Subject:
The ICE alliance has more geopolitical and geostrategic rationale than economic
ShortRussia’s emphasis on ensuring security to accelerate economic development will allow the main stakeholders to step back from differences, focus on a positive agenda and at least start a dialogue on building a Eurasian security system
ShortWith stiffer competition between the great powers, a cooperative form of a continent-wide Eurasian security system is needed
ShortThe Old World is extremely vulnerable to an American leader who could depart from the liberal Atlantic consensus
ShortFor achieving its ambitious economic and social development goals, China needs a friendly and stable international environment
ShortInterview with Vladimir Morozov, Vice-Rector of MGIMO University
ShortGRANI Project Interview with RIAC Director General Ivan Timofeev
ShortPolicy Brief #52/2024
ShortInterview with Kin Phea, Director General of the International Relations Institute of the Royal Academy of Cambodia
ShortWhile the US-led group enforces rigid bloc discipline, the world’s emerging powers extol flexibility
ShortIs it any surprise that a lone wolf shooter has seized onto Democrats’ narratives as his marching orders to save the country?
ShortThe most erroneous way for Russian policy to develop in Asia would be for Moscow to concentrate on interaction with regional institutions and platforms - “brotherly cemeteries”, where individual opportunities are drowned in the need for everyone to come to a common average denominator
Short