

Max Bergmann, What Could Come Next?: Assessing the Putin Regime’s Stability and Western Policy Options, Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS), published January 2023. TZ and Tamir Hayman, Open-Source Intelligence and the War in Ukraine, Institute for National Security Studies, published January 5, 2023.Īlthough the war is far from over, at this stage it is already possible to see how the use of open-source intelligence (OSINT), based on commercial capabilities, knowledge-sharing communities on social media, and artificial intelligence tools developed in the private sector have improved the ability of the Ukrainian military to gather intelligence to offset the relative advantage of the Russian military.

All material is free to read and download on JSTOR. Some of the material included here is now historical in light of the current situation, but the context provided by them will help readers understand the enormous changes that have occurred in Ukraine, whether over one hundred, thirty or even three years.Īs new reports become available, we add them to this page. These readings are from two groups: the first, non-governmental organizations and “think tanks” that monitor and analyze international relations and foreign policy the second, scholars working in Western and Eastern European history. On the first anniversary of the invasion of Ukraine by Russian troops, it does not appear that any movement toward a pause or end of aggression is in sight.
