Dmitri Trenin
RIAC Member.
Graduated from the Military Institute (now Military University) in Moscow. Holds a Ph.D. degree in History.
Served in the Soviet and Russian army. Liaison officer in the external relations branch of the Group of Soviet Forces in Germany (Potsdam). Senior lecturer at the Military Institute. Member of the delegation at the Geneva talks on nuclear and space weapons. Senior research fellow at the NATO Defense College and fellow at the Institute of Europe of the Russian Academy of Sciences. Head of the scientific council, lead researcher and chairman of the Foreign and Security Policy program of the Carnegie Moscow Center.
Since 2008, Director of the Carnegie Moscow Center.
Author of over 10 books published in Russia, the USA, Germany, China and other countries.
Academic focus: transatlantic and Eurasian security, international relations, Russian foreign policy, geopolitics and globalization, and post-soviet Eurasia.
Articles
The world’s power center’s journey, a half millennium later, will have come full circle. Russia is not a bystander, but part of the action, pushing for change
What lessons can Russia and Chine draw from the Korean War to better handle conflict?
The 2010s should become a period that defines Russia's destiny for decades to come
20 years on. How has the world changed since the disintegration of the USSR?
Member Comments
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Poll conducted
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In your opinion, what are the US long-term goals for Russia?
U.S. wants to establish partnership relations with Russia on condition that it meets the U.S. requirements 33 (31%) U.S. wants to deter Russia’s military and political activity 30 (28%) U.S. wants to dissolve Russia 24 (22%) U.S. wants to establish alliance relations with Russia under the US conditions to rival China 21 (19%)
Владимир Орлов, Елена Карнаухова