Dmitri Trenin

Trenin, director of the Carnegie Moscow Center, has been with the center since its inception. He also chairs the research council and the Foreign and Security Policy Program.
Education

PhD, Institute of the USA and Canada, Russian Academy of Sciences

Latest Analysis

    • Op-Ed

    Russia's Stake in Asia-Pacific

    • September 06, 2012

    The APEC agenda focuses on trade and investment liberalization, business facilitation, and economic and technical cooperation—all things that are top priorities for Russia, if it seeks to develop its Asia-Pacific territory and increase its presence in the region.

    • Op-Ed

    Building a Better Bear

    While Russian military reform, aimed at creating a modern military institution, has proven relatively successful, the Putin leadership’s strategic thinking remains outdated.

    • Op-Ed

    Russia's Own Asian Pivot Comes with Big Dreams, Tough Realities

    • September 03, 2012

    Russians need to see themselves as a Euro-Pacific country, and act accordingly by developing Russia's own Asia-Pacific territory and increasing its activity in the whole region.

    • Article

    Republicans’ Russia Approach Wide Open

    • August 31, 2012

    If Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney is elected, there is reason to worry that bilateral relations between the United States and Russia may become frayed. However, Russia will not be Romney’s foreign policy priority.

    • Strategic Europe

    Turkey and Russia

    • August 17, 2012

    An interesting relationship is emerging between Turkey and Russia, which may impact on a range of countries that once used to be part of either the Ottoman or Russian/Soviet empires, or both.

    • Op-Ed

    International Diplomacy's 11th Hour

    • July 18, 2012

    If a solution to the Syria problem is not found soon, not only will Syria descend into wholesale carnage, but the prospects for future conflict management in the world will become much bleaker.

    • Sada - Analysis

    Syria: A Russian Perspective

    • June 28, 2012

    Would focusing on transition (not regime change) bring the Russians back to the table over Syria?

    • Article

    Syria: A Russian Perspective

    • June 28, 2012

    A political transition, rather than regime change, may be the only chance for international cooperation on Syria.

    • Op-Ed

    Realigning the Reset

    If United States and Russia fail to collaborate on urgent global issues, it could enhance the two countries’ mutual alienation, allow regional crises to run unabated, and even lead to a reconfiguration of the world’s strategic landscape.

    • Strategic Europe

    The Rise of the Rest

    • June 15, 2012

    What we are observing on the world scene is not so much the decline of the West as the rise—and a very uneven one—of some of the rest.

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