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1. A battle against time – and against Putin’s Russia

2. The Russian-Ukrainian War: An Opportunity to Strengthen the AfCFTA

3. EU-South Korea Extend Cooperation Beyond the Economy

4. Prescription for Military Paralysis: Wartime Reactor Meltdowns (Occasional Paper 2305)

5. NATO in the North: The emerging division of labour in Northern European security

6. Drafting Greece’s “Internal Security Strategy” – Challenges and Prospects

7. Addressing Cohesion Policy’s identity crisis in a changing European Union

8. Quantum technologies and value chains: Why and how Europe must act now

9. Soldiers out, civilians left behind: EU lessons from the evacuation of Kabul

10. EU-Ukraine wartime trade: Overcoming difficulties, forging a European path

11. Charting a Transatlantic Approach to Russia: A Working Paper of the Transatlantic Forum on Russia

12. The EU and CT-P/CVE in its external action

13. The EU as a Soft Power Superpower: Why a Green Marshall Plan for the Sahel Is Imperative

14. The Russian Soldiers’ Question Revisited

15. Mobilizing Against Russia? Some Reflections on the Security Deadlock Called Ukraine

16. Georgian-Greek Relations: Building a Strategic Dimension

17. Europe after Putin’s War: EU Foreign and Defence Policy in the new European security architecture

18. Achieving qualitative superiority: Greek conscription and the Turkish threat

19. After Russia’s invasion of Ukraine: Unity is good, but ambition is better

20. Overcoming the ambition-unity dilemma

21. Parliamentary oversight of the police and the EU accession process – a missing link in the fundamentals-first approach

22. Geopolitics is Local – Ramifications of Chinese Projects for Human Security in Serbia

23. Rethinking the Dutch position towards the Western Balkans in the new security environment in Europe

24. Resilience to Violent Extremism in Serbia: The Case of Sanjak

25. NATO’s 2022 Strategic Concept: Matching Ambition with Reality

26. Walking a Fine Line: Turkey’s Mediation between Russia and Ukraine, and Relations with the West

27. Germany and the Ukraine Crisis: End of the Age of Illusions

28. A Primer on the 2022 National Security Strategy

29. Blowback from Russia’s invasion of Ukraine

30. Russian-Turkish Relations and Implications for U.S. Strategy and Operations

31. The African-France Summit and an Overview of its Recommendations Since 1973

32. Europe’s Area of Maritime Interest in Northeast Asia

33. The “New Uzbekistan”: Turkey’s New Partner in the Pan-Turkist Organization of Turkic States

34. The differences between Western and non-Western US allies in the Ukraine war

35. Japan and the War in Ukraine

36. What is the agenda for the Eastern Mediterranean?

37. British Pugwash Note on the Absence of Sole Purpose in NATO’s 2022 Strategic Concept

38. Russia’s threat against the Jewish Agency is a Bargaining Measure

39. Ukraine War Distracts US from China, Legitimizes Nuclear Bombs

40. The Libyan EEZ Challenge: Israel Should Reject Turkey’s Claims in the Eastern Mediterranean

41. Mine Action as a Confidence- and Security-building Measure in the OSCE Region

42. Blockchain Technology: An Innovative Policy Tool for Enhancing Conventional Arms Control and Verification

43. Commitment to Control Weaponised Artificial Intelligence: A Step Forward for the OSCE and European Security

44. An Abrupt Awaking to the Realities of a Pandemic: Learning Lessons From The Onset of COVID-19 in the EU and Finland

45. EU Strategic Autonomy in the Shadow of Geopolitical Rivalry: A View from Moscow

46. Strengthening EU Civilian Crisis Management: The Civilian CSDP Compact and Beyond

47. China–EU Connectivity in an Era of Geopolitical Competition

48. Opportunities for Danish stabilisation policy to engage with climate- and livelihood-related conflict: New approaches to fragility in the Horn of Africa and Sahel

