Written by Marcin Grajewski,

Russia is increasingly assertive in foreign and security policy, posing a challenge to the post-Cold War, rules-based international order. Following the annexation of Crimea, conflict with Ukraine and intervention in Syria, Russia stands accused of seeking to influence electoral outcomes in the United States and some European countries. Vladimir Putin looks set to be re-elected as Russian President later this month.
This note offers links to commentaries, studies by major international think tanks, which discuss Russia’s policies and how to respond to them. More reports on the topic can be found in a previous edition of ‘What Think Tanks are Thinking’, published in July 2017.
Presidential election
Future tense: Putin’s re-election a given, but what comes next?
Atlantic Council, February 2018
The price of the Russian elections: Easy to achieve, Putin’s victory will have huge costs
Finnish Institute of International Affairs, January 2018
After the election of no alternatives: The Kremlin’s domestic political challenges from 2018 onwards
Finnish Institute of International Affairs, December 2017
Dress rehearsal for Russia’s presidential election
Stiftung Wissenschaft und Politik, October 2017
Foreign and defence policies
Russian policy across the Middle East: Motivations and methods
Chatham House, February 2018
Incomplete hegemonies, hybrid neighbours: Identity games and policy tools in Eastern Partnership countries
Centre for European Policy Studies, February 2018
Is Russia Europe’s biggest threat?
Carnegie Europe, February 2018
Russia, Euroskeptic parties, and Italian elections
German Marshall Fund, February 2018
How to downsize Russia in the Balkans
German Marshall Fund, February 2018
Putins Wiederwahl wird den gesellschaftlichen Wandel nicht aufhalten
Deutsche Gesellschaft für Auswärtige Politik, February 2018
Russia is not a viable counterterrorism partner for the United States
Rand Corporation, February 2018
Restoring equilibrium: U.S. policy options for countering and engaging Russia
Brookings Institution, February 2018
Is Russia seeking a peaceful path?
Atlantic Council, February 2018
Russia, Trump, and the 2016 U.S. election
Council on Foreign Relations, February 2018
Putins schöne neue Weltordnung gewinnt mehr und mehr an Realität
Deutsche Gesellschaft für Auswärtige Politik, February 2018
The Russia file: Russia and the West in an unordered world
Deutsche Gesellschaft für Auswärtige Politik, February 2018
A classic dilemma: Russia’s threat to withdraw from the Council of Europe
Heinrich Böll Stiftung, February 2018
Rilancio del dialogo con la Russia
Istituto per gli Studi di Politica Internazionale, February 2018
Putin’s big match special
Chatham House, January 2018
Putin’s road from Damascus: After the ‘victory,’ what?
Brookings Institution, January 2017
Russia’s new strategy for Caspian relations
Chatham House, December 2017
Dutch narratives about Russian-Western relations
Clingendael, December 2017
The great powers have their ways
Egmont, December 2017
Brexit makes it even more difficult for the UK to deal with Russia
Chatham House, December 2017
Defence industries in Russia and China: Players and strategies
European Union Institute for Security Studies, December 2017
The EU Global Strategy: Implications for Russia
Egmont, November 2017
Drawing red lines in gray areas: Deterring Russia’s challenge to transatlantic security today
German Marshall Fund, November 2017
The Kremlin’s Trojan horses 2.0
Atlantic Council, November 2017
War in peacetime: Russia’s strategy on NATO’s eastern and southern flanks
Barcelona Centre for International Affairs, November 2017
How NATO could accidentally trigger a war with Russia
Rand Corporation, November 2017
Russia’s tactics in the Western Balkans
Carnegie Europe, November 2017
What is the public mood like in Crimea?
