Turkish delight
Recep Tayyip Erdogan stands to gain the most once the dust from Putin’s invasion of Ukraine settles on the global stage

Turkey has also emerged as the principal beneficiary of the Black Sea grain deal, the agreement Erdogan brokered to enable Ukrainian agricultural exports amid Russia’s naval blockade.
With Putin beholden to Erdogan, the Armenian population in the disputed territory of Nagorno-Karabakh can no longer count on Russian military protection and has been enduring a months-long blockade by Azerbaijan, Turkey’s close ally.
Erdogan’s triumph aside, the war in Ukraine is essentially a conflict between two diametrically opposed political systems: autocracy and democracy.

Russia’s drone pipeline
How Iran helps Moscow produce an ever-evolving unmanned fleet for use against Ukrainian civilians

Alone, together
While Volodymyr Zelensky appears upbeat about US security guarantees, Davos only demonstrated Trump’s unreliability

Neighbourhood watch
With NATO and the EU unsuited to meet Europe’s evolving security needs, it’s time to formalise the coalition of the willing

Going to cede
Restitution of lost territory can take decades and is only realistic in certain geopolitical circumstances

The race for the Arctic
Trump’s outlandish threats to seize Greenland risk ushering in a new world order based on spheres of domination
A grave miscalculation
Putin’s attempt to re-enact World War II in Ukraine has gone horribly wrong

A frozen war is not peace
Why a premature peace deal in Ukraine could just be kicking the can of Russian revanchism down the road

Just 10% from peace
Novaya Gazeta Europe’s Kyiv correspondent reflects on another year of war and muses on what 2026 may bring

The year that could be
Even without cause for optimism about the state of the world, we mustn’t allow hope to die
