Skip to content
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Youtube
USC Global Policy Institute

USC Global Policy Institute

  • Refugee Crises Think-a-Thon
    Register now for our signature annual event.
  • Eye on Ukraine
    The war in context: an analysis of the broader post-Soviet world.
  • Home
  • About
    • About GPI
    • GPI Fellows
    • GPI Alumni
  • Events
    • 2023 Refugee Crisis Think-a-Thon
    • Upcoming Programs
    • Past Programs
      • 2022 Global Media Think-a-Thon
      • 2021 Climate Change Think-a-Thon
      • 2021 Eurasian Human Rights Series
      • 2020 Election Event Series
  • Editorial Blog
    • News from the World
    • Opinion
    • Problems and Answers
    • Face-Off
  • Special Projects
    • Eye on Ukraine: Region in Focus
    • COP26: What’s At Stake
    • International Week of Social Justice
    • The Biden Doctrine
  • Resources
    • Active Learning
    • Publish Your Work
    • Internships and Fellowships

Martin Makaryan, Guest Contributor

Martin Makaryan is a Master’s in International Relations candidate at Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies (SAIS) and specializes in US foreign policy and international security with a focus on Europe and Eurasia. He was a Marcellus Policy Fellow in the Spring 2023 cohort at the John Quincy Adams Society, where he researched the evolution of Turkish foreign policy over the last two decades. His areas of interest are transatlantic relations, European security, Russia, Turkey, and South Caucasus. He has previously researched the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict in various roles, including at the UCLA Promise Institute for Human Rights and the Armenian National Committee of America, Western Region.

Biden’s Silence on the Nagorno Karabakh Crisis Jeopardizes the American Foreign Policy Agenda

by Martin Makaryan, Guest Contributor16 Aug 202318 Aug 2023Leave a comment

As a humanitarian crisis unfolds in blockaded Nagorno-Karabakh, the Biden Administration's response has been lacking. Without decisive action, 120,000 lives are at risk -- and Armenian democracy itself.

Uncategorized conflict, foreign policy, human rights, lachin corridor, nagorno-karabakh, Opinion, united states
2023 USC Global Policy Institute
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Youtube
 

Loading Comments...