ABSTRACT

This book is a very timely account of the legal, economic and political consequences for border states caught in the current tug-of-war between the West and Russia.The Ukraine crisis of 2014 focused policy-makers’ attention on a geographical area full of dangers that had gone relatively unnoticed since the breakup of the Soviet Union, namely the security dynamics of the border states of Eastern Europe and the Black Sea. Twenty-five years after the collapse of the Soviet Union, a strong Russia returns alternatively threatening and cajoling, but at risk itself of suffering economic injury from western reprisals over its nostalgia for the map drawn at Yalta. That conflict, which hotted up over the Ukraine, was soon being played out over - and in the air space over - Syria and Turkey, while the border states themselves are likely to be drawn into the European refugee crisis and have the potential, after the 2015 Paris atrocities, to be breeding grounds for international terrorists.

This groundbreaking book contains prescient warnings that must be heeded by leaders and diplomats on both sides of the East-West divide.

chapter |13 pages

Introduction

The plight of Europe's border states

chapter 1|22 pages

New states, new borders

Nothing succeeds like secession?

chapter 2|32 pages

One rope, two ends

NATO and EU facing Russian interests

chapter 4|32 pages

Migration and transnational crime

Europe, the new Noah's Ark

chapter 7|28 pages

Soft power of the east

From benign influence to dominance and informational warfare

chapter 8|21 pages

Reestablishing a fault line between Europe's East and West

Russia's ‘hybrid war’ and how should NATO respond