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KARAGANOV, SERGEY (5) answer(s).
 
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ID:   132698


Europe and Russia: preventing a new cold war / Karaganov, Sergey   Journal Article
Karaganov, Sergey Journal Article
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Publication 2014.
Summary/Abstract Debates over the ongoing crisis in relations between Russia and the West revolve around the incorporation of Crimea, the global reaction to that move, and the future configuration of the Ukrainian state if, of course, it manages to survive (and I hope it will). But I contend that these are not the primary issues in global terms. There are other crucial questions. The first is what the European security system will be like. I repeat: the Old World was not allowed to withdraw from the Cold War, and now it may see a new round of tension. The second important question is whether Russia will be able to overcome the impasse in its development, in which it found itself after it restored statehood at the end of the 2000s. The third and closely linked question is whether Russia will wish to remain part - even an independent and very special partner - of Europe or will it opt for cultural-civilizational isolation and increasingly lean towards the East economically. It is obvious that Russia is firmly determined to change the rules of the game that have been dictated to it for the past twenty-five years. Unable and reluctant to toe the line, Russia has given up attempts to become part of the West.
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2
ID:   148714


Global challenges and Russia’s foreign policy / Karaganov, Sergey   Journal Article
Karaganov, Sergey Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract The article discusses the results of Russian foreign policy since the collapse of the Soviet Union against the background of major new global and regional international trends and the policy of other major world powers. The author argues that Russia should work for preventing a new structured confrontation in Europe, maintaining international stability, and keeping the world from sliding into a big war which seems to be more likely now than ever before in the last 50 years. At the same time it should join forces with China, India, Iran and other major non-Western players in building a community of cooperation, development and security for Greater Eurasia, open to the world and serving as one of the pillars of its stable and peaceful development. The world is changing incredibly fast and precariously. Russia must occupy a leading place in this world by moving towards economic growth and playing a key role in preventing a new world war, supporting global strategic stability and building or rebuilding international cooperation and security structures for the decade to come.
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3
ID:   127422


Lop-sided power: even the smartest diplomacy has its limits / Karaganov, Sergey   Journal Article
Karaganov, Sergey Journal Article
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Publication 2013.
Summary/Abstract The main reserves for Russia's foreign policy and its influence in the next decade lie more than ever in internal development. And this is also where the main threats are, fraught with the risk of losing political weight in the international arena and the status of great power.
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4
ID:   134547


Russia and the U.S.: a long confrontation? / Karaganov, Sergey   Article
Karaganov, Sergey Article
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Summary/Abstract For the United States, at stake is its leader’s declining reputation and the risk of yet another humiliating defeat. The stakes are high also because Russia stands as a symbol of a rising and increasingly anti-Western “non-West.”
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5
ID:   136122


Watershed year: interim results / Karaganov, Sergey   Article
Karaganov, Sergey Article
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Summary/Abstract Today Russia is confronted by the West which is largely demoralized by its own blunders and no longer a source of moral supremacy and appeal for most people in the world. Sided with Moscow is the rising “non-West” that comprises the majority of countries and most dynamic economies.
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