Tag: Visegrad Group

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All You Need to Know About Visegrad Group
INFOGRAPHICS
All You Need to Know About Visegrad Group
December 22, 2021

The Visegrad Group is a cultural and political alliance of four Central European countries originally designed to further their integration to the EU. However, about a decade after joining the EU they began to sharply disagree with the EU establishment on many issues.

VIDEO: The Visegrad Nations Have Nailed Their Complaints to the EU’s Door
July 6, 2021

What is the “Visegrad Group” and why does it matter to the future of the European Union? Watch the video and read more in the article by Tim Kirby.

VIDEO: The Visegrad Nations Have Nailed Their Complaints to the EU’s Door
The Visegrad Nations Have Nailed Their Complaints to the EU’s Door
World
The Visegrad Nations Have Nailed Their Complaints to the EU’s Door
July 6, 2021

The Visegrad nations in the center of Europe are challenging the orthodoxy of the EU elite and throughout history direct challenges to enforced dogmas spark a lot of chaos, change, and empower others to stand against the status quo.

A Counter Vision for Poland
May 11, 2019

Poland’s vision for Europe should be one where Poland matters, where it is at the heart of something important and not just on the borderlands between great powers.

A Counter Vision for Poland
World
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The Polish-American Landmine under the Visegrad Group
World
The Polish-American Landmine under the Visegrad Group
September 28, 2014

Conflicts within the European Union are continuing to intensify, and one of the most successful regional projects in Europe – the Visegrad Group – is at risk… Rather than associating themselves with the policy of Brussels and Warsaw regarding Ukraine, Budapest, Prague and Bratislava are discussing the economy, calculating their losses as a result of anti-Russian sanctions, and even criticising the European Union. Warsaw’s dissatisfaction with the course of events is growing. A lengthy article published in the leading Polish newspaper Gazeta Wyborcza on 19 September puts the question bluntly: why is the Visegrad Group not united in its condemnation of Russia, and why is it not hurrying to rally its members around Poland as the main defender of Ukraine? Hungarians, Czechs and Slovaks are accused of collective amnesia, what the newspaper calls exaggerated trade and economic links with Russia…