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1 |
ID:
117383
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Publication |
2012.
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Summary/Abstract |
PRESIDENTS Vladimir Putin and Barack Obama in their joint statement signed on June 18, 2012 at Los Cabos, Mexico, in the margins of the summit of the G20 acknowledged differences in assessments of the missile defense issue in Russian-American relations. For several years, it was a persistent stumbling block to the politico-military agenda of the two mightiest nuclear powers. Still, both parties agreed to "continue a joint search for solutions to challenges in the field of missile defense.
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2 |
ID:
138055
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Summary/Abstract |
FOR A LONG TIME, Russian researchers remained riveted to the problem of resource deficit in the world as a potential cause of international instability or even conflicts. In recent years, however, we are growing increasingly aware of deficit of confidence, a resource which is equally important for world economy and world politics and which, therefore, can be described as universally important. There is a deficit of confidence in the basic institutions, the rules of the game and among the main actors which do not trust what others are doing and plan to do. The trends of world development depend on how fast and to which extent we will be able to deal with this fundamental deficit. The events unfolding in Ukraine and around it with no end in sight do not breed optimism.
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3 |
ID:
127484
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Publication |
2013.
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Summary/Abstract |
RUSSIAN-AMERICAN RELATIONS are on another troubling decline. The point here is not probably only about the media blown irritants, such as the notorious Magnitsky Act or the dragging-on case of Snowden. The problem lies deeper, namely in the general climate of distrust and misunderstanding between Moscow and Washington and in the growing cross-accusations and skepticism arising from the diametrically opposed positions of the elites of the two countries on key socioeconomic and foreign policy issues.
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4 |
ID:
137332
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Summary/Abstract |
THE CURRENT STATE of the Russian-American relations causes concerns. The economic sanctions the U.S. introduced after the reunification with Crimea; the deliberate destruction of the Russian-American negotiation structure up to and including G-8 and the RF-U.S. Presidential Commission and finally, megaphone diplomacy instead of the Moscow-Washington dialogue look too much as another bout of the Cold War relegated, as we all thought, to the refuge heap of history.
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