New Eastern Europe

    • Carnegie.ru Commentary

    For Ukraine, Moldova, and Georgia Free Trade with Europe and Russia Is Possible

    • Sergei Aleksashenko

    There are few if any reasons for Russia to worry about an immediate negative impact on trade and economic interests of signing of the AA/DCFTA by Ukraine, Moldova, and Georgia. The Russian government’s position is more likely to reflect concerns about the loss of geopolitical influence rather than trade and economic relations.

    • Op-Ed

    Moscow’s Task is to Build a Nation Not an Empire

    If Russia wants to stay in the game of global competition, it has no choice but to work toward becoming a civic nation, a rules-based polity, and a modern economy.

    • Carnegie.ru Commentary

    21st Century Great Game as a New Normal

    The 25-year-long quest for Russia's integration with the West is off. A new normalcy is setting between Russia and the West resembles the Russo-British Great Game of the 19th century—this time between America and Russia.

    • Russia, Ukraine, and the West: Is Confrontation Inevitable?

      • Chrystia Freeland, Michael McFaul, John Mearsheimer, Dmitri Trenin, Roger Cohen
      • Chatham House

      Ukraine is the most important strategic issue for Russia, and Putin, who mistrusts the West, worries that NATO enlargement may concern Ukraine.

      • Carnegie.ru Commentary

      How Long Russians Will Believe in Fairy Tale?

      Russian state and national identity are still based on the search for the enemy. However, the patriotic euphoria that followed Crimea has begun to wear off. As the Kremlin attempts to understand what to do next in Ukraine, it has become clear that Russians are not prepared to pay for it with their lives.

      • Carnegie.ru Commentary

      Coup d’Etat in Abkhazia Without Russia’s Permission

      The coup d’état in Abkhazia attracted virtually no media attention in Russia, and even less attention was paid to the parliamentary election in South Ossetia. It seems that after almost six years of Abkhazian and South Ossetian “independence,” these territories stopped being Russia’s headache, only to be replaced by Crimea.

      • Carnegie.ru Commentary

      Poroshenko’s Team: Managers of the Nation?

      Ukraine needs strong, loyal managers in order to face the long and daunting list of tasks confronting the country. However, to move Ukraine forward the president and his team will need to put aside their own ambitions.

      • Carnegie.ru Commentary

      Russia vs. the West: End of Round One

      The D-Day anniversary celebrations have marked a new quality of the West’s relations with Russia. Putin is obviously playing from a position of weakness vis-à-vis the joint forces of the West. The first round has shown it has a chance, but more difficult rounds lie ahead.

      • Carnegie.ru Commentary

      The Problems for the Eurasian Economic Union Are Just Starting

      Belarus, Kazakhstan, and Russia signed a treaty on the creation of the Eurasian Economic Union (EAEU) on May 29. While Russia mainly hopes to increase its political clout, all three presidents realize how many difficulties they will have to overcome.

      • Carnegie.ru Commentary

      All (Ukrainian) Politics Are Local

      Weeks ago, after heavy fighting in the southern city of Mariupol, local leaders brokered an agreement without the participation of Kyiv-based or regional authorities. Kyiv should move toward a new power-sharing deal or face more Mariupol-type solutions.

    Please note

    You are leaving the Carnegie–Tsinghua Center for Global Policy's website and entering another Carnegie global site.

    请注意...

    你将离开清华—卡内基中心网站,进入卡内基其他全球中心的网站。