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  • 25 Jun 2021
    • Europe
    • France

    Macron’s right-wing gamble

    Lisa Louis
    The French president is betting on the far-right to boost his chances in the 2022 election.
  • 21 Jun 2021
    • Europe
    • United States
    • Russia
    • European Union
    • Germany
    • United Kingdom
    • France

    Believing Biden

    Daniel Woker
    The US President has persuaded European allies of his values-based policy. But will such faith carry home?
  • 14 Apr 2021
    • Europe
    • China
    • Coronavirus

    Serbia’s vaccine diplomacy: Balancing China and the West

    Nikola Mikovic
    The politics of Covid have tangled up countries across the world – but that’s not always a drawback.
  • 17 Feb 2021
    • Europe
    • Russia
    • European Union
    • Germany
    • France

    Russia vs the EU

    Daniel Woker
    A visit to Moscow by Europe’s top envoy did nothing to calm a growing diplomatic spat. What if Washington weighs in?
  • 4 Feb 2021
    • Defence & Security
    • Europe
    • Russia

    The Donbass conflict: Waiting for escalation

    Nikola Mikovic
    The forgotten war involving Ukraine and Russia in the energy-rich region is simmering still.
  • 3 Feb 2021
    • Asia
    • Europe
    • Trade
    • Coronavirus
    • Human rights
    • United Nations

    A “beggar-thy-neighbour” approach keeps seafarers stranded

    Sandra Tsui
    Some countries have banned crew rotations. Some have tight limits. A few are open. So a crisis continues.
  • 25 Jan 2021
    • Australia in the World
    • Europe
    • United States
    • Global Economic Governance
    • Multilateral Institutions

    The US and the next leader of the OECD

    Daniel F. Runde
    Australia’s candidate for Secretary-General is a favourable contender, but American backing is still up in the air.
  • 18 Dec 2020
    • Europe
    • Coronavirus

    Learning from an island in a pandemic

    Grant Wyeth
    For all the focus on New Zealand’s and Taiwan’s successes, another fascinating island nation has kept the virus at bay.
  • 26 Nov 2020
    • Europe
    • European Union
    • Germany

    The outlines of a European policy on the Indo-Pacific

    Lisa Louis
    Germany and the Netherlands have new strategies for the Indo-Pacific, and maybe the beginnings of a common EU stance.
  • 19 Nov 2020
    • Europe
    • Diplomacy
    • Australia
    • China
    • South Korea

    Beijing’s bad books: Australia can learn from Norway and South Korea

    Henry Storey
    China’s coercive diplomacy is not new. Other countries have managed to repair ties after a perceived slight.
  • 26 Oct 2020
    • Europe
    • Multilateral Institutions
    • China – Belt and Road Initiative

    The Three Seas Initiative: A European answer to China’s Belt and Road?

    David Morris
    A quest to modernise dilapidated infrastructure in Central Europe has quickly transformed into a geopolitical contest.
  • 24 Sep 2020
    • Europe
    • Human rights

    Francis Fukuyama in Minsk

    Mark Beeson
    The outcry for liberal freedoms on display in Belarus suggests “The end of history” wasn’t all wrong.
  • 16 Sep 2020
    • Europe
    • United States

    Trump’s gambit in the Balkans

    Nina Marković Khaze , Perparim Xhaferi
    Drawing down troops from Germany one day, inserting the US into the Serbia-Kosovo dispute the next. What’s at play?
  • 7 Sep 2020
    • Europe
    • United States
    • Australia
    • Coronavirus
    • The 2020 US Presidential Election

    Pandemic democracy

    Benjamin Reilly
    Voting is based on trust between citizens and their government. In an age of social distancing, such faith is tested.
  • 7 Sep 2020
    • Europe
    • Russia
    • Coronavirus

    How Russia benefited from Belarus’s turmoil

    Nikola Mikovic
    The “last European dictator” has turned back to the Kremlin after the West imposed sanctions for recent crackdowns.
  • 28 Aug 2020
    • Europe
    • Diplomacy
    • United States
    • Multilateral Institutions
    • United Nations
    • Iran

    A diplomatic breakdown over “snapback” tests the UN

    Richard Gowan
    Dispute over a US call for pre-2015 Iran sanctions has pushed the Security Council to its limit. It’s been there before.
  • 22 Jul 2020
    • Europe
    • China
    • Technology

    Is Huawei in the UK a canary in the coalmine?

