By Richard Weitz
January 19th 2017, the CACI Analyst
The Trump administration will soon undertake a comprehensive review of Russia-US relations and U.S. policy toward the rest of Eurasia. Although the new team will presumably consider many options, the president-elect’s statements imply that the U.S. will not soon support further NATO expansion or other actions that would strongly antagonize Moscow. Despite this limitation, the U.S. government will continue security ties with U.S. partners in Eurasia, such as Georgia. In practice, there are a number of steps the U.S. and Georgia can undertake to advance their mutual security.
- United States
- Georgia
- South Caucasus
- Eurasia
- Russia
- Georgia US relations
- NATO
- European Union
- Russo Georgian war 2008
- Georgian Armed Forces
- Azerbaijan
- Turkey
- Baku Tbilisi Ceyhan oil pipeline
- Baku Tbilisi Kars railway
- Eternity Military Drills
- Iran
- China
- EU Georgia trade
- Georgia China trade
- NATO mission in Kosovo
- NATO mission in Afghanistan
- NATO Annual National Program
- NATO Individual Partnership and Cooperation Program
- NATO Georgia Professional Development Program
- NATO Defense Education Enhancement Program
- NATO Smart Defense Initiative
- NATO Partnership for Peace program
- NATO Georgia Commission
- US Georgia Strategic Partnership
- WMD trafficking
- Arms control
- Abkhazia
- South Ossetia
- Terrorism
- Black Sea region
- Caspian Sea region
- Nagorno Karabakh conflict
- WMD proliferation
- Trump Administration
- US Congress