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Although the score of countries comprising Russia's "near abroad"
(the former non-Russian Soviet republics) and "far abroad" (the
former non-Russian Warsaw Pact states) are behaving with variably
increasing independence in their domestic and foreign policies,
Russia continues to regard them as remaining within the same
core-periphery sphere of influence formerly exerted by the Soviet
Union within the same geographic space. Russia misinterprets bids
by these countries to adopt liberalizing structural reforms and to
join Euro-Atlantic organizations as foreign-inspired and inimical
to Russia's security. Whether Russia can learn to recognize that
such bids are in fact natural developments of national
self-interest will determine whether healthy and mutually
beneficial bilateral relations can develop between Russia and the
states of her near and far abroad in the 21st century. No previous
study of the dynamics of post-Soviet assertive sovereignty has as
broad a geographic scope as Eurasia Rising, which considers the
whole of Post-Soviet Space: DT Belarus, Moldova, Ukraine DT _
Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania DT Armenia, Azerbaijan, Georgia DT
Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan DT
Albania, Bulgaria, Czech Republic, Hungary, Poland, Romania,
Slovakia
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