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The Stockholm syndrome in politics
There is an emerging trend to cool rhetoric and to help Russia to eliminate itself as a party to and originator of the conflict with and in Ukraine, to try to help the aggressor to ‘save face’. It is a...
View ArticleEnough: NATO should stop feeding the Russian troll
For many years NATO attempted to use dialogue as the basis for its partnership with Russia. The Alliance operated in the spirit of trust and transparency. But this trust was, too often, abused: Russia...
View ArticleEurope to Russia: We won’t forget Crimea
Two years have passed since Russia illegally annexed Crimea and Sevastopol. March 18, 2014, marked the beginning of Russia’s ongoing attack on the territorial integrity of Ukraine and represents the...
View ArticleEU and UK need each other on post-Brexit security
The U.K.’s withdrawal from the European Union poses a number of challenges on both sides of the Channel, but Brussels should be alive to one particularly important risk: Brexit’s effect on Europe’s...
View ArticleLukashenko is no longer president of Belarus
Linas Linkevičius is Lithuanian minister of foreign affairs. VILNIUS — The crisis in Belarus goes far beyond the violent aftermath of its presidential election in August. For decades, under Alexander...
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