Carnegie Europe, November 2017
Partners or competitors? The future of the Iran-Russia power tandem in the Middle East
Atlantic Council, November 2017
Principles of Russian military thought
Institute of International Relations Prague, November 2017
Russia in the international arena, according to Putin
Institute for National Security Studies, October 2017
NATO’s Eastern flank and its future relationship with Russia
Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, October 2017
The S-400 deal: Russia drives another wedge between Turkey and its NATO allies
Institute for National Security Studies, October 2017
Central Asia: Twenty-five years after the breakup of the USSR
Bruegel, November 2017
The struggle for Ukraine
Chatham House, October 2017
The Syrian conflict and Russia’s search for regional hegemony in a contested Middle East: Implications for the Euro-Atlantic community
College of Europe, October 2017
On economics of innovation subsidies in Russia
Forum for Research on Eastern Europe and Emerging Economies, October 2017
Controlling chaos: How Russia manages its political war in Europe
European Council on Foreign Relations, September 2017
Putin’s Viennese waltz
Chatham House, September 2017
Learning lessons from Zapad 2017
Carnegie Europe, September 2017
So far from god, so close to Russia: Belarus and the Zapad military exercise
European Council on Foreign Relations, September 2017
The new Russia sanctions law: What it does and how to make it work
Atlantic Council, September 2017
The Zapad-2017 exercises: The information war (for now)
Centre for Eastern Studies, September 2017
Decoding Zapad-2017
International Centre for Defence Studies, September 2017
Russia’s electronic warfare capabilities to 2025: Challenging NATO in the electromagnetic spectrum
International Centre for Defence Studies, September 2017
Publics worldwide unfavorable toward Putin, Russia but few see Russian power and influence as a major threat
Pew Research Center, August 2017
The militarization of Russian policy
Transatlantic Academy, German Marshall Fund, August 2017
Russian strategy in the Middle East
Rand Europe, August 2017
Putin’s man in Hungary, Putin’s man in Germany
Carnegie Europe, August 2017
Increasing Western tolerance of Russian overreaction
Carnegie Europe, August 2017
A region with special needs: The Russian Far East in Moscow’s policy
Centre for Eastern Studies, July 2017
Fellow travellers: Russia, anti-westernism and Europe’s political parties
European Council on Foreign Relations, July 2017
US-Russia ties, electoral issues, cyber-security
Russians charged with meddling in 2016 US election
Atlantic Council, February 2018
Containing Russia: How to respond to Moscow’s intervention in U.S. democracy and growing geopolitical challenge
Council on Foreign Relations, January 2018
So what did we learn? Looking back on four years of Russia’s cyber-enabled ‘active measures’
German Marshall Fund, January 2018
The ‘combination’: An instrument in Russia’s information war in Catalonia
Real Instituto Elcano, November 2017
Raising the consequences of hacking American companies
Center for Strategic and International Studies, October 2017
An accident waiting to happen: Trump, Putin and the US–Russia relationship
Lowy Institute for International Policy, October 2017
In its relations with Russia, can the U.S. walk and chew gum at the same time?
Rand Corporation, August 2017
Energy
The clock is ticking: Ukraine’s last chance to prevent Nord Stream 2
Bruegel, January 2018
Russia’s untapped Arctic potential
Chatham House, January 2018
Eurasian Economic Union integrates energy markets, EU stands aside
Stiftung Wissenschaft und Politik, January 2018
Nord Stream 2: More hot air than gas?
Centre for European Reform, January 2017
Does Russian gas weaken energy security in Europe? Lessons from the Baumgarten incident
Centre for European Policy Reform, December 2017
Nord Stream 2: Divide et impera again? Avoiding a zero-sum game
European Political Strategy Centre, November 2017
Schröder’s unswerving loyalty to Putin
Carnegie Europe, October 2017
Russia-India energy cooperation: Trade, joint projects and new areas
Russian International Affairs Council, October 2017
Domestic and other issues
Why Boris Nemtsov still matters today
Atlantic Council, February 2018
Highlights for commemoration of the 1917 Russian revolution: Hints for further study
Free Network, December 2017
Russia’s ostrich approach to climate change and the Paris Agreement
Centre for European Policy Reform, November 2018
Spirituality as a political instrument: The church, the Kremlin, and the creation of the ‘Russian world’
Finnish Institute of International Affairs, September 2017
Read this briefing on ‘Resurgent Russia‘ on the Think Tank pages of the European Parliament.
[…] Russia’s policies and how to respond to them. More reports on the topic can be found in a previous edition of ‘What Think Tanks are Thinking’, published in March 2018. Some more papers on […]
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Od: European Parliamentary Research Service Blog Za: jpnakupi-eprs@yahoo.de Poslano: petek, 2. marec 2018 10:57 Zadeva: [New post] Resurgent Russia [What Think Tanks are thinking] #yiv4803561051 a:hover {color:red;}#yiv4803561051 a {text-decoration:none;color:#0088cc;}#yiv4803561051 a.yiv4803561051primaryactionlink:link, #yiv4803561051 a.yiv4803561051primaryactionlink:visited {background-color:#2585B2;color:#fff;}#yiv4803561051 a.yiv4803561051primaryactionlink:hover, #yiv4803561051 a.yiv4803561051primaryactionlink:active {background-color:#11729E;color:#fff;}#yiv4803561051 WordPress.com | EPRS Strategy posted: “Written by Marcin Grajewski,Russia is increasingly assertive in foreign and security policy, posing a challenge to the post-Cold War, rules-based international order. Following the annexation of Crimea, conflict with Ukraine and intervention in Sy” | |
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