Sixth Edition

November 13th, 2024

Привет! Welcome back to our newsletter! Our much awaited 6th edition is here! If you missed our previous one, don't worry, click here to have a look.

This month, our editors delve into critical developments in global democracy and their security implications concerning Russia. In the United States, we analyze the drivers behind Donald Trump’s return to the White House and its repercussions on the prospect of a durable peace in Ukraine. In Georgia, recent elections reveal a shifting security paradigm, underscoring the region's growing importance to Western efforts to contain Russia amidst the ongoing war in Ukraine. In Ireland, we explore Russian intelligence activities and how they expose vulnerabilities in Ireland’s national security infrastructure, with broader implications for the security of the European Union as a whole.

Louis Benson, MSc Student, King's Russia Institute Louis Benson, MSc Student, King's Russia Institute

Georgia’s Election: Transitioning Security in the South Caucasus  

Georgia’s population took to the polls during the final weekend of October, with many voters hoping for a democratic change in the government to bolster their strong pursuit of future European integration. However, official results gave the pro-Russian ‘Georgian Dream’ party a 54 percent majority, highlighting the country’s ongoing struggle against high level corruption alongside the extension of its alignment to President Putin’s regime. 

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Alec Berube, MSc Student, King's Russia Institute Alec Berube, MSc Student, King's Russia Institute

Trump Won. What Happened, and What’s Next for Ukraine? 

For the first time since Grover Cleveland’s return to the White House in 1893, Donald J. Trump has secured a second, non-consecutive term as President. In the days following the election, political analysts and pundits have scrambled to dissect the forces that led to this outcome, often through a partisan lens. Yet what remains indisputable is that his victory heralds a renewed embrace of the inward-looking, nativist policies that characterized his first administration, raising profound questions about the trajectory of U.S. leadership on the global stage.

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