Why Warsaw Should Go Soft on Kyiv
January 8, 2019 16 min. read

The recently intensifying memory conflict around the interpretation of some World War II events, between Ukraine and Poland, is distracting the two intertwined nations from their main international challenges and some critical tasks today. An increase of Ukrainian national security is in the core interests not only of Kyiv, but also of Warsaw. An odd […]

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Playing Political Games with Other People’s Tragedies
March 8, 2018 3 min. read

An effective tool for prolonging many of the genocides over the last one hundred years was to make sure that the human rights atrocities were either unknown, the information was skewed, or by diminishing the act itself through language and politics. The recent moves by some in Poland’s government to diminish Poland’s role in the […]

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Can Trump Be Trusted in a Room Alone with Putin?
July 6, 2017 4 min. read

According to reports, U.S President Donald Trump is “eager to meet Russian President Vladimir Putin with full diplomatic bells and whistles” at the Group of Twenty (G20) Summit in Hamburg, Germany on July 7. In fact Trump is “so excited about meeting Vladimir Putin that U.S. officials are worried.” U.S. allies in Europe are also worried. They probably […]

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The Dangerous Tool of Russian Military Exercises
June 7, 2017 10 min. read

Understanding what Russian large-scale military exercises are designed to accomplish could offer answers and highlight areas that NATO should closely watch.

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EU Funds Allocation: Is Brussels Flexing Its Muscles?
March 18, 2017 6 min. read

European Commissioner for Justice Vera Jourová proposed to make the distribution of EU funding dependent on whether states uphold fundamental EU principles like the rule of law.

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Central and Eastern Europe at odds with Brussels
September 27, 2016 5 min. read

The refugee crisis revealed the extent of the ideological parting of ways between old and new Europe.

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