Not the same Vladimir anymore? How the Russian aggression changed European politics (Part 2)
Will the pro-Russian European right ever change its view on Putin? Olivier Bault (…) Similar reactions to the Russian aggression
Read MoreWill the pro-Russian European right ever change its view on Putin? Olivier Bault (…) Similar reactions to the Russian aggression
Read MoreWill the pro-Russian European right ever change its view on Putin? Olivier Bault Having among my “friends” on social
Read MoreRegardless of the military outcome of the war, in a sense, Ukraine has already won. In 2014, the south-east of
Read MoreThe departure from the universal progressive rhetoric used by the Soviet Union in favor of the mythology of Slavicism and
Read More„Putin has surrounded himself with friends and loyalists with whom he has had relationships for decades. Their wealth and power
Read MoreFor now, Putin has found himself in a trap that he set upon himself. Paweł Lisicki After the first days,
Read MoreThe departure from the universal progressive rhetoric used by the Soviet Union in favor of the mythology of Slavicism and
Read MoreThree decades after the collapse of the USSR, the Russians still miss the Soviet past, although they would not necessarily
Read MoreThree decades after the collapse of the USSR, the Russians still miss the Soviet past, although they would not necessarily
Read MoreIn Russia old habits never die, or, as Putin put it himself, “once a Chekist, always a Chekist.” Marek Jan
Read MoreThe heritage of Kievan Rus is common to all three East Slavic nations. Kiev is “the mother of Ruthenian settlements”.
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