Dmitri Trenin

Director
Carnegie Moscow Center
Trenin, director of the Carnegie Moscow Center, has been with the center since its inception. He also chairs the research council and the Foreign and Security Policy Program.
Education

PhD, Institute of the USA and Canada, Russian Academy of Sciences

Contact Information
Secondary Contact

Latest Analysis

    • Op-Ed

    Russia and the Reset

    • November 07, 2012
    • New York Times

    Barack Obama’s re-election may signal predictability in U.S.-Russian relations, but this relationship needs to be upgraded from largely tactical to strategic.

    • Op-Ed

    Resetting the Reset

    Whoever wins the U.S. presidency, Washington’s Russia policy needs a reassessment and a rethink. The choice for the new administration lies between keeping Russia on the periphery of the U.S. foreign policy and treating Russia as an asset in America’s global strategy.

    • Op-Ed

    Why Russians Prefer Obama—But Just Barely

    • November 05, 2012
    • Foreign Affairs

    For Russians, Obama seems to be a better choice for the next U.S. president, but in general, the Kremlin and the Russian public are watching the U.S. election rather calmly. It is a sign that the countries are no longer enemies but are not great friends.

    • Op-Ed

    Moscow on the Pacific: The Missing Piece in the “Pivot” to Asia

    • October 30, 2012
    • Current History

    The United States needs to begin paying more attention to Russia as part of its Asia-Pacific strategy if it wants a more stable balance to emerge in this critical region.

    • Op-Ed

    Middle East Dilemma for US

    • October 19, 2012
    • China Daily

    Since 2011, the driving forces in the Middle East have been the Arab people, the Gulf monarchies, Iran, and Turkey, not the United States. As global power realities shift, so must U.S. foreign policy.

    • Op-Ed

    Obama or Romney? The Russian View

    • October 17, 2012
    • openDemocracy

    Moscow would probably prefer Obama to win in the U.S. presidential elections, but a Romney win would not be seen as a disaster. Romney's Cold War-style rhetoric fits into Putin’s worldview and helps him to mobilize his supporters.

    • Strategic Europe

    What Russians Think

    • September 21, 2012

    This year’s Transatlantic Trends survey prepared by the German Marshall Fund of the United States included Russia, for the first time.

    • Op-Ed

    An Alternative to Force

    • September 14, 2012
    • Security Times

    Moscow is neither pro-Assad nor anti-West, but its position on the issues of the primacy of the UN Security Council and the importance of sovereignty will not change.

    • Article

    U.S. Democrats Tout Foreign and Security Policy as Their Strength

    Historically the U.S. Democrats have been perceived as weak in foreign policy and national security, but President Barack Obama has a strong record in these spheres.

    • Op-Ed

    Russia Can Pivot to the Pacific, Too

    • September 07, 2012
    • The Globalist

    Modern Russia has exploited its Asia-Pacific advantages rather poorly, if at all. The country must find a pathway to a dynamic future and make a pivot from West to East—where the greatest geopolitical challenge is rising.

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