This website collects cookies to deliver better user experience, you agree to the Privacy Policy.
Accept
Sign In
The Texas Reporter
  • Home
  • Trending
  • Texas
  • World
  • Politics
  • Opinion
  • Business
    • Business
    • Economy
    • Real Estate
  • Crypto & NFTs
  • Tech
  • Lifestyle
    • Lifestyle
    • Food
    • Travel
    • Fashion
    • Books
    • Arts
  • Health
  • Sports
  • Entertainment
Reading: Arms Race in Ukraine | Tim Judah
Share
The Texas ReporterThe Texas Reporter
Font ResizerAa
Search
  • Home
  • Trending
  • Texas
  • World
  • Politics
  • Opinion
  • Business
    • Business
    • Economy
    • Real Estate
  • Crypto & NFTs
  • Tech
  • Lifestyle
    • Lifestyle
    • Food
    • Travel
    • Fashion
    • Books
    • Arts
  • Health
  • Sports
  • Entertainment
Have an existing account? Sign In
Follow US
© The Texas Reporter. All Rights Reserved.
The Texas Reporter > Blog > Books > Arms Race in Ukraine | Tim Judah
Books

Arms Race in Ukraine | Tim Judah

Editorial Board
Editorial Board Published May 22, 2025
Share
Arms Race in Ukraine | Tim Judah
SHARE

As I used to be ready outdoors Kyiv’s primary army hospital on the finish of April, I noticed a person in a wheelchair come out of the primary gate. He wove gingerly previous seven “hedgehogs”—the massive metallic antitank traps that have been deployed throughout the capital’s streets at the start of Russia’s full-scale invasion in February 2022. Now they’ve virtually all been cleared away. Troopers have been strolling out of the gate carrying baggage of medication and enormous flat folders with their X-rays, whereas guests have been checking in.

Amid this morning rush the person wheeled himself to the tip of the quick, blocked street resulting in the road. There he lit a cigarette and watched the world go by. He was carrying a T-shirt within the yellow and pale blue Ukrainian colours. One among his legs had been amputated beneath the knee, and the opposite one was gone completely. Each stumps have been nonetheless sure with dressings. Perhaps he suffered from phantom limb ache. In a number of weeks maybe he will likely be out of the wheelchair, studying to stroll once more on prosthetic legs.

The person was virtually definitely one of many 380,000 Ukrainians who President Volodymyr Zelensky mentioned in February had been wounded on this battle. Just a few days earlier I had been in a bunker speaking to a Ukrainian commander. We have been watching reside drone feeds from the entrance line when he confirmed me a grainy one zooming in on a wounded Russian solider. “See, he has lost his leg,” he mentioned. “So, are you going to finish him off?” I requested naively. “No, no!” he replied. A badly wounded soldier was worse for Russia than a lifeless one, he defined. First he would endanger the lives of any males who tried to rescue him, who could be diverted from holding their positions, and eventually he would wish long-term care, rehabilitation, and a pension, similar to the person on the Kyiv hospital. The subsequent day I met a senior Ukrainian safety official who instructed me one thing that he would by no means say in public. We have been speaking in regards to the battle and the way it had consolidated Ukrainian id for a lot of for whom being Russian or Ukrainian had not mattered a lot earlier than. He mentioned that the Russians noticed themselves because the heirs of the Imperial and Soviet legacies, however that Ukrainians have been too. Then he instructed me, “I will tell you something very strange: we are twins!”

Just like the legless man smoking his cigarette, all Ukrainians are questioning what the longer term holds for them. They’ve misplaced a fifth of their nation to the Russians, and for now there isn’t any prospect of getting any of it again. They really feel the phantom ache of the lack of houses and households and reminiscences, to not point out companies and sources, within the Russian-occupied territories within the east and south. However whereas troopers and civilians proceed to die day by day, the nation, similar to that man, continues to be very a lot alive.

This spring, as President Donald Trump tried to safe a cease-fire in a battle that he as soon as boasted could be really easy to finish that he may do it in twenty-four hours, Ukrainians have been left bewildered by his temper swings and the parroting of Kremlin propaganda about Ukraine by him and his staff. One minute US officers have been pouring bile on Zelensky and accusing him of being chargeable for President Vladimir Putin’s invasion, and the subsequent Trump was grumbling about Putin’s “very bad timing” in killing 13 civilians with a missile strike on Kyiv the evening of April 24. He didn’t enterprise how the timing for these strikes could possibly be improved.

