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Podcast host Alex Gabuev is joined by Sophia Besch, a fellow at the Carnegie Europe Program, and Eric Ciaramella, a senior fellow at the Carnegie Russia and Eurasia Program, to discuss the outcomes of the NATO summit in Vilnius.
The EU has not changed enough in response to Russia’s war on Ukraine. To be effective, the bloc needs a strategic foreign and security policy.*
Ukrainian membership in the security alliance is the only basis for a more stable relationship with Russia.
Pipelines, ports, and cables in and around the Baltic Sea are as critical as they are vulnerable.
Led by the United States and Germany, NATO gave Kyiv no date for joining the military alliance. This is a short-sighted decision that Russia will exploit.
Join us for a conversation with Johan Rockström, co-chair of the Earth Commission and lead author of the Nature report, to learn more about the deteriorating health of the planet—and how international cooperation must adapt to prevent catastrophe.
An in-depth discussion about French and Ukrainian expectations for NATO’s Vilnius Summit, the future of European defense, security guarantees and assurances for Ukraine inside and outside NATO, Ukrainian membership of the EU, as well as Ukrainian economic recovery and reconstruction.
Marginalized groups in Iran are disproportionately affected by the regime’s systemic repression and by the country’s socio-economic and ecological crises. The EU must integrate these groups’ perspectives into its policies and work with civil society to address Tehran’s human rights violations.
Join us for a conversation between Carnegie nonresident scholar Adam Tooze and Carnegie president Mariano-Florentino (Tino) Cuéllar. This event is part of a series on the global political economy organized by the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.
Although the geopolitical rationale for the arrangement is understandable, the parties have failed to come to terms with its core problems.