Item Details
Skip Navigation Links
   ActiveUsers:1747Hits:19221807Skip Navigation Links
Show My Basket
Contact Us
IDSA Web Site
Ask Us
Today's News
HelpExpand Help
Advanced search

In Basket
  Journal Article   Journal Article
 

ID118602
Title ProperBelavezha accords legacy
Other Title Informationpost-Soviet Russia,torn between nationalism and separatism
LanguageENG
AuthorMarkedonov, Sergei
Publication2012.
Summary / Abstract (Note)The USSR ceased to exist in December 1991, but the dramatic events of the two subsequent decades have shown that it is premature to view its collapse as a closed chapter of history. The termination of the Soviet Union's existence as a legal fact and the historical process of its disintegration are different things. The country that accounted for one-sixth of the planet's land is gone from the world map, but the disintegration of Soviet statehood persists. Like the breakup of the Western Roman Empire does not boil down to the abdication of Romulus Augustus, or the French Revolution to the storming of the Bastille, or Russia's 1917 October Revolution to the October 25 (in the Julian calendar) coup, the breakup of the USSR is not confined to the December 1991 Belovezha declaration by heads of states of Russia, Ukraine and Belarus on its dissolution. That the process still continues is evidenced by eight armed conflicts, the de-facto emergence of new states (two of which have won international, albeit limited, recognition), unending border disputes, ethnic and religious clashes, and regional conflicts. In 2008 a precedent was created when the borders of former Soviet republics were redrawn. Given unsettled ethno-political conflicts, it is hard to predict when and how these borders will be recognized, and where the self-determination process, launched by Mikhail Gorbachev's perestroika policy, will stop.
`In' analytical NoteRussia in Global Affairs Vol. 10, No.4; Oct-Dec 2012: p.70-83
Journal SourceRussia in Global Affairs Vol. 10, No.4; Oct-Dec 2012: p.70-83
Key WordsSoviet Union ;  Soviet Statehood Persists ;  French Revolution ;  Russia ;  Border Disputes ;  Religious Clashes ;  Mikhail Gorbachev