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GEORGIA WAR (2) answer(s).
 
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ID:   132144


Beyond Crimea: what Vladimir Putin really wants / Gedmin, Jeffrey   Journal Article
Gedmin, Jeffrey Journal Article
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Publication 2014.
Summary/Abstract Ukraine is lost. At least lost as many of us had once imagined it-as a potential member of the European Union and, perhaps one day, of NATO. Thank the Kremlin's visionary leader for that. It's striking how confidently and quickly Russian President Vladimir Putin gobbled up Crimea. Although it was a clear-cut case of unprovoked aggression, followed by annexation, the United States and its allies were unable to lift a finger.
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2
ID:   134095


Strange bedfellows: Putin and Europe's far right / Polyakova, Alina   Journal Article
Polyakova, Alina Journal Article
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Publication 2014.
Summary/Abstract The courtship between Eastern European far-right parties and Russia has been going on for years, of course. In 2008, Eastern Europe's far right supported the Russian war against Georgia. In May 2013, leaders of Jobbik, the Hungarian far-right party with dubious fascist origins, met with Russian Duma leaders and academics at Moscow State University. The neo-Nazi Bulgarian Ataka party has vocally supported Putin and Russian foreign policy. In 2012, Ataka's leader, Volen Siderov, traveled to Moscow, reportedly at his own expense, to celebrate Putin's sixtieth birthday and express admiration for the Russian president's strong leadership. After Russia's annexation of Crimea, Siderov threatened to withdraw his party's support from the coalition government if it supported further sanctions against Russia.
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