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ID132149
Title ProperTougher sanctions now
Other Title InformationPutin's Delusional quest for empire
LanguageENG
AuthorBraun, Aurel
Publication2014.
Summary / Abstract (Note)This spring, as Russia's puppet government in Crimea moved clocks forward two hours to coincide with Moscow time, Vladimir Putin seemed intent on moving the historical clock backwards to the age of nineteenth-century Russian imperialism. As the leader of an economically weak and vulnerable country with a corrupt governing class, the Russian president acted with brazen disregard for international law and norms, while the democratic West played a totally reactive role, and a feckless one at that. Ignoring very reluctantly introduced, and very limited, sanctions, Putin reciprocated with utter contempt for capitalist democracies, where he believes profits will always trump principle, and especially for President Obama, who, in the Russian dictator's view, finds Western unity only in weakness, not in strength. But even though what appear to be irreversible faits accomplis occur every day in Crimea and eastern Ukraine, it is not too late for the West to seize the initiative, mobilize its vast economic and political capacity, and put Putin and the "yes" chorus of siloviki, who surround and encourage him, truly on the defensive.
`In' analytical NoteWorld Affairs US Vol. 177, No.2; Jul-Aug 2014: p.34-42
Journal SourceWorld Affairs US Vol. 177, No.2; Jul-Aug 2014: p.34-42
Key WordsRussia ;  Crimea ;  Vladimir Putin ;  Russian Imperialism ;  International Law ;  Obama ;  Ukraine ;  International Community ;  Angela Merkel ;  Madeleine Albright ;  Political Magical Realism ;  Russian Empire