Publications
Articles, publications, books, tools and multimedia features from the U.S. Institute of Peace provide the latest news, analysis, research findings, practitioner guides and reports, all related to the conflict zones and issues that are at the center of the Institute’s work to prevent and reduce violent conflict.
![Russia’s War on Ukraine: How to Get to Negotiations](https://www.usip.org/sites/default/files/styles/summary_image/public/2022-07/20220713-51987935183_e114e4ac71_o-flickr-ac.jpg?itok=WCTLVoMx)
Russia’s War on Ukraine: How to Get to Negotiations
President Volodymyr Zelenskyy has said that Ukraine will negotiate with Russia when Ukrainian forces have pushed Russian army back to their positions of February 24, the day President Vladimir Putin initiated its latest war of aggression against Ukraine. The decision on when and how to negotiate rests entirely with Ukraine. But the United States and other allies can provide the support Ukrainians need in that process. What would that support look like?
![Biden’s Trip, and Ukraine’s War, Could Boost the Abraham Accords](https://www.usip.org/sites/default/files/styles/summary_image/public/2022-07/20220712-biden-mideast-1-nyt-ac.jpg?itok=kKWICcV5)
Biden’s Trip, and Ukraine’s War, Could Boost the Abraham Accords
President Biden’s Middle Eastern diplomatic mission this week contrasts with news reports and public discussion in the past year suggesting that the region has become a lesser priority for U.S. foreign and security policy. Biden’s visits to Saudi Arabia, Israel and the Palestinian West Bank territory build on a reality that Middle Eastern states have been knitting new relations, notably via the 2020 Abraham Accords. They are doing so in ways that Biden’s visit, and overall U.S. diplomacy, can advance.
![Juan Diaz-Prinz on Incentivizing Peace Talks in Ukraine](https://www.usip.org/sites/default/files/styles/summary_image/public/2018-02/usip-sirius-on-peace-podcast-logo.jpg?itok=P6tKk4cz)
Juan Diaz-Prinz on Incentivizing Peace Talks in Ukraine
As it stands, both sides see little reason to engage in peace talks. But USIP’s Juan Diaz-Prinz says that shouldn’t stop the international community from trying to incentive an end to the conflict: “We’ve got to try everything, and we’ve got to try every avenue until the right one fits.”
![To Counter Russia’s Aggression, Invest in Africa](https://www.usip.org/sites/default/files/styles/summary_image/public/2022-07/20220706_clean_energy_congo_12-nyt-ac.jpg?itok=vCSFguEw)
To Counter Russia’s Aggression, Invest in Africa
The current struggle by Western democracies to isolate Russia over its assaults on Ukraine and international rule of law will be costly to sustain. Spiking prices for fuels, fertilizers and foods that Russia exports are risking wider socio-economic instability in many countries. A long-term solution must include a Western partnership to invest economically and politically in Africa, arguably Russia’s most formidable potential economic competitor. This strategy can strengthen a rules-based world against economic coercion by authoritarian powers, stabilize African democracies by enabling them to deliver for their people and strengthen international institutions and laws by including African countries more fully in them.
![Donald Jensen on the NATO and G-7 Summits](https://www.usip.org/sites/default/files/styles/summary_image/public/2018-02/usip-sirius-on-peace-podcast-logo.jpg?itok=P6tKk4cz)
Donald Jensen on the NATO and G-7 Summits
With back-to-back G-7 and NATO summits this week, USIP's Donald Jensen says President Biden is focused on maintaining unity among allies and partners as the war in Ukraine grinds on: "Putin is counting on the faltering of Western assistance and political support for Ukraine … and that's what we’ll see discussed this week."
![Possible Russian Nuclear Deployments to Belarus Could Shift Europe’s Nuclear Balance](https://www.usip.org/sites/default/files/styles/summary_image/public/2022-06/20220630-army2016demo-075-wikicommons-ac.jpg?itok=xvZHUpTj)
Possible Russian Nuclear Deployments to Belarus Could Shift Europe’s Nuclear Balance
During a meeting with his Belarusian counterpart on June 25, Russian President Vladimir Putin indicated that “within the next several months,” Russia intends to transfer Iskander-M missiles — which can carry both conventional and nuclear warheads — to Belarus and begin upgrading Belarusian Su-25 fighters to carry nuclear weapons. Most of the details of the deal remain unknown or to be determined. But should Putin’s promise turn out to be more than nuclear bluster — something Putin and other Russian officials have resorted to since the beginning of the Russian invasion of Ukraine — the deployment could remake the nuclear balance in Europe and increase the risk of a potential NATO-Russia conflict occurring.
![Russia Has Relaxed its Rhetoric on NATO’s Nordic Expansion](https://www.usip.org/sites/default/files/styles/summary_image/public/2022-06/20220622-nato-assess-1-nyt-ac.jpg?itok=gVePcx5k)
Russia Has Relaxed its Rhetoric on NATO’s Nordic Expansion
Russia for years has warned that it would take military steps, among others, to counter any eventual decision by Finland or Sweden to join NATO. Yet since the Nordic countries declared that intention in mid-May, Russian officials’ changing rhetoric suggests that the Kremlin will seek to avoid any real confrontation over prospective NATO expansion.
![Another Way to Help Ukraine: Prepare Now for a Peace Process](https://www.usip.org/sites/default/files/styles/summary_image/public/2022-06/20220616-ukraine-zelenskyy-biden-nyt-ac.jpg?itok=wIgXD5yN)
Another Way to Help Ukraine: Prepare Now for a Peace Process
Three months of Russia’s savagery against Ukraine have left little space in current policy discussions for considering a peace process. President Biden vows to strengthen Ukraine before any negotiations by providing more arms and funds, and tougher sanctions on Russia. Alongside that vital support for Ukraine’s defense, it is important to develop other ways to help Ukraine end bloodshed and protect its future. One track of policy should be preparation now for negotiations if that opportunity emerges.
![Ukraine: How to Oppose Russia’s Weaponization of Corruption](https://www.usip.org/sites/default/files/styles/summary_image/public/2022-06/20220609-russia-ukraine-nukes-2-nyt-ac.jpg?itok=nrHvR2No)
Ukraine: How to Oppose Russia’s Weaponization of Corruption
Fifteen weeks of Ukrainians’ staunch resistance to Russia’s invasion has created an opportunity to weaken one of Russia’s main weapons to undermine democracy and stability in other countries, according to Eka Tkeshelashvili, a former foreign minister of Georgia. As democracies bolster Ukraine’s defense, they also should step up support for Ukraine to root out the corruption in business and government that has long been Russian President Vladimir Putin’s primary method to cripple the independence of Russia’s neighbors. One impact of the war will be to create a stronger political base for throttling corruption in Ukraine, Tkeshelashvili said.
![Russia’s War Has Created a Human Trafficking Crisis, Says U.N. Envoy](https://www.usip.org/sites/default/files/styles/summary_image/public/2022-06/20220607-ukraine-poland-refugees-1-nyt-ac.jpg?itok=2OFP_1Av)
Russia’s War Has Created a Human Trafficking Crisis, Says U.N. Envoy
The humanitarian crisis caused by Russia’s war in Ukraine is rapidly turning into a human trafficking one in which women and children, who make up the majority of the refugees fleeing the war, are being exploited, according to the United Nations Special Representative on Sexual Violence in Conflict Pramila Patten. She said there is an urgent need for a “coordinated regional approach” to what she described as “a crisis within a crisis.”