experts
Anatol Lieven
Senior Associate

about


This person is no longer with the Carnegie Endowment.

Anatol Lieven was a Senior Associate at the Carnegie Endowment in the Global Policy Program.

A journalist, writer, and historian, Lieven writes on a range of security and international affairs issues. He previously was editor of Strategic Comments, published by the International Institute for Strategic Studies (IISS) in London. There he also specialized in the former Soviet Union and in aspects of contemporary warfare.

From 1996 to 1997, he was a visiting senior fellow at the U.S. Institute of Peace. Previously he was a correspondent for the Financial Times in Eastern Europe, based in Budapest.

Lieven’s journalism career includes work as a correspondent for the Times (London) in the former Soviet Union from 1990 to 1996. Prior to 1990, Lieven was correspondent for the Times in Pakistan and Afghanistan. He also worked as a freelance journalist in India. In the autumn and winter of 1989, he covered the revolutions in Czechoslovakia and Romania for the Times.

Publications: A Spreading Danger: Time for a New Policy Toward Chechnya (Carnegie Policy Brief #35, 2005), Ambivalent Neighbors: The EU, NATO and the Price of Membership, edited with Dmitri Trenin (Carnegie, 2003); Ukraine and Russia: A Fraternal Rivalry (U.S. Institute of Peace, 1999); Chechnya: Tombstone of Russian Power (Yale University Press, 1998)


affiliations
education
B.A., Ph.D., Cambridge University 
languages
French, German, Russian

All work from Anatol Lieven

filters
128 Results
podcast
Analyzing the Afghan Peace Negotiations with Anatol Lieven and Rudra Chaudhuri

Anatol Lieven and Rudra Chaudhuri join Srinath Raghavan to analyze the implications of the recent intra-Afghan negotiations. Are the negotiating parties well-poised towards building a peace deal? And what are the prospects of talks leading to a successful peace deal in Afghanistan?

event
Democratic Transformation in Georgia
December 16, 2005

Georgian Foreign Minister Gela Bezhuashvili reviewed the accomplishments of President Mikhail Saakashvili's government and outlined its program for 2006.

In the Media
How The Democrats Have Been Paralysed By Bush
· May 6, 2005
Financial Times
In The Media
in the media
Warped Advice Blights American Intervention

In writing of the need to bring democracy to the Arab world, Natan Sharansky makes repeated parallels with America's propagation of its democratic message to the subject peoples of the Soviet Union and eastern Europe.

· March 17, 2005
In The Media
in the media
Now Let the Chechens Select Their Leader

The deeply regrettable death of the Chechen leader Aslan Maskhadov at the hands of Russian forces means that the Kremlin no longer has an alibi for its failure to pursue a political process in Chechnya. The West must pressure Russia to fulfill its committment to allow elections.

· March 14, 2005
In The Media
in the media
The Essential Vladimir Putin

A semiauthoritarian present isRussia’s best hope for a liberal future.

· February 28, 2005
REQUIRED IMAGE
commentary
A Spreading Danger: Time for a New Policy Toward Chechnya

The ongoing conflict in and around Chechnya is helping to feed the wider international jihadi movement, and is endangering the West as well as Russia. Mutual recriminations over the conflict have badly damaged relations between Russia and the West. While most of the blame for this lies with Russian policies, the Western approach to the issue has often been unhelpful and irresponsible.

· February 23, 2005