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Near Abroad - Putin, the West and the Contest over Ukraine and the Caucasus (Hardcover)
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Near Abroad - Putin, the West and the Contest over Ukraine and the Caucasus (Hardcover)
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Vladimir Putin's intervention into the Georgia/South Ossetia
conflict in summer 2008 was quickly recognized by Western critics
as an attempt by Russia to increase its presence and power in the
"near abroad", or the independent states of the former Soviet Union
that Russia still regards as its wards. Though the global economic
recession that began in 2008 moved the incident to the back of the
world's mind, Russia surged to the forefront again six years later
when they invaded the heavily Russian Crimea in Ukraine and annexed
it. In contrast to the earlier Georgia episode, this new conflict
has generated a crisis of global proportions, forcing European
countries to rethink their relationship with Russia and their
reliance on it for energy supplies, as Russia was now squeezing
natural gas from what is technically Ukraine. In Near Abroad, the
eminent political geographer Gerard Toal analyzes Russia's recent
offensive actions in the near abroad, focusing in particular on the
ways in which both the West and Russia have relied on Cold War-era
rhetorical and emotional tropes that distort as much as they
clarify. In response to Russian aggression, US critics quickly
turned to tried-and-true concepts like "spheres of influence" to
condemn the Kremlin. Russia in turn has brought back its long
tradition of criticizing western liberalism and degeneracy to
grandly rationalize its behavior in what are essentially local
border skirmishes. It is this tendency to resort to the frames of
earlier eras that has led the conflicts to "jump scales," moving
from the regional to the global level in short order. The
ambiguities and contradictions that result when nations marshal
traditional geopolitical arguments-rooted in geography, territory,
and old understandings of distance-further contributes to the
escalation of these conflicts. Indeed, Russia's belligerence toward
Georgia stemmed from concern about its possible entry into NATO, an
organization of states thousands of miles away. American hawks also
strained credulity by portraying Georgia as a nearby ally in need
of assistance. Similarly, the threat of NATO to the Ukraine looms
large in the Kremlin's thinking, and many Ukrainians themselves
self-identify with the West despite their location in Eastern
Europe.
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