Section: Research Organizations & Think Tanks about Ukraine
Who is at fault in Ukraine?
Foreign Affairs has recently published a number of articles examining the extent to which the ongoing crisis in Ukraine is the West’s fault. Those articles sparked a heated debate, so they decided to ask a broader pool of experts to state whether they agree or disagree with the following statement and to rate their confidence level about...
How Russia Sells Itself to the Long-Demoralized People of Donbas
In the City of Stakhanov, a Cossack Commander and Local Radio Station Mix Nostalgias for Russia’s Greatness and Soviet Goodness While analysts of Russia’s assault on Ukraine debate the veiled question of President Vladimir Putin’s motives, little is hidden about how the Kremlin and its proxy forces are selling themselves to the...
Russia is blackmailing Ukraine and Europe with the threat of escalation of the conflict in Donbas
Russian troops and separatists continue to build up their forces in the parts of Donbas controlled by them. This was stated on 4 November by Spokesman of the Information and Analysis Centre of the National Security and Defence Council of Ukraine Andriy Lysenko at the briefing in Kyiv, informs the news agency Radio Liberty. Co-director of Foreign...
Fighting Flares in Ukraine, Romanians Rally over Voting Problems
Plus, the Azerbaijani opposition holds a new anti-Aliev demonstration, and Poland’s Sikorski survives a no-confidence vote. …read more Source: Transitions Online...
Poland’s Foreign Policy Needs More, Not Less, Germany
The Ukraine crisis shows that Poland’s special foreign policy toward its Eastern neighbors is needed more than ever-together with support from Berlin. …read more Source: Carnegie Endowment for International...
Russia’s New Foreign Policy
Russia’s incorporation of Crimea and continuing support for armed separatists in Ukraine demonstrates the changes the Russian national identity has undergone in the last two years. This talk will focus on the dramatic revisions in Russia’s foreign policy doctrine since Putin’s return to power, looking at the specific worldview...
Business, Power, and Property Rights in Russia after Crimea
Twenty-three years after its emergence as an independent state, Russia’s institutions are still incomplete. It possesses open markets, competitive pricing, and appropriate fiscal tools to promote economic growth, but it lacks rule of law and independent courts. Paradoxically, Russia’s business community has never really championed...
Hitting the Pause Button: The ‘Frozen Conflict’ Dilemma in Ukraine
Frozen conflicts describe places where fighting took place and has come to an end, yet no overall political solution, such as a peace treaty, has been reached. Ukraine is likely to host such conflicts for some time, in Crimea and the Donbas region. Georgia’s experience offers lessons for Ukraine. …read more Source:...
Remarks by Ambassador Samantha Power: Reforming peacekeeping in a time of conflict
Good afternoon.I’ve come here today to talk to about UN peacekeeping. There is a lot going on in the world right now, but the urgent, critical issues on our plate should not divert us from an important fact: the United States has a vital interest – and a critical role to play – in strengthening peacekeeping to meet demands that peacekeepers...
Ukraine News Roundup | November 7
…read more Source: Atlantic...