Samuel Charap
Guest Speaker
Professional Affiliation
Distinguished Chair in Russia and Eurasia Policy, Senior Political Scientist, RAND Corporation
Expert Bio
Samuel Charap is Distinguished Chair in Russia and Eurasia Policy and a senior political scientist at RAND. His research interests include the foreign policies of Russia and the former Soviet states; European and Eurasian regional security; and U.S.-Russia deterrence, strategic stability, and arms control.
From November 2012 until April 2017, Charap was the senior fellow for Russia and Eurasia at the International Institute for Strategic Studies. Prior to joining the IISS, he served at the U.S. Department of State as senior advisor to the undersecretary for Arms Control and International Security and on the Secretary鈥檚 Policy Planning Staff, covering Russia and Eurasia. From 2009 to 2011, Charap was director for Russia and Eurasia at the Center for American Progress.
Charap's book, Everyone Loses: The Ukraine Crisis and the Ruinous Contest for Post-Soviet Eurasia (coauthored with Timothy Colton), was published in 2017. His articles have appeared in The Washington Quarterly, Foreign Affairs, Survival, Current History, and several other journals.
Charap was a visiting scholar at the Carnegie Moscow Center and the International Center for Policy Studies (Kyiv), and a Fulbright scholar at the Moscow State Institute of International Relations. He is fluent in Russian and proficient in Ukrainian. Charap holds a Ph.D. in political science and an M.Phil. in Russian and East European studies from the University of Oxford, where he was a Marshall scholar. He received his B.A. in Russian and political science from Amherst College. He is a life member of the Council on Foreign Relations.
Insight & Analysis by Samuel Charap
- Past event
- Conflict Resolution and Peacebuilding
War Termination: Prospects in the Short to Medium Term

- Past event
- Governance
Kennan Long View Series | Russian Grand Strategy: Reality and Rhetoric

- Past event
- Global Governance
Getting Out from In-Between

- Past event
- Conflict Resolution and Peacebuilding
How to Read The Crimea Crisis?

