Security in the Baltic Sea region is a major element in the European politico-military landscape. The region demands special attention as it is where NATO and Russia are direct neighbors, sharing land borders. Where does the region fit in Russia’s foreign and security policy? How to preserve a minimum of security in the region? Join Ambassador Vygaudas Ušackas and Dmitri Trenin to explore these and other issues.
Is there a way to upgrade Indo-Russian economic and technological ties and make geopolitical and security interaction more effective, while not upending India’s connections with the United States, and Russia’s with China?
Carnegie Europe and the Carnegie Moscow Center organized a roundtable to discuss the changing nature and shifting trends of global strategic stability in the post-arms control era.
On September 25, the Carnegie Moscow Center held a discussion on the future of the U.S.-Russia relationship featuring Ivo H. Daalder from the Chicago Council on Global Affairs and Lev Gudkov from Levada Center.
Carnegie Moscow Center hosted a former U.S. Secretary of Defense William Perry.
Carnegie Moscow Center hosted Richard N. Haass to discuss the current state of the U.S.-Russia relationship and its future developments.
Carnegie Moscow Center hosted an open discussion on major power relationships in the Asia-Pacific region with John McCarthy, former Australian ambassador to Vietnam, Indonesia, Japan, and India.
Carnegie Moscow Center hosted a launch of Dmitri Trenin’s new book, “Should We Fear Russia?”
Carnegie Moscow Center organized a conference on contemporary issues in Central Asia.
The Carnegie Moscow Center hosted a discussion about the strategic future of U.S.-Chinese relations.