In the early 1990s, Russia seemed on the brink of fully shedding
its authoritarian and communist past. It made significant progress
through engaging the world community as an emerging market
democracy, a returning friend and neighbor to Europe and the West,
and a strategic partner of the United States. The ensuing fifteen
years of Russian history have witnessed several booms, such as the
buoyancy provided by high oil revenues, and busts that resulted in
retrenchment and centralization of power. What is the real Russia?
Is the nation going in the wrong direction and becoming a
threat-in-waiting, or is it moving along, and even forward, in a
familiar three-steps-forward and two-steps-back pattern? In Getting
Russia Right, Dmitri Trenin sheds new light on our understanding of
contemporary Russia, providing Western audiences with an insider's
explanation of how the country has arrived at its current position
and how the United States and Europe can deal with it more
productively. Trenin looks beyond Russia's famous leaders to the
economic and cultural spaces outside the Kremlin where promising
changes are taking place. Russia is probably not going to join the
West, but it is on a path toward becoming Western; capitalist even
if not democratic; European in terms of civilization, rather than
as part of the EU; and gradually more Western than pro-U.S.
Insightful and optimistic, Getting Russia Right offers
policymakers, students, and stakeholders in the U.S.-Russia
relationship an understanding of what Russia is --and is not.
Russia will matter in the foreseeable future, and Trenin's
innovative and objective analysis provides an understanding that is
crucial to rebuilding relationships among the world's key
players.
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