How Trump killed the Atlantic alliance
The transatlantic alliance is dead, and Trump has killed it. How could the next president restore it?
The transatlantic alliance is dead, and Trump has killed it. How could the next president restore it?
Podcast de notre discussion du 5 mars « Défense européenne : le couple franco-allemand au pied du mur » en présence d'Ulrike Esther…
Nous avons le plaisir de vous inviter à un Black Coffee Morning, en présence d'Ulrike Esther Franke, Olivier de France et Manuel Lafont Rapnouil sur le thème suivant : « Défense européenne : le couple franco-allemand au pied du mur »
Smaller EU member states are most committed and best place to push for alliances for a common energy policy and address climate change
Black Coffee Morning in cooperation with Georgia's Reforms Associates (GRASS).
Splits between Germany and Poland vis-à-vis Russia signal deeper divisions in the alliance, ones which threaten European security
Politicians from Macron to Di Maio have co-opted right-wing nationalist strategies in order to reach disillusioned voters. Instead, Europe's leaders must focus on crafting a new narrative ahead of May's EP elections.
At this year's Munich Security Conference, appearances by former US Vice President Joseph Biden and current Vice President Mike Pence offered the transatlanticists in attendance a portrait in contrasts. Yet to achieve the bright future promised by Biden, Europeans need to heed Pence's dark warnings.
Czy na miejsce liberalnego porządku międzynarodowego „wróci dżungla” i prawo silniejszego?
Will “the jungle grow back” and power politics replace the liberal order?