When Zelensky requested to purchase extra Patriot missiles, that are essential for defending Ukraine’s cities from long-range Russian drones and missiles, Trump mocked him. The idea in Kyiv had been that whether or not a cease-fire occurred or not, the US would now not present weapons and essential intelligence to Ukraine. Then, on April 30, Kyiv and Washington signed a deal giving the US preferential remedy in future exploitation of Ukrainian minerals—one thing which will by no means occur. Trump’s argument is that an “American presence at the excavation site will help protect the country.” However because the deal comes with no safety ensures, no main firm will make investments earlier than Ukraine is definitely safe.

A Ukrainian enterprise supply described the deal as a “performative political act,” as a result of it gave Trump one thing to current as successful to MAGA true believers. If it stored Trump completely satisfied, that was fantastic with him. Firstly of Could, Trump started promoting weapons to Ukraine once more, and it was reported that an additional Patriot missile battery was being transferred. All this was an enormous shock. Russian commentators started to surprise if Trump, who they’d been crowing was their man within the White Home, was not going to ship for them in any case.

I like going to see the safety official as a result of, within the decade that I’ve identified him, he has at all times had a clear-eyed perspective on what the longer term holds. Now he instructed me, “It is easier to predict what Ukraine will look like in ten years rather than in ten days!” Certainly, for days earlier than this text went to press, everybody was questioning whether or not Putin would flip up for peace talks with Zelensky in Istanbul on Could 15. He didn’t.

In Pobuzke, a 3 hours’ drive south of Kyiv, you possibly can go to the Strategic Missile Forces Museum. On a grey and drizzly April day it may be exhausting to muster a lot enthusiasm for rusting previous Soviet warplanes with lifeless wasps crushed towards their cockpit home windows or parking heaps filled with shattered Russian armor from this battle. However these issues usually are not actually why folks come right here. Within the Soviet interval about one third of the USSR’s intercontinental ballistic missiles have been based mostly in Ukraine. As you enter the bunker, Yurii, the sixty-seven-year-old information, who served in Soviet forces close by, flicks a change to activate the air-conditioning. You then squeeze right into a tiny elevator with him and eventually clamber down a ladder into the tiny management room from which the ICBMs in silos on this a part of Ukraine would have been launched. There are bunks, a rest room, a samovar, a teapot, teacups, and an electrical sizzling plate for one saucepan. Six males may have survived Armageddon on this advanced for forty-five days.

All the pieces is completely preserved, and Yurii reels off numbers about missiles and payloads. You sit behind a desk with switches and buttons: Yurii explains that after orders to launch got here by from Moscow, two folks in that room would each have needed to press a button, which my colleague and I have been invited to do. On a display screen we watched missiles being fired, circling the planet and destroying cities.

In 1994 the US helped Ukraine do away with its nuclear missiles. All of its eighteen command facilities, besides this one, which was preserved as a museum, have been destroyed. When the Soviet Union collapsed, the missiles in Ukraine couldn’t have been launched by its authorities, as a result of the command-and-control techniques remained in Moscow. Whereas these may have been recreated in Ukraine, it will have taken years and some huge cash. The ICBMs have been despatched to Russia, and in return the US, Russia, and Britain signed the Budapest Memorandum, which dedicated them to the territorial integrity of Ukraine. They agreed that they might search UN Safety Council motion to assist Ukraine ought to it “become a victim of an act of aggression.” Maybe on the time the concept Russia may try to beat and annex elements of its neighbor was thought-about so outlandish that the absurdity of going to the Safety Council, the place Russia has a veto, by no means appeared vital. It could be as futile as asking it to behave if the US tried to make use of power to annex Canada or Greenland.

Again aboveground I requested Yurii if he thought it had been a mistake for Ukraine to surrender its missiles. Would Russia have dared to grab Crimea in 2014 after which tried to destroy Ukraine as a state if it nonetheless had them? Sure, he mentioned, the truth that Ukraine had voluntarily given up the missiles “makes me a little depressed.” Extra to the purpose, because the demilitarization of Ukraine is now one among Putin’s primary calls for, together with its giving up all these areas of the 4 provinces within the east and south that Russia claims to have annexed however has not but occupied, the Budapest Memorandum and the nuclear disarmament of the Nineties forged a darkish shadow.

