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Ukraine: torn between grit and bitterness

19 April 2024
Just back from Kyiv, EUISS Director Steven Everts raises the alarm: Ukraine urgently needs more military support, above all air defence and fighter jets. He sets out four measures the EU needs to take now. Time is running out. Getting Ukraine to victory is achievable, it is the right thing to do and it is in our own interest.

Decoding global contestation

13 March 2024

Director Steven Everts presented the Institute's upcoming analysis to the PSC, highlighting a shift from fragmented alliances to a more active contestation of the current global order.

Amid wars and elections: getting the EU political transition right

23 January 2024
Against the backdrop of two major wars in Ukraine and the Middle East, the EU is bracing for a pivotal year with two important elections: the European parliamentary elections and the US presidential elections, as well as crucial decisions on who gets appointed to the top jobs at the head of the EU’s institutions.

Steven Everts quoted on possible Trump reelection

21 January 2024

'Given the enormous role the United States plays in European security, we now have to think again about what this means for our own politics, for European defense and for Ukraine.'

The power and limits of data for peace

12 January 2024
This Brief analyses the EU’s conflict early warning and analysis system and its role in conflict prevention, and examines how it can be further strengthened to support the EU’s preventive action.

Navigating a power political world

29 November 2023
The Institute’s new Commentary section, featuring articles by EUISS analysts on topical issues, kicks off with an article by the EUISS director on how the EU should respond to the challenges of an increasingly competitive and transactional international environment.

Easing, suspending and phasing out

04 September 2023
This Brief examines the idea that compliance can be promoted through sanctions easing or relief. In particular, it shows how the gradual easing of sanctions employed in the field of development cooperation might be usefully transferred to the foreign policy realm.

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