    Daniel Woker
    Britain’s 5G ban shows that political risk must be priced into commercial calculations as the world considers value.
  • 12 Jun 2020
    • Defence & Security
    • Europe
    • United States
    • Australia

    NATO: Rebranding exercise or new product launch?

    Gorana Grgic
    #NATO2030
  • 1 May 2020
    • Global Issues
    • Europe
    • Coronavirus

    Governments, not pandemics, stop access to reproductive health

    Sara E Davies , Sophie Harman
    A winding back of hard-won women’s rights in Europe has implications for us all.
  • 24 Apr 2020
    • Middle East
    • Europe
    • Islamic State
    • Terrorism
    • Coronavirus

    ISIS looks to prosper in a world distracted by the virus

    Kareem Salem
    Europe could quickly be confronted by another security crisis if the terrorists growing resurgence is left unchecked.
  • 21 Apr 2020
    • Europe
    • Europe's Economy
    • Coronavirus

    Hit hard, could Covid lead Europe to rethink economic policy?

    Lisa Louis
    Airlines could be nationalised, global supply chains severed. Will a once familiar market-led dogma survive the crisis?
  • 20 Jan 2020
    • Europe
    • China
    • Germany

    No end in sight for Germany’s troubles with Huawei

    Björn Alexander Düben
    As other European capitals look for a cue, German politicians are sharply divided over the Chinese tech company.
  • 4 Nov 2019
    • Europe

    What 1989 unleashed, and what it didn’t

    Marcus Colla
    The story of “post-Wall” Central Europe is not simply a straight line from liberalism’s triumph to its collapse.
  • 27 Aug 2019
    • Europe
    • Diplomacy
    • United States

    Macron tries to put the spark back into the G7

    Hervé Lemahieu
    By keeping Trump from derailing the proceedings, the self-anointed saviour of the West scored a tactical win.
  • 5 Jul 2019
    • Defence & Security
    • Europe
    • United States

    The burden of friendship: Germany, Trump and NATO

    Marcus Colla
    Germany earns a special ire in the President’s complaints, but Berlin sees less challenge in dollars and more in trust.
  • 21 Jun 2019
    • Global Issues
    • Europe
    • Russia

    Accountability for flight MH17: a long and winding road …

    Priya Pillai
    Trials in absentia are problematic, but as with the Lockerbie trial, the quest for justice will be arduous and complex.
  • 10 May 2019
    • Europe
    • Australia
    • Migration

    My mother’s life: faraway dreams, new growth and seeking acceptance

    Scott Winter
    Born to a world in flames, set back by illness, an adventure to Australia would strengthen the threads of a nation.
  • 30 Apr 2019
    • Europe
    • United States
    • Australia
    • Migration

    Visa tussles: here come the Irish again

    Alan C. Tidwell
    Australia’s privileged access to a US special working visa class is under challenge once more and will likely be lost.
  • 17 Apr 2019
    • Europe
    • France

    Notre Dame: the day after the big fire

    Daniel Woker
    A first-hand look at the destruction leads to wonder if people will appreciate connections more than differences?
  • 1 Apr 2019
    • Europe

    Do you care about Slovakia? You should

    Merriden Varrall
    Right-wing populists are meant to be on the march, yet one European presidential election bucked the trend.
  • 7 Mar 2019
    • Europe

    The global significance of an electoral showdown in Europe

    Daniel Woker
    The May elections shape as a contest for the heart of the European Union and win back voters who feel abandoned.
  • 22 Feb 2019
    • Europe
    • United States
    • The Trump Presidency

    Trouble in Munich: the transatlantic breakup

    Michael Fullilove
    <p>Europe and America read from diverging scripts at the annual strategic confab, the Munich Security Conference.</p>
  • 13 Feb 2019
    • Europe
    • Australia
    • Review

