Opinion / European Union and Wider Europe

When Borders Melt

My latest piece for DIPLOMAT wonders what happens when international borders start to melt: … some people think that borders are less and less important. This in turn seems to signify politically (or even morally) that within the European Union so-called nation states are less and less important. As perhaps […]

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Museum of the History of Polish Jews

At last this spectacular new museum in Warsaw is fully open and buzzing. So many sites in Poland recall how Poland’s Jewish community died. Now this one recalls how they lived. Here is a good piece from Timothy Garton Ash: “Mir zaynen do!” (“We are here!”) The defiant Yiddish refrain […]

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Assange and ‘Diplomatic Asylum’

A reader has sent me this fascinating email with many points of historical interest (reproduced with his permission) on the general subject of ‘diplomatic asylum’ (and the Assange case): Dear Charles  I’m a retired DS officer, who follows your website with interest.  I enjoy what you say and how you […]

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How World War Three Starts (Again)

It’s always good when a Pope picks up one’s ideas and gives them mass appeal. Here is Pope Francis warning that a ‘piecemeal World War Three‘ may have already begun: “Even today, after the second failure of another world war, perhaps one can speak of a third war, one fought piecemeal, […]

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Putin, Ukraine, Bosnia, Macbeth

My latest Telegraph piece on Ukraine is up on the DT website: Russia’s “principled demands” are unchanged: that Ukraine stay independent of all “blocs”; that eastern areas of Ukraine get radical autonomy allowing them to have special economic relations with Russia; and that Ukraine kisses goodbye to Crimea. A settlement […]

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Ukraine and NATO

One of the sharpest knives in the British Embassy in Moscow in the early 1990s was Christopher Granville. He was the first-ever UK diplomat to resign from the FCO to set up a new financial business in Russia. After various adventures he now is a leading member of the team at Trusted […]

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The Diplomatic Origins of WW1

It turns out that there is a healthy market out there for me whispering into your ears. In that spirit, here is my podcast for the FCO describing how the Foreign Office operated in the years before World War One started. Many surprising facts in it about the tiny elite […]

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NATO and Russia (and Ukraine): European Security Wobbles?

My new piece for Telegraph Blogs looks at NATO’s preparedness (ie lack of) for a new assertive Russia: It is hard to imagine any situation in which Moscow decided that a full-scale military attack on central Europe would be a productive and winning idea. But what about something far more […]

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Debating Russia and Ukraine

Here is the link to my latest foray with Voice of Russia. I was on the programme for a panel discussion with Sarah Lain (RUSI), Martin McCauley (SOAS) in London, and Simon Fentham-Fletcher of RenAsset Management (via feed from Moscow). The discussion is hosted by Peter Lavelle, an American based in […]

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Speechwriting: The Politics of Food (Sir Geoffrey Howe, 1986)

I am whirring away on my Speechwriting book. It takes me back to this effort that I prepared back in 1986 for the then Foreign Secretary, Sir Geoffrey Howe. The opulent surroundings and fine nourishment of the annual Lord mayor’s Diplomatic Banquet were not an obvious choice for a speech on […]

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