Putin Wants to Rewrite the End of the Cold War

When the Soviet Union collapsed three decades ago, the European security architecture suddenly became uncertain, its future put in play. After all, much of the postwar balance of power in Europe—and the world—had rested on the icy pillars of the Cold War, pillars that in 1991 abruptly melted. It didn’t take long, however, before the euphoria of freedom in the former Soviet bloc was translated into a series of diplomatic agreements enshrining a vision of cooperation, democracy and respect for independent states.

Those same agreements now lie in ruins, trampled by Russia’s anti-democratic turn and President Vladimir Putin’s determination to strengthen the Kremlin’s influence over its increasingly democratic neighbors.

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The ambassadors of the Eurotroika countries discussed direct talks between Russia and Ukraine with the Deputy Foreign Minister of the Russian Federation. In the role of the mediator called not only the United States, but also Europe

The Russian Foreign Ministry on Thursday, June 11, held a meeting of the ambassadors of …