49. What threatens NATO – and what members can do? The case of Norway and Poland

50. Resilience in the age of crises

51. Cooperation in Tertiary Prevention of Islamist Extremism

52. Countering Zero-Sum Relations in the Middle East: Insights from the Expert Survey

53. “The Montreux Petition” and Creeping Islamization of the Turkish Military

54. The EU’s Defense Ambitions: Understanding the Emergence of a European Defense Technological and Industrial Complex

55. Great Expectations: Defining A Trans-Mediterranean Cybersecurity Agenda

56. Dealing with the Neighbours: The case for an affiliate membership of the European Union and a new Security Council

57. Mind the Gap: Priorities for Transatlantic China Policy

58. Guidelines for Intelligence Oversight for Parliamentary Committees in the Assembly of the Republic of North Maced

59. Cybersecurity in the Western Balkans: A Guide to Public-Private Partnerships

60. Cybersecurity Capacity Building and Donor Coordination in the Western Balkans

61. Unlocking European Defence. In Search of the Long Overdue Paradigm Shift

62. Russia or the West – Which Should Jerusalem Choose?

63. What does the Deraa surrender mean for Iran and Russia in Syria?

64. Communicating in Tertiary ­Prevention of Islamist Extremism

65. The pandemic has overturned our old understandings of security

66. Finnish foreign policy during EU membership: Unlocking the EU’s security potential

67. Government reports on Finnish foreign and security policy: Relevant but not without problems

68. The Crisis of Nuclear Arms Control and its Impact on European Security

69. EU Security Perspectives in an Era of Connectivity: Implications for Relations with China

70. The Arms Control–Regional Security Nexus in the Middle East

71. Increasing Member State Contributions to EU Civilian CSDP Missions

72. Will a European Security Council Bring Strategic Relevance?

73. Beyond Corona: Getting EU Economic Security Right

74. Russian pipelines and EU energy security: Utilizing the externality elements of the EU’s regulatory framework

75. Towards an EU Hydrogen Economy: Policy and Energy Security Perspectives

76. Greek-American relations: what next?

77. Greek-Russian Relations: A Potential to Mend Strained Ties

78. Dealing with Russia: Towards a Coherent Belgian Policy

79. Belgium Should Not Change Strategy on Her Contribution to NATO's Nuclear Role Sharing

80. China's Rise as a Global Security Actor: Implications for NATO

81. Etched in Stone: Russian Strategic Culture and the Future of Transatlantic Security

82. The persistent refugee crisis in Europe. The legal and management framework of the European Union / La persistente crisis de los refugiados en Europa. El marco jurídico y de gestión de la Unión Europea

83. Terrorism in Afghanistan: A Joint Threat Assessment

84. Hard security dynamics in the Baltic Sea region: From turbulence to tense stability

85. How Germany and France Could Play a Leading Role in International Donor Coordination

86. Monitoring in German Bilateral Development Cooperation: A Case Study of Agricultural, Rural Development and Food Security Projects

87. “Irregular” Migration and Divergent Understandings of Security in the Sahel

88. China Global Security Tracker, No.6

89. Data Is Dangerous: Comparing the Risks That the United States, Canada and Germany See in Data Troves

90. The Visegrád Four and the Security of NATO’s “Eastern Flank”

91. Russia Attempts to Move Closer to Egypt as US Withdraws

92. Turkey’s Salafists, ISIS, and the Revolving Doors of Turkish Prisons

93. An EU response to Turkey’s increased aggressiveness

94. Rising Tensions and Security Chaos in Syria’s Deraa Province

95. The Impact of COVID-19 on Russia’s Middle East and Syria Policies

96. COVID-19 in Turkish Controlled Areas and Idlib

97. The Battle for the Tribes in Northeast Syria

98. America’s ‘Turkey Dilemma’ in the Mediterranean

99. Is Escalation Between France and Turkey in the Middle East and Beyond Inescapable?

100. Security, Stability, and Counter-Terrorism in Idlib: A Turkish Perspective