Julian Stöckle worked as a project assistant for DGAP’s “Action Group Zeitenwende” from December 2022 to June 2023. Stöckle is currently pursuing a dual master’s degree in European affairs at Sciences Po and the London School of Economics and Political Science (LSE). He gained practical experience at the International Sustainable Finance Centre (ISFC) and through serving as a Danube Youth Council member and as director for the student-led think tank European Horizons.
Stöckle holds a dual bachelor’s degree in European and international business with a major in finance from the Prague University of Economics and Business (VŠE) and University of Applied Sciences Regensburg (OTH).
For Germany’s chancellor, victory seems to be the hardest word. This reluctance appears driven by fears of geopolitical change, which he seems hesitant to shape, let alone master, and by drawing the wrong lessons from German history.
The Baltic States, Central Europe, France, the Nordic countries, the United Kingdom, and the United States have all reacted to Russia’s war of aggression against Ukraine in their own, but often similar ways.