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Discussion Article
Assessing Cultural and Regime-Based
Explanations of Russia’s Foreign Policy.
‘Authoritarian at Heart and Expansionist by
Habit’?
ANDREI P. TSYGANKOV
Abstract
Scholars disagree on how to interpret Russia’s assertive foreign policy. According to some observers,
Russia’s authoritarian culture and political system have historically required the Kremlin to depend on
the Western threat image at home and to engage in revisionist behaviour abroad. These observers
recommend that Western nations abstain from engaging Russia as an equal contributor to shaping the
global system. This article assesses the validity of the authoritarian expansionism theory by comparing
it to other prominent perspectives on foreign policy, realism and constructivism. The article argues
that, by perceiving Russia’s historical and institutional distinctness as fundamentally threatening to the
West, the theory overlooks important sources of foreign policy contestation at home and potentially
varying directions abroad. The article selects the historically important cases of the Crimean War, the
Cold War and the Russia–Georgia War to demonstrate the theory’s flaws and to highlight the role of
factors other than Russia’s authoritarianism in the nation’s foreign policy.
RUSSIA’S INTERNATIONAL BEHAVIOUR CONTINUES TO provoke lively disagree-
ments among scholars and policy makers alike. While some view Russia as largely
accommodationist and non-threatening to the West, others perceive the Kremlin’s
objectives as expansionist and disrespectful towards existing international rules.1 The
arrival of Barak Obama to power in the USA and his attempts to ‘reset’ relations with
Russia have yet to clarify the question of the motives for the Kremlin’s international
behaviour. Those on the sceptical side argue that the reset advocates misread Russia’s
intentions and undermine Western allies (Kramer 2010a, 2010b; Cohen 2010; LeVine
2010). According to this line of reasoning, Russia’s authoritarian culture and political
The author thanks the editors of Europe-Asia Studies and two anonymous reviewers for their
comments and suggestions. The usual disclaimers apply.
1For examples of scholarship on Russia’s foreign policy, see Trenin (2009), Mankoff (2009),
Tsygankov (2010), Lucas (2009), Bugajski (2009) and Kanet (2009).
EUROPE-ASIA STUDIES
Vol. 64, No. 4, June 2012, 695–713
ISSN 0966-8136 print; ISSN 1465-3427 online/12/040695-19 ª 2012 University of Glasgow
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/09668136.2012.671568
system require the Kremlin to depend on the Western threat image at home and to
engage in revisionist behaviour abroad (Shlapentokh 2009; Cohen & Dale 2010;
Shevtsova 2010). It leads to the conclusion that the Western nations are better off
trying to contain or transform Moscow, rather than engaging with it as an equal
contributor in shaping the global system.
Behind the policy debate about Russia’s intentions are profound theoretical,
historical and ethical questions. Is a more democratic Russia likely to act in
accordance with the United States and Europe in international affairs? Does an
authoritarian Russia necessarily present a threat to the West? Should Russia’s cultural
and regime-based difference serve as a sufficient basis for excluding the nation from the
list of partners and potential allies? More generally, should a difference in political
system and values—whether it concerns Russia, China, Iran or another country—be
treated by Western nations as potentially threatening their values and interests?
This article seeks to assess the validity of the authoritarian or expansionist Russia
approach by comparing it to two other prominent perspectives on foreign policy:
realism and constructivism. Instead of focusing on Russia’s domestic authoritarian-
ism, realism and constructivism study the foreign-policy impact of international
anarchy and norms, respectively. I argue that as a guide to understanding Russia’s
international behaviour, the theory of authoritarian expansionism is at best
insufficient and at worst misleading. By emphasising Russia’s purportedly autocratic
nature, it overlooks important sources of contestation within the nation’s political
system and the potentially varying directions of its foreign policy. By perceiving
Russia’s historical and institutional distinctness as fundamentally threatening the
West, the theory of authoritarian expansionism also displays the tendency to deny
Russia its own interests and stakes within the international system. As a result, many
of the theory’s advocates blame Moscow for everything that has gone wrong in
relations with Western nations and invariably offer policy advice that amounts to
isolating or containing Russia.
The article is organised in four parts. The next section reflects on the theory of
authoritarian expansionism’s assumptions and historical evolution. After identifying
the theory’s propositions and intellectual roots, I offer an analysis of several biases
from which it suffers. I then move to an empirical analysis by selecting three cases of
Russia’s foreign policy that have been important to the progression of the theory of
authoritarian expansionism. My interpretation of these seminal cases—the Crimean
War, the Cold War and the Russia–Georgia War—highlights the role of factors other
than Russia’s authoritarianism. The conclusion summarises the article’s findings and
calls for a more complex and dynamic understanding of Russia than the theory of
authoritarian expansionism-based understanding.
