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15d
National Security Journal on MSNThe Trump-Putin Summit Has the ‘Smell of Yalta and Munich’
Key Points and Summary: As Presidents Trump and Putin prepare to meet in Alaska, historical parallels to the disastrous ...
15d
RBC Ukraine on MSNRussia frames Alaska meeting as second Yalta Conference - ISW
The Kremlin is using the Alaska summit to position Russia as a global power equal to the US, and Vladimir Putin as an equal to President Donald Trump, according to a report by the US-based Institute ...
The president is an unreliable partner for Ukraine and potential plaything for Putin to flatter and manipulate.
OP-ED. On the eve of the summit between Donald Trump and Vladimir Putin, a coalition of human rights and civil society ...
On Aug. 18, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy and the leaders of several European countries came to the White House for ...
13dOpinion
Al Jazeera on MSNThe Alaska summit was not a ‘new Munich’, but it could be a ‘new Yalta’
Europe and Ukraine have to change their approach towards Trump or risk ceding more ground to Russia. These days, the Russian ...
The Alaska Summit wrapped up. As with these kinds of meetings, what’s actually said and agreed upon never gets passed to the ...
Why a new Yalta wouldn’t end the malaise between the West and Russia The political moment might seem propitious for a new Yalta, but such a system is likely to create more problems than it solves.
To equate Munich and Yalta isn’t just sloppy history. It erases the essential difference between surrender and solidarity in the face of total war.
By the time of Yalta, the Red Army occupied all of Poland and much of Eastern Europe. Theoretically, Churchill and Roosevelt could have refused to cut any deal with Stalin at Yalta.
No doubt about it—the Russians were changing. At Yalta, as at earlier conferences, Stalin and other Soviet bigwigs shed a little more of their personal isolation. Stalin mugged the cameras, ...
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