Crush or be crushed
Why a policy of realpolitik towards Alexander Lukashenko’s regime is doomed to fail

“If the Belarusian opposition asked me for advice, I would tell them to agree to anything Lukashenko says in exchange for free parliamentary elections and parliamentary immunity,” Ukraine’s former Interior Minister Yuriy Lutsenko said in a recent interview with independent Belarusian media outlet Zerkalo.
In its fourth decade of Lukashenko’s rule, there are clear signs that Belarus’s transformation from an authoritarian dictatorship to a totalitarian one is nearing its completion.
You’d be hard pushed to find anyone willing to say that realpolitik as applied to dictators who unleashed bloody wars, mass repression and genocide has ever been a successful “strategy”.

All change
Domestic political concerns mean that Russian anti-war activists in Türkiye face a precarious new reality

Faith in victory
How Ukrainians can still win as they fight to defend Western democracy

Zelensky’s perfect storm
Washington’s new national security strategy adds to Ukraine’s woes and exacerbates Europe’s dilemmas

No end in sight
No amount of external pressure can force peace on two parties with fundamentally incompatible objectives

Ctrl-alt-defy
How Ukrainians have used memes to counter Russia’s propaganda machine

Trump’s crony diplomacy
The US president is entrusting inexperienced loyalists with complex foreign policy issues, and it shows

Imperishable
A corruption investigation into Zelensky’s inner circle shows Kyiv is on the right path

Doom mongers
A corruption scandal has left Zelensky vulnerable to US and Russian moves to impose an indefensible peace deal on Ukraine

Margaritaville
Would the departure of RT’s longtime head sound the death knell for Russia’s notorious propaganda network?





