Solving the Karabakh Conflict: Why direct negotiations between Baku and Yerevan are the only way to go
September 15, 2021 3 min. read

The solution of the conflict lies in direct negotiations between Baku and Yerevan rather than in mere propping up of domestic mobilization, military capacities, and geopolitical alliances.

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The Fog of Politics and Denied Justice
January 11, 2017 4 min. read

Establishing the facts in an objective review could possibly achieve some form of justice for victims of war crimes and genocide.

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Bubble Trouble: Russia’s A2/AD Capabilities
October 25, 2016 7 min. read

Russia’s A2/AD “bubbles” around the Baltics, the Black Sea, the Eastern Mediterranean and the Arctic could dramatically constrain NATO’s freedom of movement.

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The Nagorno-Karabakh Conflict 2.0.
May 31, 2016 3 min. read

The fighting outbreak in Nagorno-Karabakh was the largest since the 1994 Bishkek Protocol ceasefire. However, the situation has now “normalized.”

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The Nagorno-Karabakh conflict and geopolitical chessboard of the South Caucasus
April 7, 2016 5 min. read

The recent fighting outbreak in Nagorno-Karabakh, the worst in a twenty years period, reveals a sweeping complexity of the longstanding geopolitical chessboard that is the South Caucasus.

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Art as Politics
November 7, 2013 3 min. read

It is not often that a rug becomes caught in the crosshairs of foreign policy and cast away from artistic appreciation, yet the 1920s Armenian orphan rug that was planned for display in December at the Smithsonian Museum suffers just this fate. Bound by the common thread of their identity as children and survivors of […]

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