Alexander Baunov

Baunov is a senior fellow at the Carnegie Moscow Center and editor in chief of Carnegie.ru.
Education

MA, Moscow State University, 1995

Languages
  • English
  • German
  • Greek
  • Italian
  • Polish
  • Russian
  • Spanish

Latest Analysis

    • Carnegie.ru Commentary

    How Is Russia Coping With Coronavirus?

    • March 24, 2020

    As of March 23, Russia had reported 438 cases of coronavirus and one disputed death. But there is growing speculation in the West over whether official figures can be trusted and whether the Kremlin might be making use of the pandemic to further its own ends.

    • Carnegie.ru Commentary

    Putin’s Choice: What do Russia’s Latest Constitutional Maneuvers Mean?

    • March 11, 2020

    A new Russian state is taking shape that is unashamedly authoritarian in design. If Russia ever wants to return to the European model, it will have to dismantle the entire political legacy that this regime has built.

    • Carnegie.ru Commentary

    An Alternate European Path: How Brexit Will Benefit a Democratic Russia

    • February 06, 2020

    While broadly perceived as a blow to the EU and its values, Brexit will actually benefit a future democratic Russia. Britain’s exit will create a new model of Europeanness, in which a country can strive to achieve European standards without EU membership. That is a niche Russia can fill.

    • Carnegie.ru Commentary

    Why Aren’t Russians Protesting Putin’s Reforms?

    • January 30, 2020

    Most Russians are dumbfounded and intrigued, but not necessarily angry at Putin’s strategy of commencing constitutional change before anyone expected it. This may only change if people’s current expectations are confounded, and Putin doesn’t step down as president after all.

    • Op-Ed

    Putin Is Planning a Partial Retirement

    • January 17, 2020

    The Russian president may never leave the political stage—but he's now ready to take a step back.

    • Carnegie.ru Commentary

    Did Putin Just Appoint Himself President for Life?

    • January 17, 2020

    President Putin’s unexpected proposals this week to change the Russian constitution prompted the instant resignation of the Russian government. What’s he trying to achieve, and will he succeed?

    • Carnegie.ru Commentary

    Fresh Approaches Enable Russia-Ukraine Prisoner Swap

    • September 09, 2019

    For the Kremlin, key conditions for the prisoner exchange were President Zelensky’s reference to joint work by two states and two presidents, recognition that there were advantages to the swap for both sides, and the exclusion of the exchange from the victory/defeat paradigm.

    • Carnegie.ru Commentary

    Why Macron Gave Putin Such a Warm Welcome in France

    • August 22, 2019

    It’s impossible for Russia to return to the G7, but it’s also impossible for the group to solve many problems important to it without Russia. France’s relationship of trust with the Russian leadership, and the opportunity to represent Russia behind the scenes at the group’s gatherings, are an important diplomatic asset that France would hate to lose.

    • Carnegie.ru Commentary

    Moscow’s Crisis Is Now Russia’s Crisis

    • August 08, 2019

    By agreeing to the brutal suppression of peaceful protests about Moscow city elections, Mayor Sobyanin has submitted to collective responsibility. For Putin and the Kremlin, it is impermissible that elections can be lost. This is a message for Russia’s next parliamentary and presidential polls.

    • Op-Ed

    How a Russian Reporter Beat the Kremlin

    • June 13, 2019

    The arrest of Ivan Golunov on bogus drug charges sparked intense protests against the menace of the corrupt security state.

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