Researching Baltic security challenges after the annexation of Crimea

The article aims to provide an insight into academic and military studies that investigate security challenges in the Baltic region after the annexation of Crimea. To do this in a systematic way, numerous academic and military studies and analyses in this field are divided into six broad categories:...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Veebel Viljar
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Sciendo 2019-06-01
Series:Journal on Baltic Security
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.2478/jobs-2019-0004
id doaj-d668e46b449e423e8479b1419db687df
record_format Article
spelling doaj-d668e46b449e423e8479b1419db687df2021-09-06T19:41:39ZengSciendoJournal on Baltic Security2382-92302019-06-0151415210.2478/jobs-2019-0004jobs-2019-0004Researching Baltic security challenges after the annexation of CrimeaVeebel Viljar0Baltic Defence College, Tartu, EstoniaThe article aims to provide an insight into academic and military studies that investigate security challenges in the Baltic region after the annexation of Crimea. To do this in a systematic way, numerous academic and military studies and analyses in this field are divided into six broad categories: literature on conventional threat scenarios in the Baltic region; studies on nuclear escalation scenarios; publications that describe Russian viewpoints in the current confrontation with the West; studies that discuss security policy and security perceptions of the Baltic countries and the national security models of Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania; studies on anti-access and area denial; and articles that analyse the dilemmas and challenges in association with understanding the essence of deterrence in the context of modern hybrid warfare and the build-up of a viable deterrence model in the Baltic region. In total, about 40 publications from the period between 2014 and 2019 are represented in this article. While some studies are already well known, others have undeservedly remained somewhat overlooked. This article attempts to correct this by highlighting and comparing the results of the most interesting and intriguing studies in this field. Through this, the author strived to maintain a balance between studies conducted both by military experts and by academics.https://doi.org/10.2478/jobs-2019-0004baltic statessecurity
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Veebel Viljar
spellingShingle Veebel Viljar
Researching Baltic security challenges after the annexation of Crimea
Journal on Baltic Security
baltic states
security
author_facet Veebel Viljar
author_sort Veebel Viljar
title Researching Baltic security challenges after the annexation of Crimea
title_short Researching Baltic security challenges after the annexation of Crimea
title_full Researching Baltic security challenges after the annexation of Crimea
title_fullStr Researching Baltic security challenges after the annexation of Crimea
title_full_unstemmed Researching Baltic security challenges after the annexation of Crimea
title_sort researching baltic security challenges after the annexation of crimea
publisher Sciendo
series Journal on Baltic Security
issn 2382-9230
publishDate 2019-06-01
description The article aims to provide an insight into academic and military studies that investigate security challenges in the Baltic region after the annexation of Crimea. To do this in a systematic way, numerous academic and military studies and analyses in this field are divided into six broad categories: literature on conventional threat scenarios in the Baltic region; studies on nuclear escalation scenarios; publications that describe Russian viewpoints in the current confrontation with the West; studies that discuss security policy and security perceptions of the Baltic countries and the national security models of Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania; studies on anti-access and area denial; and articles that analyse the dilemmas and challenges in association with understanding the essence of deterrence in the context of modern hybrid warfare and the build-up of a viable deterrence model in the Baltic region. In total, about 40 publications from the period between 2014 and 2019 are represented in this article. While some studies are already well known, others have undeservedly remained somewhat overlooked. This article attempts to correct this by highlighting and comparing the results of the most interesting and intriguing studies in this field. Through this, the author strived to maintain a balance between studies conducted both by military experts and by academics.
topic baltic states
security
url https://doi.org/10.2478/jobs-2019-0004
work_keys_str_mv AT veebelviljar researchingbalticsecuritychallengesaftertheannexationofcrimea
_version_ 1717765722109640704