Description |
1 online resource (46 pages) |
Series |
Europe policy paper ; 1/2015 |
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Europe policy paper ; 1/2015
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Contents |
The issue and policy priorities. -- Introduction: a region disunited? Joerg Forbrig. -- Bulgaria: increasingly assertive but not hawkish, Marin Lessenski. -- The Czech Republic: lacking foreign policy consensus, Petr Kratochvil. -- Estonia: in pursuit of a value-based foreign policy, Merle Maigre. -- Hungary: singled out by the critics, Istvan Gyarmati. -- Latvia: EU presidency at a time of geopolitical crisis, Kristine Bërzin̦a. -- Lithuania: a staunch supporter of a European Ukraine, Vytis Jurkonis. -- Poland: searching for a strategic response, Michal Baranowski and Bartosz Cichocki. -- Romania: largely immune to Russian Pressures, Alina Inayeh. -- Slovakia: ambiguity in action, Alexander Duleba |
Summary |
Europe has struggled to come to terms with the consequences of the conflict in Ukraine, and with the underlying challenge posed by Russia. Nowhere has this struggle been more obvious than in Central Europe and among the EU's eastern-most states, which arguably should have demonstrated similar assessments of and responses to this crisis. Yet despite a shared history as Soviet satellites, still fresh transition experience, deep understanding of Eastern Europe and Russia, and geographical proximity to the conflict, this region has been surprisingly divided |
Notes |
"February 2015." |
Bibliography |
Includes bibliographical references |
Notes |
Online resource; title from PDF cover page (GMFUS, viewed March 3, 2015) |
Subject |
Diplomatic relations.
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SUBJECT |
Europe, Eastern -- Foreign relations -- Russia (Federation) -- 21st century
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Russia (Federation) -- Foreign relations -- Europe, Eastern -- 21st century
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Russia (Federation) -- Foreign relations -- Ukraine
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Subject |
Eastern Europe.
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Russia (Federation)
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Ukraine.
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Form |
Electronic book
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Author |
German Marshall Fund of the United States, publisher
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