Search

Search Constraints

Begin New Search You searched for: Political Geography Russia Remove constraint Political Geography: Russia Publication Year within 10 Years Remove constraint Publication Year: within 10 Years Publication Year within 5 Years Remove constraint Publication Year: within 5 Years

Search Results

201. Advancing military mobility in Europe: An uphill battle

202. EU-Ukraine wartime trade: Overcoming difficulties, forging a European path

203. How Finnish and Swedish NATO Accession Could Shape the Future Russian Threat

204. Russia-China Defense Cooperation

205. Charting a Transatlantic Approach to Russia: A Working Paper of the Transatlantic Forum on Russia

206. Assessing the Evolving Russian Nuclear Threat

207. CTC Sentinel: August 2023 Issue

208. CTC Sentinel: April 2023 Issue

209. Evolution of the World Order and Russia’s Ideas About the Outside World

210. Restoring Competitive Politics: Electoral Contestation and the Future in Turkey and India, and Iran and Russia

211. NATO’s 2022 Strategic Concept: One Year On

212. Defunding the War Against Ukraine: Economic Strategies for Countering Russian Aggression

213. Russia’s Cultural Heritage Can Be a Bridge to the Future

214. Public Diplomacy Challenges in Reaching Russian Audiences

215. Vladimir Putin’s Mistrust of the West Runs Deep

216. Ending Wars: When Does Diplomacy Have a Role?

217. Brinkmanship and Nuclear Threat in the Ukraine War

218. Tempting Armageddon: The Likelihood of Russian Nuclear Use is Misconstrued in Western Policy

219. Aerial Drones in the Ukraine War: An Assessment of Russian Capabilities

220. Is there Eurasian Connectivity without Europe?

221. Can Back Channels Prevent Direct Military Conflict Between Russia and NATO?

222. Chinese and Russian Efforts to Undermine the Global Internet

223. The Ripple Effect: A U.S. Diplomatic Strategy for a Changing World Order

224. Enemies Foreign and Domestic: Confronting Kleptocrats at Home and Abroad

225. A Strategic Challenge: A Peddling Peril Index Analysis of Countries’ Restricted Russia Trade

226. Visible Progress at Russia’s Shahed Drone Production Site: Satellite Imagery Update and Call for Action

227. Electronics in the Shahed-136 Kamikaze Drone

228. Russian Lancet-3 Kamikaze Drone Filled with Foreign Parts: Western Parts Enable Russian Lancet-3 Drone to Have Advanced Targeting and Anti-jamming Capabilities.

229. Satellite Imagery Update on Alabuga Shahed-136 Drone Factory

230. New Bahrain Poll Reveals Support for Russia, Entente with Iran, Split on Israel

231. Preserving U.S. Military Advantages in the Middle East

232. Turkey’s Growing Ukrainian and Russian Communities

233. Niger Coup Threatens U.S. Strategy on Counterterrorism and Russia

234. The No Limits Partnership: PRC Weapons Support for Russia

235. Beyond Arms and Ammunition: China, Russia and the Iran Back Channel

236. Iran-Saudi and China Trilateral Agreement: Reshaping the Global World Order

237. Substitute to War: Questioning the Efficacy of Sanctions on Russia

238. The Russian Bloodletting Strategy in the Second Nagorno-Karabakh War: From Success to Hubris

239. Plan Z: Reassessing Security-Based Accounts of Russia's Invasion of Ukraine

240. Tackling Russian Gray Zone Approaches in the Post-Cold War Era

241. The Devil's Advocate: An Argument for Moldova and Ukraine to Seize Transnistria

242. The Cold War Computer Arms Race

243. The Ethical Character of Russia's Offensive Cyber Operations in Ukraine: Testing the Principle of Double Effect

244. Revisiting the Global Posture Review: A New U.S. Approach to European Defense and NATO in a Post-Ukraine War World

245. Enemy at the Gates: A Strategic Cultural Analysis of Russian Approaches to Conflict in the Information Domain

246. Russia's Nuclear Strategy: Changes or Continuities

247. Russia's War in Ukraine: Two Decisive Factors

248. The Human Weapon System in Gray Zone Competition

249. The Deficiency of Disparity: The Limits of Systemic Theory and the Need for Strategic Studies in Power Transition Theory