The theory of Russia’s authoritarian expansionism
Authoritarian expansionism and other theories of Russia’s foreign policy
The central claims of the theory of authoritarian expansionism may be summarised in
terms of two main propositions—one of a descriptive and one of a causal nature. The
descriptive proposition states that Russia’s main foreign-policy objectives include
696 ANDREI P. TSYGANKOV
the preservation and expansion of the country’s imperial borders and institutions.
The causal proposition comes in two distinct versions. Version One links Russia’s
expansionism to its authoritarian culture and propensity to impose itself onto other
nations. The latter is expressed through the political regime’s overconfidence and
readiness to act unilaterally, rather than in the spirit of international cooperation.
Version Two places emphasis on the leadership’s low confidence and internal
insecurity. The regime’s insecurity and preoccupation with political survival lead to a
diversionary form of expansionism. This version assumes the public to be generally
passive and uninterested in the state’s international activities.
The two versions assume diverse types of expansionism and have distinct policy
implications. While Version One identifies what might be called ‘expansionism from
strength’ or ‘missionary expansionism’, Version Two describes expansionism that is
driven by weakness or desperation and seeks to divert the internal public’s attention
from the regime’s lack of legitimacy and effectiveness. The two versions also differ with
respect to the perception of cooperation of Western nations with Russia (see Table 1).
While both versions are sceptical of the possibility of developing a robust relationship
with Russia, Version One—by highlighting broad authoritarian support for inter-
national expansionism—is considerably more pessimistic than Version Two.
The description of Russia’s international objectives and main causes of behaviour
abroad by the theory of authoritarian expansionism contrasts with other theories of
Russia’s foreign policy. In particular, the theory of authoritarian expansionism differs
from realist and social constructivist theories. Realists typically emphasise material
capabilities and the status of a great power as state international objectives. Scholars
working in this tradition view the Russian state as acting within the same constraints
of an international anarchical system that defines the choices of other states. Although
internal factors such as ideology, nature of government and political culture matter as
well, their role is to specify, and sometimes to cover for but never to contradict,
‘genuine’ national interest. Realists view national interest as a geopolitically enduring
reality, rather than something open to interpretations, and define such interest as a
preservation and enhancement of power within the existing international system. For
instance, realists have argued that the Soviet leaders, while employing a revolutionary
ideology and acting under a totalitarian system of government, defended Russia’s
traditional state interests.2
TABLE 1
PROPOSITIONS ABOUT RUSSIA’S AUTHORITARIAN EXPANSIONISM
Type of propositions
Descriptive proposition Russia pursues an expansionist foreign policy
Causal propositions 1. Active authoritarian culture is a cause of the regime’s confidence and
missionary expansionism
2. Passive authoritarian culture is a cause of the regime’s insecurity and
diversionary expansionism
2For realist studies of Soviet foreign policy, see, for example, Ulam (1968), Wohlforth (1993) and
Donaldson and Nogee (1998).
EXPLANATIONS OF RUSSIA’S FOREIGN POLICY 697
To social constructivists, what matters most is not power or material capabilities
objectively defined but what those may mean to the Self in terms of acquiring
recognition from its significant Other. In the Russian context, Europe and the West in
general played the role of the significant Other and prominently figured in Russia’s
debates about national identity by creating the meaningful environment in which
Russia’s rulers defended their foreign-policy choices.3 Constructivists argue that
although state behaviour is shaped by power calculations, such behaviour can only be
understood in contexts of everyday interactions and socio-historical development.
Even if anarchy is ‘out there somewhere’, constructivists say, we ought to focus on
everyday interactions for understanding what anarchy means and how social contexts
of power are being formed and unformed. Constructivist scholars of Soviet foreign
policy therefore view such policy in terms of signalling to the Western nations the
Kremlin’s desire for equality and recognition (Nation 1992; Ringman 2002).
Table 2 compares the theory of authoritarian expansionism to other theories of
Russia’s foreign policy.
Evolution of the theory of authoritarian expansionism
The context and the long history of the theory of Russia’s expansionism may be
traced to European reactions to Nicholas’s suppression of Polish demands for
independence in 1830–1831. Russia did not limit itself to suppressing what was then
an internal revolt, but also played a prominent role during the nationalist revolu-
tions of the 1840s in Europe. In 1846, Russia led the way in suppressing the Polish
uprising in Kraków, which was a part of the Hapsburg state under the Vienna
convention. In July 1848, Nicholas suppressed revolutions in the Danubian
Principalities of Moldavia and Wallachia—partly to assist Turkey in defeating the
Romanian nationalist movement. In 1849, Russia provided Austria with financial
and diplomatic assistance to strengthen its position in Italy and Nicholas committed
almost 200,000 troops to help the Hapsburgs to suppress the revolt in Hungary
(Riazanovsky 1959, p. 248).
