Delusions About Russia

Twenty-six years ago at a national policy conference in Los Angeles co-hosted by his foundation, Richard M Nixon observed that one of America's most fundamental foreign policy objectives was to build a new international order after the collapse of the Soviet Union which included the newly-democ...

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Veröffentlicht in:The National interest 2019-09 (163), p.5-16
1. Verfasser: Simes, Dimitri K.
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description Twenty-six years ago at a national policy conference in Los Angeles co-hosted by his foundation, Richard M Nixon observed that one of America's most fundamental foreign policy objectives was to build a new international order after the collapse of the Soviet Union which included the newly-democratic Russia as a partner. Today, it can be stated with certainty that America has failed at this task. America's new strategic doctrine views Russia as a major threat to the US due to its military prowess, hybrid warfare capabilities, and global drive to undermine the American-led liberal world order. As with every divorce, there are contrasting narratives about who bears what responsibility for the dissolution of this once promising relationship. However, it is clear that America's foreign policy establishment, including members of both Congress and the Trump administration, is currently plagued by the tension between its habitual desire to assume the worst of Russia and its simultaneous reluctance to respond to the magnitude of Moscow's challenge in a serious fashion.
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source Worldwide Political Science Abstracts; JSTOR Archive Collection A-Z Listing; Political Science Complete
subjects Autocracy
Cold War
Communism
Delusions
Democracy
Dissolution
Divorce
Domestic policy
Foreign policy
Germany
Legislatures
Narratives
Nationalism
Nixon, Richard M
Political campaigns
Political corruption
Presidential elections
Putin, Vladimir
Russia
Russian foreign relations
The Realist
Trump, Donald
Ukraine
War
World order
title Delusions About Russia
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