The teachings that almost all Ukrainians draw from this are that allies can’t be relied upon, that Russia, beneath Putin and doubtless beneath his successors too, won’t ever quit the need to subjugate their nation, and that their nation must be armed to the tooth to defend itself. However the right way to accomplish this? With out negotiating, Trump has already acceded to Putin’s demand that Ukraine by no means be part of NATO, and he says that the Ukrainians haven’t any playing cards to play. He’s unsuitable about that. They could not have as robust a hand because the Russians proper now, however they nonetheless have loads of playing cards, and so they plan on having much more.

When the Soviet Union collapsed, Ukraine’s formidable army industries went right into a steep decline. Now Ukrainian missiles are hanging Russian army and oil business targets deep contained in the nation. For the reason that starting of the Russian invasion in 2014 and particularly since 2022, Ukraine’s army business has risen like a phoenix, and if there have been extra money, it may produce much more weapons. In 2024, in line with Herman Smetanin, the Ukrainian minister of strategic industries, the nation’s army manufacturing was $35 billion—thirty-five occasions greater than in 2022.

Within the autumn of 2022 Ukrainian forces routed the Russians and chased them out of a lot of the territory they’d occupied after the preliminary February assault. That November the Russians have been pressured to retreat from the town of Kherson, which lies on the banks of the mighty Dnieper River. I wrote in regards to the jubilation there a number of days later.* Crowds thronged its central Freedom Sq., and Zelensky got here to ship a triumphant tackle. It’s all very completely different in the present day. The Russians pulled again throughout the river, and whereas they proceed to shell the town, it’s above all a drone battle right here.

Artem, a Ukrainian soldier, drove me by the town’s virtually abandoned streets. Near the river we skirted a district that has develop into too harmful for anybody to reside in. Once we handed Freedom Sq. the one individual there was a lone pensioner with a procuring bag. Beneath the timber of an empty boulevard a lady was placing out meals for birds or cats. In a close-by village, in a faculty basement that has now been transformed into school rooms, Oleksandr Prokudin, the pinnacle of the area’s army administration, described the battle for Kherson as “Star Wars.” Each side are testing their newest drones. Artem mentioned that an “electronic curtain” had been erected alongside this a part of the river for the jamming and spoofing of drones. When a drone is jammed it may be downed or is solely misplaced. Spoofing signifies that the enemy can change the drone’s residence base after which divert it “home” to its destruction. As we talked, he confirmed me a reside feed on his telephone from a hacked Russian drone that was someplace close by. In concept, he mentioned, this meant you possibly can watch it fly towards you and kill you.

In February 2022 the Ukrainians had nearly no army drones. Final 12 months they made 2.2 million, and this 12 months they hope to make 4.5 million. The vast majority of these are “first-person view” (FPV) drones, which signifies that the operator wears goggles or controls them from a display screen. Ukrainian forces, says Yevhen Hlibovytsky, the pinnacle of the Frontier Institute suppose tank, have been confronted with recruitment issues, and this has pressured the nation “to turn to technology to compensate for that deficit.” The pace with which drones have emerged because the main weapon of the battle is a direct results of manpower shortages and having a homegrown industrial capability to make them.

However jamming, accidents, and the dearth of expert pilots imply that two thirds or extra of Ukrainian and doubtless Russian FPV and different drones don’t hit their goal. The arms race is transferring so quick, although, that issues are already altering in response to those issues. Some 70 % of battlefield casualties are actually reported to be attributable to drones. The brand new era of drones is managed by a fiber-optic filament as much as fifteen kilometers lengthy—akin to a fishing line—in order that they haven’t any radio sign to jam. In addition they give the pilot a higher-quality image. However even when fiber-optic drones dominate the battlefield by the tip of summer season, they’re solely a short-term answer.



Tim Judah

A drone pilot, Kharkiv, Ukraine, April 2025

So now the race is on for lasers to blind enemy drones and AI to make Ukrainian ones autonomous. Once I first met Yaroslav Azhnyuk greater than two years in the past, he instructed me about Petcube, a profitable firm he had arrange in 2012. It allowed you to look at onscreen as your canine jumped to seize a deal with you had simply launched remotely from a dispenser. I assume it’s a logical development from flying canine biscuits to flying drones. The Fourth Regulation, Azhnyuk’s new firm, is engaged on drone autonomy, together with, he mentioned,

autonomous bombing missions, autonomous goal recognition, and autonomous navigation in direction of a kill zone.

