Western Negative Perceptions of Russia: "the Cold war Mentality" over Five Hundred Years. Western Negative Perceptions of Russia: "the Cold war Mentality" over Five Hundred Years.

Western Negative Perceptions of Russia: "the Cold war Mentality" over Five Hundred Years‪.‬

International Social Science Review 2001, Fall-Winter

    • $5.99
    • $5.99

Publisher Description

In a recent CNN interview, former National Security Advisor and professor of American Foreign Policy at Johns Hopkins University's School for Advanced International Studies, Zbigniew Brzezinski, compared the Russian military's indiscriminate bombing of the Chechen capital, Grozny, in late 1999 and early 2000 to Stalin's murder of 15,000 Polish officers at Katyn in 1940. He called the Russian war in Chechnya "genocide" and Russia's then acting-president Vladimir Putin "a brute ... a form of a political gangster." (1) In an article in the New York Times published three months earlier, Brzezinski argued that Russia's ruling elite "is still driven by imperial nostalgia" and its generals "thirst for revenge for the defeat they suffered in Chechnya four years ago." (2) Likewise, U.S. Senator John McCain, during his campaign for the Republican party's nomination for president in early 2000, warned on ABC's "Meet the Press" that Putin "is from the KGB. He could use the military to reassemble the Soviet Union. The U.S. President should speak far more harshly about what is happening in Chechnya." (3) Sheila Heslin, a former director for Russian, Ukrainian and Eurasian Affairs at the National Security Council, voiced similar concerns, arguing that Russia had not yet become a "normal" power. She asserted that "unconstrained, Russia tends toward heavy-handedness because it underestimates popular commitment to independence [in the former republics of the Soviet Union as well as in its own break-away regions] while overestimating its ability to impose order. Armed to the teeth Russia gets itself in trouble, fomenting instability in the Southern Caucasus and increasingly in its own Caucasian provinces." (4) Others wary of Russia hearken back to the imperialism of the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, seeing Russia's moves as part of a zero-sum game between Russia and the West. William Satire wrote in a recent New York Times column that "The newly emboldened Russian military has now embarked on a modern version of what Rudyard Kipling in 1901 called `the Great Game'--that struggle against the West for economic and political power in the Caucasus and the Middle East." Satire went on to call the war in Chechnya, a "systematic massacre of the dark-skinned Muslin trouble-makers" carried out to win votes for Russian politicians running for office in parliamentary elections. He further pointed to Russia's meddling in the affairs of other nations such as Georgia, whose president Eduard Shevardnadze "has survived three assassination attempts that many think were KGB-inspired," (5) as yet more examples of Russia's quest to maintain or reestablish its empire. Many foreign policy experts in the West see efforts to unify the former Soviet space, such as the CIS and the various treaties designed to bring Russia and Belarus into closer union, including efforts to create a customs union and a single currency, as further proof that Russia is attempting to expand. (6)

GENRE
Non-Fiction
RELEASED
2001
22 September
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
45
Pages
PUBLISHER
Pi Gamma Mu
SELLER
The Gale Group, Inc., a Delaware corporation and an affiliate of Cengage Learning, Inc.
SIZE
239.2
KB
Creating Russophobia Creating Russophobia
2017
Normalizing Russia, Legitimizing Putin (Ex Tempore: Toward a New Orthodoxy? the Politics of History in Russia Today) (Vladimir Putin) (Critical Essay) Normalizing Russia, Legitimizing Putin (Ex Tempore: Toward a New Orthodoxy? the Politics of History in Russia Today) (Vladimir Putin) (Critical Essay)
2009
Have Personality Disorder, Will Rule Russia: A Pocket Guide to Russian History Have Personality Disorder, Will Rule Russia: A Pocket Guide to Russian History
2019
Russia's Place in the World Russia's Place in the World
2015
Russia, Ukraine, and the Breakup of the Soviet Union Russia, Ukraine, and the Breakup of the Soviet Union
2020
Oleg Rudol'fovich Airapetov, The Foreign Policy of the Russian Empire, 1801-1914/Vneshniaia Politika Rossiiskoi Imperii, 1801-1914 (Book Review) Oleg Rudol'fovich Airapetov, The Foreign Policy of the Russian Empire, 1801-1914/Vneshniaia Politika Rossiiskoi Imperii, 1801-1914 (Book Review)
2009
The Baha'i Faith and Its Relationship to Islam, Christianity, And Judaism: A Brief History. The Baha'i Faith and Its Relationship to Islam, Christianity, And Judaism: A Brief History.
2004
Ideological Incompatibility: The Forced Fusion of Nazism and Protestant Theology and Its Impact on Anti-Semitism in the Third Reich. Ideological Incompatibility: The Forced Fusion of Nazism and Protestant Theology and Its Impact on Anti-Semitism in the Third Reich.
2006
Earnings Determinants for Self-Employed Women and Men in the Informal Economy: The Case of Bogota, Colombia. Earnings Determinants for Self-Employed Women and Men in the Informal Economy: The Case of Bogota, Colombia.
2008
Thinking the World: A Comment on Philosophy of History and Globalization Studies. Thinking the World: A Comment on Philosophy of History and Globalization Studies.
2005
Lobbying Unorthodox Lawmaking. Lobbying Unorthodox Lawmaking.
2008
HIV/AIDS: the Pandemic Hits the 'Sleeping Giant' (1) (Human Immunodeficiency Virus /Acquired Immune Deficiency Virus. Brazil) (Case Study) HIV/AIDS: the Pandemic Hits the 'Sleeping Giant' (1) (Human Immunodeficiency Virus /Acquired Immune Deficiency Virus. Brazil) (Case Study)
2007