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News & Publications
Break Point: Scenarios and Regional Implications of the Russo-Ukrainian War

Published on October 23, 2023, by the Institute for Human Sciences (IWM), this essay offers a comprehensive analysis of the ongoing Russo-Ukrainian War and its broader regional consequences. Two years on, the essay remains strikingly relevant as it anticipated structural dilemmas that now define Ukraine’s battlefield and diplomatic realities in 2025. Jarábik examines the war's origins and argues that the West's understanding of these events remains oversimplified, leading to underestimation of Ukraine's resilience and NATO's unpreparedness for the current war of attrition. Break Point shifted focus from a binary “victory or defeat” lens to the long-term consequences of a frozen conflict. Western policymakers increasingly align with this view, managing escalation risks and strategic fatigue rather than expecting quick resolutions. 

augusta 10, 2025
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augusta 8, 2025
Zelenskyy Faces His "Moment of Maximum Pressure" (FT Citation)
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augusta 8, 2025
Ukraine’s Political Crisis Deepens as Battlefield Pressures Mount (Op-Ed)
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Trump pointing
augusta 6, 2025
The EU–U.S. Trade Deal: One Way Street (Op-Ed)
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júla 30, 2025
Explaining Ukraine’s Political Crisis (Meduza Interview)
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júla 24, 2025
Ukraine’s Military Spending Under Scrutiny (Media Citation)
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Moldova at a Crossroads: Navigating Election Risks and EU Prospects

Published by Carnegie’s Russia Eurasia Center on July 15, 2025, this memo follows Balázs Jarábik’s working visit to Chișinău ahead of Moldova’s critical 2025 September parliamentary elections. The analysis highlights rising stakes and growing risks of (self-)deception as Moldova approaches this pivotal vote. While the country’s European Union trajectory is unlikely to reverse, its pace will hinge less on Chișinău’s reform efforts and more on Brussels’ readiness to deepen enlargement. In an increasingly securitized regional environment, the greater threat is not backsliding on reforms but the escalation of domestic tensions triggered by a mishandled electoral process—an opening Russia is well-positioned to exploit. 

júla 15, 2025
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júla 7, 2025
Kyiv’s Government Reshuffle (Media Citation)
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júla 6, 2025
Ukraine Won the First Phase of the War, but Could Still Lose the Second (Interview)
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