That’s an space away from your personal troops and civilians and lethal in your enemy. What he foresees is that “in the end there will be operators operating maybe thousands of drones each.” Autonomous drones will remodel the battlefield simply as FPV drones have.

Ukraine has been testing laser weapons, and kill zones are already very a lot with us. Line of Drones is a program that goals to make it virtually not possible for the Russians to maneuver in a belt of as much as fifteen kilometers alongside the entrance line. Ivan, a soldier I met whose unit has been preventing in Toretsk, gave me a graphic instance of what it meant after they have been within the kill zone and couldn’t transfer. Two weeks earlier Ukrainian troops right here had needed to give floor, however 5 troopers had discovered themselves marooned beneath the rubble of a home two and a half kilometers past the brand new entrance line and seventy meters from a brand new Russian place. The lads have been disoriented, injured, and asking to be rescued. Ukrainian drones have been dropping them meals and batteries and bombing the Russian place, however in any other case there was no means anybody may cross that stretch of land to rescue them.

Whereas it’s simple to drop small quantities of provisions to a place like this, logistics have gotten ever tougher. Kamikaze drones can land and wait by a street, and when a surveillance drone spots a goal akin to a automobile, they will take off and ambush it. Illia was a soldier, however now he’s an engineer working with SkyLab, an organization that has pivoted from making giant bomb-dropping drones to smaller land drones. These are little unmanned floor autos (UGVs) that may transport cargo throughout a kill zone. Earlier within the battle you possibly can load up a automotive or armored automobile with ammunition and drive it to the entrance, however drones have made that too harmful. One of many causes that in March the Russians have been in a position to drive Ukrainian forces out of the a part of Russia’s Kursk area that they’d occupied was that fiber-optic drones had given them the sting.

Illia and Yevhenii Rvachov, the pinnacle of SkyLab, took me to some tough floor outdoors Kyiv, unloaded one among their meter-long UGVs, and despatched it trundling off into the space. This one had a mount into which they’d slotted 4 land mines, which it proceeded to put. When it got here again, they took off the mount. Now it was prepared to move 200 kilograms of ammunition or anything. They mentioned they thought there is perhaps two thousand land drones at present on the entrance, however by the tip of the 12 months there could possibly be tens of 1000’s. I remarked that these may develop into the equal of the donkeys of wars previous, and so they confirmed me a video of Russian troops utilizing donkeys in the present day. A drone doesn’t must be fed, they remarked, simply charged for 2 hours. They have been now engaged on AI for the subsequent era of UGVs, which is able to include six lidar sensors to assist them navigate round obstacles. The great thing about these land drones is that, being so small, they’re exhausting to identify from the air, and so they transfer so quick that they’re exhausting to hit. If they’re destroyed, nevertheless, no lives are misplaced, and so they solely value the equal of an affordable automotive.

Olena, who runs army evacuation items for the wounded, instructed me that they have been testing bigger UGVs to extract injured males from the entrance. Absolutely they might be seen and liable to be focused? I requested. True, she replied, but when somebody would shortly bleed to demise with out being quickly extracted, it was a raffle price taking.

In Kyiv there’s a sense of utmost pleasure about all of those “miltech” developments. I met SkyLab’s folks at a convention organized by Brave1, a authorities platform that connects start-ups and builders with the army. Just a few days later an occasion organized by an NGO known as Put money into Bravery was filled with buyers, inventors, and entrepreneurs. In speeches they emphasised that Ukraine, with greater than 1,000,000 males beneath arms, now had the biggest, most skilled military in Europe (aside from Russia, in fact), and folks clapped when it was identified that Western international locations wanted Ukraine greater than Ukraine wanted them. On the face of it that is considerably weird, because the nation doesn’t produce sufficient gear itself to outlive, however the level is that this: the battle has proven that a lot costly {hardware} in Western armories is turning into out of date. What issues now, aside from tech, is expertise. For the reason that full-scale invasion started, Western armies have skilled tens of 1000’s of Ukrainian troops overseas. However, say Ukrainians, a lot of their instructors’ expertise has been, as Olena put it pointedly, “fighting men in mountains with Kalashnikovs.” Classes realized in Afghanistan or Iraq don’t assist a lot right here. That message could also be beginning to get by. In late April it was reported that British troops have been now being skilled in drone warfare by Ukrainian troopers.

