... with global reach. Nor is there any going back to 2013, just before the Ukraine crisis. In any case, that was hardly a happy time in Russia-EU relations, with intense feelings of malaise on both sides.
Despite the ongoing U.S.-Russia confrontation, the NATO-Russia military standoff in Europe is still relatively low-level. While preparing for various contingencies, neither side seriously believes that initiating a military conflict with the other in that part of the world would give it any advantages....
... pro-Western paradigm and lead the country towards collaboration with international financial bodies, the European Union and NATO. Russia–Ukraine relations will largely depend on the general trends in U.S.–Russia relations, and I think gradually moving ... ... the self-proclaimed republics would be out of the question. This can be interpreted as a step towards non-compliance with the Minsk agreements. Additionally, since Ukraine is a parliamentary-presidential republic, and since V. Zelensky does not have his ...
... come because the situation in Ukraine is too uncertain, not to speak of the active propaganda.
Today the implementation of the Minsk agreements is more an internal than an external problem for Ukraine.
The external parties to the crisis around Ukraine ... ... confine themselves to the “zero option” of holding back the escalation. Therefore the
stationing
of several thousand NATO troops on the Alliance’s eastern borders while Warsaw and Vilnius
demanded
permanent bases is largely a symbolic act ...