250. Sovereignty, Cyberspace, and the Emergence of Internet Bubbles

251. One year of war in Ukraine

252. De-colonising the Azerbaijan-Armenian Conflict: Breaking the Knot of Security and Dependence

253. Turkey’s Watershed Elections: A Matter of Leadership

254. The EU and the Transformed Nuclear Context since the War in Ukraine

255. Reinventing Soft Power: The Strong Impact of China’s Soft Power “Shortcomings” on the Global South

256. The changing face of Russia’s information war against Ukraine and other democratic countries: Lessons and recommendations. Interview with Professor Sinan Aral

257. Conclusions from the use of aviation in the first half of the first year of the Ukrainian-Russian war

258. Integrating Earth observation IMINT with OSINT data to create added-value multisource intelligence information: A case study of the Ukraine–Russia war

259. Conventional and Hybrid Actions in the Russia's Invasion of Ukraine

260. Hazardous Drinking in Privatized Industrial Towns of Russia

261. The Development Response to Kleptocracy and Strategic Corruption

262. The Return of US Leadership in Europe: Biden and the Russia Crisis

263. Europe’s Post-Cold War Order Is No More

264. Putin’s Use and Abuse of History: Back to the 19th Century?

265. The EU is Reluctantly Getting Tougher with Putin

266. Understanding the Russia-Iran-Israel Triangle

267. Could Biden construct a new world order through détente with Russia?

268. The Russians are coming! The Russians are coming? Russia’s growing presence in Africa and its implication for European policy

269. On a Collision Course: Russia’s Dangerous Game in Ukraine

270. The End of the Post-Cold War Era: Russia's Adventure in Ukraine Reshapes the Entire World Order

271. War in Ukraine enters its second month: serious implications and far-reaching changes

272. Ukraine: Toward a Prolonged War of Attrition Fuelling Great Power Competition

273. If Russia Uses Migration as a Weapon, Europeans Should Respond In Kind

274. Designing a Geo-Economic Policy for Europe

275. Sea Change for Europe’s Security Order: Three Future Scenarios

276. The Economics of Great Power Competition: Why Germany Must Step Up on Defense

277. Using Information to Influence the Russian War in Ukraine

278. Sanctions Against Russia: Five Lessons from the Case of Iran

279. Putin and Erdogan Meet in Sochi: Another Challenge to the Western Bloc

280. The Iranian-Russian-Turkish Summit in Tehran

281. The War in Ukraine: More Western Aid and Fear of Escalation

282. The Russia-Ukraine War: Where Do We Go from Here?

283. Investigation of Russia's Crimes in Ukraine: A Turning Point for the International Criminal Court?

284. Walking a Fine Line: Turkey’s Mediation between Russia and Ukraine, and Relations with the West

285. The Ukrainian Civil Front – An Interim Assessment

286. After the Russian “Ruse,” China Looks for New Friends

287. MF Dollars for Dictators? The Allocation of SDR to Moderate and Isolated Countries

288. Intelligence and the War in Ukraine: The Limited Power of Public Disclosure

289. Will Russia Use Nuclear Weapons in Ukraine?

290. Underreporting of Russian Investments Abroad: Are the Sanctions Undermined?

291. The War in Ukraine: The Challenge of Shaping an Endgame

292. Putin’s Dilemma

293. The Russian Invasion of Ukraine: Legal Aspects

294. The Ukraine Crisis: An Interim Analysis

295. Avoiding the Dangers of a Protracted Conflict in Ukraine

296. The Lobbying Battle Before the War: Russian and Ukrainian Influence in the U.S.

297. NATO’s Tunnel Vision

298. Managed Competition: A U.S. Grand Strategy for a Multipolar World

299. Russia-Ukraine: Dangerous Stalemate

300. Cutting through the Value Chain: The Long-Run Effects of Decoupling the East from the West