War in Ukraine

Experts from across the Atlantic Council are assessing the consequences of Russia’s February 2022 invasion, including what it means for Ukraine’s sovereignty, Europe’s security, and the United States’ leadership.

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WATCH

“Putin’s endgame: The stakes beyond Ukraine,” an Atlantic Council documentary

Russia’s full-scale war against Ukraine may be closer to its end than its beginning. How it ends will matter not only for Ukraine, but for the whole of Europe and the wider world. The first-ever documentary from the Atlantic Council’s Eurasia Center, “Putin’s endgame: The stakes beyond Ukraine,” discusses the threat of Russian aggression beyond Ukraine and the dangers it poses to US interests today and in the future.

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Content

In the News

Mar 12, 2014

Yatsenyuk: Meeting with Obama “Frank and Open”

ABC New reports on Ukrainian PM Arseniy Yatsenyuk’s visit to Washington:

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Russian Presiden Vladimir Putin, March 8, 2014

NATOSource

Mar 11, 2014

Russia: It is Extremely Dangerous to Bring the ‘NATO Factor’ to the Crisis in Ukraine

By Russian Foreign Ministry

Question: How has Moscow perceived NATO’s decision to suspend cooperation with Russia because of the situation in Ukraine, which was announced on the 5 March?

NATO Russia
(REUTERS/Konstantin Grishin)

New Atlanticist

Mar 11, 2014

Ukraine’s Crisis Government Seeks a Strategy Against Russia

By James Rupert

Despite Crimea Invasion, Kyiv’s Mood Is Moderate, Pragmatic, Non-Violent Ukraine’s interim government took office twelve days ago to face a Russian invasion, a national bankruptcy, and deep regional and political divides. As its top officials prepared to visit Washington this week to seek support, an Atlantic Council delegation first went to Kyiv to meet them, […]

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Unidentified gunmen at Simferopol Airport, Feb. 28, 2014

NATOSource

Mar 11, 2014

Failure to Support Ukrainian Sovereignty will Tempt Putin to Continue Aggression

By Jon Kyl & Joseph Lieberman, Real Clear World

Russia’s actions in Ukraine also trouble Americans because of their implications for NATO allies and the United States’ common defense responsibilities.

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New Atlanticist

Mar 11, 2014

Lost in Space

By Bharath Gopalaswamy

The Crimean Crisis highlights America’s Dangerous Dependence on Russian Space Technology. The Crimea crisis, the sharpest conflict in decades between the United States and Russia, is raising concerns about the future of the U.S. space program. The cooperation in space that Washington and Moscow fostered in the quarter-century since the Cold War ended is now […]

Space Technology & Innovation

Event Recap

Mar 11, 2014

Crisis in Ukraine: Military Options and Planning

While much of the discussion in the West on responding to the crisis in Ukraine has been about targeted sanctions against Russian oligarchs and the oil industry, the latest developments in Crimea have turned the situation in a more militaristic direction. Recently, Russian troops seized a military hospital in Simferopol along with a missile base […]

Ukraine

New Atlanticist

Mar 11, 2014

Russia is Playing a Weak Hand Very Strongly

A regular contributor to CNN.com, Ambassador-in-Residence Michael Oren writes that in both Syria and Iran, Russia has played its relatively weak strategic hand exceedingly well and is threatening to outmaneuver the United States in the Middle East. Meanwhile, the United States has paused its effots to forge an Israeli-Palestinian peace in order to generate pressure on […]

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New members welcomed at 1999 NATO Summit

NATOSource

Mar 11, 2014

Central European Nations Glad to be in NATO

By AFP

Fifteen years have passed since the Czech Republic, Hungary and Poland joined the NATO military alliance, a decision the ex-Soviet satellites now see as fortuitous given today’s Ukraine standoff between Russia and the West.

Central Europe Hungary

In the News

Mar 11, 2014

Carstei: New Russian Pipeline Makes No Sense

By Mihaela Carstei

Foreign Policy quotes Energy & Environment Program Acting Director Mihaela Carstei on Russia’s energy strategy in Europe:

Energy & Environment Russia

New Atlanticist

Mar 11, 2014

Don’t Give Up on Crimea

By Damon Wilson

Ukrainian Troops Sustain Symbols of Sovereignty That Could Weaken Russia’s Grip Twenty-four hours after being named to command Ukrainian forces in Crimea, Rear Admiral Denis Berezovsky switched allegiance to the Russia-installed Crimean puppet government. Accompanied by Russian special operations troops and unidentified gunmen, he strode into the Ukrainian military’s Perevalne base demanding that its soldiers […]

Russia Ukraine