Nikolas Gvosdev


Nikolas Kirrill Gvosdev is a Russian-American international relations scholar. He is currently professor of national security studies at the U.S. Naval War College and the former Editor of the bi-monthly foreign policy journal, The National Interest. He writes as a specialist on US foreign policy as well as international politics as they affect Russia and its neighbors.

Biography

Gvosdev received his D.Phil. as a Rhodes Scholar at St Antony's College, Oxford.
He worked executive editor and the founding editor of The National Interest. In 2005 he appointed journal's now-defunct separate web edition, In The National Interest. Upon leaving the editorship in 2008, he was succeeded by Justine Rosenthal; he remains associated with the journal as a contributing editor. He wrote many articles, essays, books. He has appeared as an analyst and a commentator on television and radio likes CNN, Fox News, MSNBC, National Public Radio, BBC, C-SPAN's Washington Journal, CBC and Voice of America
Gvosdev lived in Washington, D.C. and served as Senior Fellow for strategic studies at the Nixon Center, and as an Adjunct Professor at Georgetown University and George Washington University until 2007. In 2008 he moved to Newport, Rhode Island and started teaching at the Naval War College, where he is Professor of National Security Affairs, holding the Captain Jerome E. Levy Chair in Economic Geography and National Security. He is married with one son.
Gvosdev is a Senior Fellow with the Foreign Policy Research Institute, specifically as part of the Eurasia Program and the Program on National Security.
Along with Dimitri K. Simes, Anatol Lieven, and John Hulsman, Gvosdev is seen as one of the proponents of the "new realism" in foreign policy—one that acknowledges a greater role for values than traditional realpolitik as espoused by Henry Kissinger but nonetheless puts a stress on setting priorities. He has also been one of the strongest proponents for engagement with Russia and has tended to view Vladimir Putin's government in a more positive light than most American commentators, characterizing his regime as "managed pluralism" rather than as an outright authoritarian state. Along with Ray Takeyh, he was an early skeptic of the proposition that the spread of democracy in the Middle East would bring pro-American governments to power.
Contributing to the anthology Our American Story, Gvosdev addressed the possibility of a shared American narrative and focused on a sense of community, writing "Shared participation in and celebration of the unfinished and ongoing American experiment is the best way to create and cement the bonds of fellowship and citizenship among Americans."

Books