    Film review: They Shall Not Grow Old

    Joan Beaumont
    Peter Jackson has reclaimed the voices of veterans, and with technical prowess offered a glimpse of the battlefield.
  • 29 Nov 2018
    • Europe
    • United States
    • Russia

    Russia-Ukraine: soggy response to Kerch aggression

    John Besemeres
    It is not tensions that are escalating but the relentless Russian acts of aggression against Ukraine.
  • 20 Nov 2018
    • Europe
    • European Union
    • United Kingdom

    Brexit: the Northern Ireland conundrum

    Luke Dawes
    In a break from the past, Sinn Fein should take up its long empty seats in Westminster and offer a key to negotiations.
  • 2 Oct 2018
    • Europe
    • Germany

    Germany: A tale of two conservatisms

    Marcus Colla
    Merkel is facing a slow moving political crisis caused by a schism between mainstream and far-right conservatism.
  • 17 Jul 2018
    • Europe
    • United States

    The President, his partners, and Putin

    David Ritchie
    If America’s allies in Europe were ever in doubt, now they know: the President is a US-only leader.
  • 4 Jul 2018
    • Europe

    Denmark: fading out ghettoes

    Amina McCauley
    A bid “to ensure good Danish knowledge” has raised fears of Islamophobia.
  • 18 Jun 2018
    • Europe
    • United States

    The ever-widening Atlantic

    Marcus Colla
    Battening hatches and waiting for the Trump storm to pass is hardly a pragmatic solution to concerns of a world in flux.
  • 15 Jun 2018
    • Europe
    • United States

    The US and the West: with friends like that ...

    David Ritchie
    Lost trust between leaders and policy concerns under Trump have hardened into an existential crisis.
  • 25 May 2018
    • Europe

    Ireland’s abortion referendum

    Clare Murphy
    A divisive campaign not only challenges Ireland’s place in the world but also exposes the vulnerability of elections to foreign interference. 
  • 18 May 2018
    • Europe
    • Russia

    Russia: patrons of assassinations

    Ewen Levick
    Leaders promote and protect their clients to secure a debt of personal loyalty, and the cost of betrayal is high.
  • 14 May 2018
    • Europe

    AfD and the politics of German identity

    Marcus Colla
    The far-right party Alternative für Deutschland is rattling the Bundestag by pushing identity to the centre of German politics.
  • 10 May 2018
    • Europe
    • United States
    • Iran

    Can Europe salvage the Iran deal?

    Dina Esfandiary
    <p>The EU had more than a year to plan, but instead sought to downplay Trump’s statements and appease him.</p>
  • 19 Apr 2018
    • Europe
    • Syria

    Europe: the movers and the shakers

    David Ritchie
    The responses to the Syria strikes illustrate a troubling divide in Europe in defending Western principles.
  • 17 Apr 2018
    • Europe
    • United States
    • Iran

    As threats to Trump mount, allies must uphold the Iran deal

    Barbara Slavin
    Perhaps France’s Emmanuel Macron can convince Trump he will retain far more leverage over Iran within the existing nuclear deal.
  • 13 Apr 2018
    • Europe

    Europe and its populists

    David Ritchie
    The triumph of Viktor Orbán in Hungary is not just a curious and isolated development.
  • 11 Apr 2018
    • Europe
    • Australia
    • China
    • Russia

    Australia vs China, Europe vs Russia

    Daniel Woker
    Surprising parallels in international relations appear to lead to similar replies.
  • 6 Apr 2018
    • Europe
    • China

    Chinese belts and roads stir mixed reactions in Europe

    Hans Jørgen Gåsemyr , Bjørnar Sverdrup-Thygeson
    Europeans are growing more wary of China, but still welcome many of its contributions.
  • 8 Mar 2018
    • Europe

    The choice between hard or soft Brexit

    Georgina Downer
    Britain might be technically free of the EU on 30 March 2019, but just how free remains an extremely vexed question.
Pagination
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