Let’s not get too carried away by tech, although. It’s vital, it has modified warfare, and it has helped the Ukrainians maintain again the Russians. However the problem is just not whether or not it is best to forgo a $4 million Patriot missile and purchase 10,000 FPV drones as an alternative, however about discovering the right combination of weaponry. It is usually vital to not lose sight of the human value of the battle. I used to be on the army hospital in Kyiv as a result of I used to be ready for Anastasiia Savova, a twenty-six-year-old who runs At all times Devoted, a corporation campaigning for naval POWs held by the Russians. Her father had been captured in Could 2022 when Azovstal, the sprawling metal plant that served because the final Ukrainian redoubt in Mariupol, was taken. For 2 years she had had no information of him and didn’t know if he was even alive. On March 19 he had been included in a prisoner alternate, and she or he was bringing me to satisfy him.

Earlier than we met, she despatched me photos of him on WhatsApp. Oleksandr Savov, forty-six, had come residence gaunt and sick with tuberculosis. Once I first noticed him in individual I didn’t acknowledge him, as a result of within the six weeks since he had been launched he had placed on a lot weight. As a prisoner, he mentioned, he had thought of solely two issues: meals and sleep. The POWs had been continually overwhelmed, and consequently he was at all times in ache. Bodily he was recovering, however psychologically it was going to take lots longer. The morning we met he mentioned he had dreamed that he was sitting within the jail barracks carrying a army uniform and medals and a colleague mentioned to him, “Take them off! If the Russians see you, they will beat all of us!” Rape had been frequent. The Russians assaulted the prisoners with soldering irons and caulking weapons, the kind used to squeeze silicone across the fringe of a bathe to seal it. “They will be our enemies forever,” he mentioned. Was he in favor of a cease-fire? I requested. If Russia didn’t hand again the territory it had occupied, he mentioned, “I think we should fight. There is no way back.”

Many, and possibly most, don’t agree with him. Russification of the occupied areas and the exodus of pro-Ukrainian residents from them signifies that they’re “a different country already,” mentioned a businessman who didn’t need to be recognized. It was “best to be honest” and “forget about them.” In that case the remainder of Ukraine would have a greater probability of recovering and integrating with the remainder of Europe. “Otherwise I don’t even see a chance.” He too, nevertheless, rejected authorized recognition of Russian annexation, which might be politically unacceptable to Ukraine. A leaked draft of a US cease-fire plan prompt that the US would acknowledge Putin’s annexation of Crimea, which might be considered a stab within the again by most Europeans and a sort of 1938 Sudetenland 2.0. In 1940 the Soviet Union annexed the Baltic states, and the US by no means formally acknowledged this.

Troopers instructed me that the dearth of manpower meant they weren’t rotated for relaxation and recreation as they need to be, and whereas Putin nonetheless needed to crush Ukraine, a truce would save lives. Olena, who runs the evacuation items, thinks that too many individuals have already tuned out of the battle and {that a} cease-fire would result in demobilization and make the nation complacent and susceptible to assault once more. A cease-fire would imply a return to the sort of frozen battle that existed between 2015 and 2022, and the Russians would solely look ahead to the day after they have been able to attempt to take extra of the nation.

Issues might change, however no Ukrainians I met believed Putin even needed a cease-fire. “It is not going to happen,” mentioned Hlibovytsky, the pinnacle of the Frontier Institute.

They suppose they’ve the higher hand. They may attempt some tactical strikes like a three-day cease-fire or no matter simply to get some sanctions lifted, however in any other case there isn’t any change of coronary heart. There isn’t any disillusionment in Russian imperial pondering.

In accordance with the political analyst Andrii Buzarov, if there’s a cease-fire and regular political life returns to Ukraine, the battle won’t be over. Disinformation and propaganda could be used to divide society, he says. At this time, in contrast to previously, there isn’t any viable “pro-Russian” choice, however Russian tender energy within the nation is just not solely about language and points of faith that divide the Orthodox devoted. “It is also about history and heroes,” he says. The Russians will work on destabilizing a traumatized society wherein folks will quickly be blamed for what they did or didn’t do in the course of the battle. They can even use points akin to homosexual rights to color the West as degenerate. If Trump is seen to have definitively betrayed Ukraine, which is already the widespread view, and Europe can’t or received’t do sufficient to take up the slack, then the query will likely be, “So, what did the West give you, what do you have?”

