Publication |
2012.
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Summary/Abstract |
Some four years ago, an author wrote in this journal that the conflict with Georgia would be a watershed that would put an end to Moscow's post-Soviet approach to the world. He believed Russia would finally formulate "a program of realistic and pragmatic foreign policy matching its genuine strategic interests and the goals of economic and social development" (Alexander Lukin, "From a Post-Soviet to a Russian Foreign Policy."
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