This is the first paper in a series devoted to the art of diplomacy, a lecture read by Yuri V. Dubinin, Professor of the Diplomacy Department at MGIMO-University, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of the Russian Federation, to the students of Moscow Linguistic University. In our age of public and ...
... may want to consider and learn from.
I suggest you look at the successes our international relations achieved during WWII and after. What diplomats and the intelligence services did helped to bring the war to its end faster and with fewer casualties. Diplomacy has not lost its significance today. I teach the masters course at the Moscow Institute (University) of International Relations (MGIMO) , and I feel I need to point to one thing about this university. Whatever ideas Russia may be entertaining ...
Barack Obama hopes to engage Russia in his effort to continue reducing nuclear armaments. For the president, this is vital for advancing his goal of a world less reliant on nuclear weapons. For Moscow, however, nuclear arms remain the bedrock of military security and a key component of Russia's international status. This does not necessarily doom Obama's approach, but it makes further reduction of U.S. and Russian nuclear arsenals contingent on Washington's willingness to consider Moscow's security...
On June 19, 2012, the Russian Council on Foreign Relations jointly with the Gorchakov Foundation for Public Diplomacy held a
round table on the topic Public Diplomacy as a Tool of Russian Foreign Policy: Opportunities, Problems and Prospects
. The event was attended by members of the Russian Council on Foreign Relations and the Gorchakov Foundation, representatives ...
What will diplomacy look like in one hundred years?
Future has already arrived. Diplomacy is radically and visibly changing. Facing new challenges, it is transforming its structures and methods, while integration diplomacy and para-diplomacy suggest new models....