- Our research
- Hits: 368
Currently, the Intermarium Institute team is working on a collective research monograph on the origins, history, present and future of the Intermarium. In this research, the team of the Institute and the experts we involve in cooperation will analyze the genesis of the idea of the Intermarium, its development over the centuries, the current state of the idea, trace the history of the Intermarium space from the Middle Ages to the present, as well as the prospects and configurations of the existence of the Intermarium space in the future, taking into account foreign, domestic, social, economic and other factors.
You can also explore our other research:
1. Nuclear Prospects of the Intermarium Countries
The nuclear ambitions of the Adriatic-Baltic-Black Sea region countries were shaped back in the socialist era. Today, the member states of the Three Seas Initiative operate 12 nuclear power plants: 4 in Ukraine (one of them — the Zaporizhzhia NPP — is located in temporarily occupied territory), 2 in the Czech Republic, 2 in Slovakia, and 1 each in Romania, Bulgaria, Hungary, and Slovenia. Belarus also has a nuclear power plant, which may become an important participant in the region’s integration projects.
2. Information and Psychological Operations as an Integral Element of New Generation Wars in the Context of the Russian-Ukrainian War
The events of the Russian-Ukrainian war demonstrate that success on the battlefield does not always depend on the number of troops or equipment. Often, the decisive factor is effective disinformation of the enemy. In the era of post-truth and modern information technologies, when verifying the accuracy of information becomes increasingly difficult, information and psychological operations are turning into a key instrument of influence — on the military, civilians, elites, and the international community.
3. A Country Without a Future: What Cannot Be Hidden Behind the Kremlin’s Bluff
The Kremlin’s propaganda machine seeks to disguise Russia’s internal crises and international isolation through bluff and intimidation. However, economic decline, demographic challenges, sanctions, and the weakening of its geopolitical influence reveal a state without a sustainable future. The myth of Russian power is gradually eroding, exposing vulnerabilities that no rhetoric can conceal.