldiers.

The assessment describes widespread lawlessness inside the armed forces, citing abuse of power, corruption, theft, alcoholism and drug use as persistent problems that have eroded discipline and combat effectiveness. Frontline units, the report says, are increasingly composed of individuals who ‘under normal circumstances should not be entrusted with weapons.’

Russia also has relied heavily on convicts to replenish its ranks. Between 150,000 prisoners and 200,000 prisoners were recruited from Russian detention facilities between 2022 and 2025, many of them convicted of serious violent crimes and granted pardons in exchange for frontline service, according to the report.

Despite the erosion of professionalism across its ranks, Estonian intelligence cautions against interpreting Russia’s military shortcomings as a reduction in threat. Instead, it says Moscow has adapted by embracing a model built around attrition, firepower and expendability, rather than maneuver warfare or elite units.

For NATO planners, the concern is that a Russia rebuilt around mass firepower and expendable manpower lowers the threshold for prolonged, high-casualty conflicts, even if Moscow struggles with complex operations.

The report emphasizes that Russia has exhausted much of the military stockpiles it inherited from the Soviet Union and exposed systemic problems within its armed forces, yet continues to invest heavily in rebuilding ammunition reserves and unmanned systems that could be used beyond Ukraine.

Not all analysts agree that ‘mass’ is Russia’s only path. A recent report from the Royal United Services Institute (RUSI) suggests 2026 will instead be the ‘year of hybrid escalation.’ With conventional options ‘foreclosed by economic constraints,’ researchers William Dixon and Maksym Beznosiuk argue the Kremlin is pivoting to a ‘thousand cuts’ strategy of cheaper, deniable sabotage across Europe.

‘We must prepare not for a resurgent Russia but for a desperate one,’ the report warns. 

This shift replaces traditional combat with an agile network of ‘disposable’ saboteurs— recruited via encrypted apps for arson and infrastructure attacks — designed to fracture Western support for Ukraine from within.

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A top Iranian security official was spotted in Oman just days after Tehran and the U.S. held indirect nuclear talks in the Mideast sultanate.

Ali Larijani, a former Iranian parliament speaker who now serves as the secretary to the country’s Supreme National Security Council, was likely in the country to discuss what comes next after the initial round of talks, The Associated Press reported. The outlet noted that Larijani’s team shared photos of him with Omani Foreign Minister Badr al-Busaidi, the chief intermediary in the U.S.-Iran talks.

Iranian media reportedly said Larijani would deliver an important message, but later state television said al-Busaidi ‘handed over a letter’ to the Iranian official without elaborating on the letter’s origins, according to the AP.

While in Oman, Larijani also met with Omani Sultan Haitham bin Tariq for nearly three hours, according to the AP, which cited the Iranian state-run IRNA news agency. Additionally, the outlet said that Larijani was set to travel to Qatar, which houses the U.S. military installation that bombed Iran’s nuclear sites in 2025.

Larijani accused Israel of playing a ‘destructive role’ in the talks just before Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s expected visit to Washington, D.C.

‘Netanyahu is now on his way to the United States. Americans must think wisely and not allow him, through posturing, to imply before his flight that ‘I want to go and teach Americans the framework of the nuclear negotiations.’ They must remain alert to the destructive role of the Zionists,’ Larijani wrote on X.

Israel and Iran engaged in a 12-day war in the summer of 2025 which culminated in the U.S. bombing Tehran’s nuclear facilities. Iran, which has been grappling with mass anti-government protests, has blamed Israel and the U.S. for various grievances.

Officials from both the U.S. and Iran have said that the first round of talks went well and suggested that they would continue.

‘The Muscat meeting, which was not a long one, it was a half-day meeting. For us, it was a way to measure the seriousness of the other side, and to find out how we could continue the process. Therefore, we mostly addressed the generalities,’ Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesman Esmail Baghaei said at a news conference Tuesday in Tehran, according to the AP.

‘Our principles are clear. Our demand is to secure the interests of the Iranian nation based on international norms and the Non-Proliferation Treaty and peaceful use of nuclear energy,’ Baghaei said, according to the AP. ‘So as for the details, we should wait for the next steps and see how this diplomatic process will continue.’

Iranian foreign minister Abbas Araghchi said that indirect nuclear talks with the U.S. in Oman were ‘a good start’ and that there was a ‘consensus’ that the negotiations would continue.

‘After a long period without dialogue, our viewpoints were conveyed, and our concerns were expressed. Our interests, the rights of the Iranian people, and all matters that needed to be stated were presented in a very positive atmosphere, and the other side’s views were also heard,’ Araghchi said.

‘It was a good start, but its continuation depends on consultations in our respective capitals and deciding on how to proceed,’ he added.

President Donald Trump also expressed optimism about the indirect talks, telling reporters aboard Air Force One on Friday that ‘Iran looks like it wants to make a deal very badly. We’ll have to see what that deal is.’

When he was pressed on how long the U.S. would be willing to wait to make a deal with Iran, the president indicated some flexibility, saying he believes the two nations can reach an agreement.

‘It can be reached. Well, we have to get in position. We have plenty of time. If you remember Venezuela, we waited around for a while, and we’re in no rush. We have very good [talks] with Iran,’ Trump said.

‘They know the consequences if they don’t make a deal. The consequences are very steep. So, we’ll see what happens. But they had a very good meeting with a very high representative of Iran,’ the president added.

American and Iranian representatives held separate meetings with Omani officials on Friday amid flaring tensions between Washington and Tehran. Oman’s Foreign Ministry said the meetings were ‘focused on preparing the appropriate conditions for resuming diplomatic and technical negotiations.’

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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