
Latest Articles
Kremlin Wagging the Dog: The Sergei Mironov Episode
          By Greg ShtraksOne hundred and five years and one week after the peaceful marchers led by Orthodox priest Father Gaston were fired upon by Tsarist troops, another mass protest, this time in Kaliningrad, threatened to undermine the ruling regime of Russia. “Bloody Sunday”, as the... MORE        
    	“Exotic Schemes” in Russia’s Georgia Policy
          By Giorgi KvelashviliOn February 1, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov was asked during a press conference to comment on the pro-Russia Georgian opposition’s latest “proposal that if Russia renounces its recognition for South Ossetia and Abkhazia, Georgia will renounce joining NATO.” In response, Lavrov said,... MORE        
    	Trouble in Paradise
          By Jiri KominekFor those readers who have a fresh, firsthand recollection of public protest in Russia, the formula is quite simple. A few hundred anti-government protesters turn up to peacefully vent their dissatisfaction with the government, and the Kremlin responds by sending in an exponentially... MORE        
    	Tymoshenko Smells Fear; Yanukovych Smells Victory
          (Photo: RFE/RL)By Tammy LynchAs debates go, the Ukraine Presidential debate on February 1 was lacking fireworks or drama. Of course, it’s hard to have fireworks and drama when only one candidate shows up.As noted in last week’s blog, presidential candidate Viktor Yanukovych previously declared his... MORE        
    	Russia’s Efforts to Sell Its Military Aggression against Georgia as “Humanitarian Intervention”
          By Giorgi KvelashviliOn January 22 2010, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov held a press conference to sum up his country’s foreign policy activities in 2009. As it has already become a peculiar tradition for top-level Russian leaders, including Prime Minister Vladimir Putin and President Dmitry... MORE        
    	Ukraine: Will Yanukovych Dodge the Debate?
          By Tammy LynchOn February 1, Ukraine’s two presidential candidates will meet for their first and only official debate. Or at least that’s the plan, according to the Central Election Commission.In reality, it's highly likely that one of the candidates – Viktor Yanukovych – will skip... MORE        
    	Openly Pro-Russian Noghaideli Presents Alternative to NATO
          By Giorgi KvelashviliAs it has already been reported, Georgia’s former prime minister who now leads the opposition Movement for a Just Georgia, Zurab Noghaideli, visited Moscow several times in December 2009 (https://jamestownfoundation.blogspot.com/2010/01/former-prime-minister-zurab-noghaideli.html). During one of his visits to the Russian capital, he was received by... MORE        
    	From Russia with Love
          By Jiri KominekSpy scandals involving Russian intelligence successfully penetrating or attempting to penetrate the upper echelons of government in NATO-member states that recently joined the alliance have made headlines on numerous occasions.In the tiny Baltic state of Estonia, authorities arrested Herman Simm, the former head... MORE        
    	In Ukraine, The Beat Goes On …. and On
          By Tammy LynchUkraine’s presidential election campaign took an odd turn on Monday, when a printing press responsible for producing ballots was bizarrely raided.As the video above from Ukrayinska Pravda demonstrates, a group of plain-clothed men smashed windows and pushed through the doors of the printing... MORE        
    	Russian and Georgian Religious Leaders React Differently, Now on Tragedy in Haiti
          By Giorgi KvelashviliThe Georgian and Russian churches have long found themselves heavily involved in political antagonism affecting almost all segments of the broad divide between pro-Western Georgia and increasingly isolationist and irredentist Russia. During the war between the two countries in August 2008, the Georgians... MORE