: :inin Kyiv (EET)

Section: Carnegie Endowment for International Peace (USA)

      Who Suffers Most From Russian Tourism Sanctions Against Turkey?
      Feb11

      Who Suffers Most From Russian Tourism Sanctions Against Turkey?

      Russia imposed a tourism ban on Turkey in apparent retribution for Turkey’s support of Ukraine. But the travel sanctions may be an own goal. …read more Source:: Carnegie Endowment for International...

      Multipolarity in Practice: Understanding Russia’s Engagement With Regional Institutions
      Jan08

      Multipolarity in Practice: Understanding Russia’s Engagement With Regional Institutions

      Over the past two decades, and especially since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in 2014, the Kremlin has intensified its engagement with international institutions. …read more Source:: Carnegie Endowment for International...

      Marie Yovanovitch Got Smeared. Where Was Mike Pompeo?
      Nov18

      Marie Yovanovitch Got Smeared. Where Was Mike Pompeo?

      The testimony by former US Ambassador to Ukraine Marie Yovanovitch and President Trump’s threatening tweets provide a window into the administration’s preternaturally destructive campaign to politicize the State Department, undermine U.S. diplomacy, and smear the reputations of career State Department officers. …read more...

      Elections in Ukraine and Slovakia Offer a Glimpse into Russia’s Future
      Apr03

      Elections in Ukraine and Slovakia Offer a Glimpse into Russia’s Future

      Will Russia equally fall for a political outsider? Only time will tell. …read more Source: Carnegie Endowment for International...

      Status Quo Woes in Slovakia, Ukraine, and Turkey
      Apr02

      Status Quo Woes in Slovakia, Ukraine, and Turkey

      Elections in three very different countries share a common desire to change the status quo. …read more Source: Carnegie Endowment for International...

      What Is at Stake in Ukraine’s Election?
      Mar21

      What Is at Stake in Ukraine’s Election?

      Ukraine votes for a president on March 31. Will the pro-Western incumbent, Petro Poroshenko, win? Or will he lose to his old foe, Yulia Tymoshenko, or wild card Volodymyr Zelenskiy? …read more Source: Carnegie Endowment for International...

      Patriotism, Pressure, Populism: How Poroshenko Can Win
      Mar07

      Patriotism, Pressure, Populism: How Poroshenko Can Win

      The current Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko seems to have enough campaign cards up his sleeve to win the upcoming Ukrainian election, despite the damage caused by a fresh corruption case in the defense sector. …read more Source: Carnegie Endowment for International...

      Ukraine: What Comes After the Presidential Election?
      Mar07

      Ukraine: What Comes After the Presidential Election?

      It is high time for Europe and the United States to pay much closer attention to Ukrainian politics and the whole range of possible outcomes of the elections ahead. …read more Source: Carnegie Endowment for International...

      Eastern Europe’s Deepest Problem Lies Within
      Feb20

      Eastern Europe’s Deepest Problem Lies Within

      A major Georgian international project, Anaklia port, is being threatened by a domestic political row. Abuse of informal power is hurting Georgia, Moldova, and Ukraine. …read more Source: Carnegie Endowment for International...

      Ukrainian Society Ahead of the Elections
      Feb07

      Ukrainian Society Ahead of the Elections

      The continuing war in Ukraine plays an important role in shaping politics and public perceptions in the run-up to this year’s elections. It turns out that identity issues are much more nuanced than the campaign rhetoric suggests. …read more Source: Carnegie Endowment for International...