Within the taxi on my approach to the station to catch the evening prepare leaving Kyiv for Poland I chatted with Andrii, my driver. He mentioned that he was sixty years previous, that “the war will last for the rest of my life,” and that simply as, in his view, Arabs had needed to destroy Israel for eighty years, though battle had ebbed and flowed, Russia needed to destroy Ukraine. Then he instructed me that his day job was as an astrologer and that enterprise was excellent as a result of folks need to know what the longer term holds.

—Could 15, 2025

TAGGED:ArmsJudahRaceTimUkraine
Share This Article
Twitter Email Copy Link Print
Previous Article Amber Portwood Claims ‘I Joined the MARINES’ in Unhinged Rant Amber Portwood Claims ‘I Joined the MARINES’ in Unhinged Rant
Next Article Supreme Courtroom will not permit nation’s first non secular constitution college Supreme Courtroom will not permit nation’s first non secular constitution college

Editor's Pick

Pam Bondi could possibly be in sizzling water for utilizing DOJ to do Trump’s bidding

Pam Bondi could possibly be in sizzling water for utilizing DOJ to do Trump’s bidding

Legal professional Normal Pam Bondi is as soon as once more underneath the microscope—this time again in Florida, the place…

By Editorial Board 5 Min Read
Alpine’s Sizzling Hatch EV Has a Constructed-In, ‘Gran Turismo’ Model Driving Teacher

One other win over its Renault 5 sibling is a multi-link rear…

3 Min Read
Louis Vuitton Is Dropping a New Perfume As a result of It’s Sizzling | FashionBeans

We independently consider all beneficial services and products. Any services or products…

2 Min Read

Latest

Minnesota taking pictures provides to string of political violence that has additionally focused high firms

Minnesota taking pictures provides to string of political violence that has additionally focused high firms

Two Minnesota lawmakers had been shot on Saturday, with one…

June 14, 2025

Sir Keir Starmer to launch new nationwide inquiry into grooming gangs | Politics Information

Sir Keir Starmer is to launch…

June 14, 2025

Republicans are raining on Trump’s parade

Nobody appears desperate to have fun…

June 14, 2025

Israel warns ‘Tehran will burn’ as Iran fires drones and missiles in response to Israeli strikes

 Israel’s protection minister warned Saturday that…

June 14, 2025

Ship hearth: ICG, Navy and IAF execute high-risk operation; tow burning Singaporean ship away from coast | India Information

In a vital breakthrough within the…

June 14, 2025

You Might Also Like

Candid Cameron | Martin Filler
Books

Candid Cameron | Martin Filler

Throughout the capturing of Lindsay Anderson’s 1987 movie The Whales of August, the notoriously troublesome Bette Davis vented an irrational…

21 Min Read
The Struggle to Remake Myanmar | Francis Wade
Books

The Struggle to Remake Myanmar | Francis Wade

Over the eighty years since Myanmar’s independence from Britain, struggle between the state and armed insurgent teams has been so…

42 Min Read
Break the Aspiration Meter! | Zoe Hu
Books

Break the Aspiration Meter! | Zoe Hu

In 1860 Milton Bradley launched The Checkered Recreation of Life, a board sport by which gamers compete throughout a patterned…

23 Min Read
Near the Punches | Carolina A. Miranda
Books

Near the Punches | Carolina A. Miranda

Stand earlier than Vincent Valdez’s work The Metropolis I (2015–2016) and The Metropolis II (2016) and you will discover that…

23 Min Read
The Texas Reporter

About Us

Welcome to The Texas Reporter, a newspaper based in Houston, Texas that covers a wide range of topics for our readers. At The Texas Reporter, we are dedicated to providing our readers with the latest news and information from around the world, with a focus on issues that are important to the people of Texas.

Company

  • About Us
  • Newsroom Policies & Standards
  • Diversity & Inclusion
  • Careers
  • Media & Community Relations
  • WP Creative Group
  • Accessibility Statement

Contact Us

  • Contact Us
  • Contact Customer Care
  • Advertise
  • Licensing & Syndication
  • Request a Correction
  • Contact the Newsroom
  • Send a News Tip
  • Report a Vulnerability

Term of Use

  • Digital Products Terms of Sale
  • Terms of Service
  • Privacy Policy
  • Cookie Settings
  • Submissions & Discussion Policy
  • RSS Terms of Service
  • Ad Choices

© The Texas Reporter. All Rights Reserved.

Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Lost your password?