TABLE 2
THEORIES OF RUSSIA’S FOREIGN POLICY
Westernising state Great power
Authoritarian
expansionist state
Russia’s international
objectives
Recognised part
of the Western
world
Capabilities and status
of a great power
Empire and geopolitical
expansion
Main causes of
Russia’s foreign
policy
Western
influences
International anarchy Domestic
authoritarianism
3For a development of this argument, see Neumann (1996), English (2000), Hopf (2002), Clunan
(2009) and Larson and Shevchenko (2010).
698 ANDREI P. TSYGANKOV
By suppressing internal opposition to the monarchical rule, Nicholas acted within
the constraints of the Holy Alliance and had no hegemonic ambitions of his own.4
Although Russia acted in a multilateral spirit and only did what the system expected
the Tsar to do, Nicholas was labelled the Gendarme of Europe. Such a presentation of
Russia was partly a product of the continent’s power struggle. Britain and France were
not satisfied with the Vienna system and each sought to challenge Russia’s rise as a
great power competitor (Taylor 1954, p. 61). No less significant, however, was Russia’s
and Europe’s growing divergence in values. European liberals now associated Poland,
and other nations that challenged monarchies, with progressive values, and Russia
with imperialism and repression. Russia was now deemed too ‘barbaric’ and
‘autocratic’ (Malia 1999, p. 99). Today, scholars such as John LeDonne continue to
argue that during the 1830s and 1840s the Russians were ‘dangerously close to the
establishment of their hegemony in the Heartland’, and that Russia’s ‘expansionist
urge’ remained ‘unabated until 1917’ (LeDonne 1997, pp. 314, 348).
Such was the political context for the emergence of the theory of authoritarian
expansionism in the liberal West. The Polish question did not go away, and the Polish
elite led another uprising in 1863, during which the European powers, again, opposed
Russia’s effort to manage the issue and preserve existing territorial boundaries.5
Intellectually, the view of Russia as a barbaric expansionist power was supported by
foreign travellers, such as the Marquis de Custine, who began to promote this view
even before the Polish uprising. The United States had begun to develop negative
perceptions of Russia after the assassination of Alexander II in 1881, as immigrant
groups (especially Jewish ones) engaged in anti-Russian lobbying in the United States
to ‘liberate’ Russia from autocracy and anti-Semitism.6 The perception of Russia as a
dangerous autocratic power grew stronger as Alexander III and Nicholas II sought to
preserve their influence in the Balkans. As theories of authoritarian Panslavism began
to develop in the early twentieth century,7 scholars became convinced of the primacy
of ‘Panslavist imperialism’ in the Tsar’s outlook (Geyer 1987; Tuminez 2000).
The social revolution in Russia in October 1917 provided another powerful impetus
for developing the perception of the country as an expansionist autocracy. The Soviet
Union diverged from the West in terms of internal institutions and it challenged the
West’s sense of military security. The Bolsheviks’ dissolution of the Constituent
Assembly in January 1918, its doctrine of world revolution, and the establishment of
the Communist International (Comintern) in 1919 in order to spread communist ideas
and set up new communist parties abroad, all contributed to the perception of Soviet
Russia as perpetuating—in the most dangerous way—the mode of authoritarian
expansionism. Even after the Bolsheviks had renounced the idea of world revolution
4While Prussia wanted to help Austria in exchange for dominating Germany, Russia had no such
conditions and was assisting Austria out of Holy Alliance obligations (Taylor 1954, p. 30).
5For example, in April 1863, Britain, France and Austria each sent similar notes to the Russian
government asking for Poland to be given independence and for its borders to include Lithuania and
Ruthenia (Seton-Watson 1967, p. 435).
6In 1911 the American government even abrogated the commercial treaty with Russia (Foglesong
2007, pp. 43–44).
7For overviews of Panslavist theories, see Kohn (1953), Petrovich (1956), Duncan (2000) and
Tuminez (2000).
EXPLANATIONS OF RUSSIA’S FOREIGN POLICY 699
and dissolved the Comintern, the majority of the West’s politicians and scholars could
not change their mind about the Soviet system. Scholars became convinced that the
idea of peaceful coexistence was a Soviet cover for an ideological expansion or an
offensive war on the West. A classic statement of this position can be found in George
Kennan’s (1961, p. 179) condemnation of ‘a regime, the attitude of which towards
Western governments, psychologically and politically, was equivalent to that which
would prevail toward an enemy in time of war’. Many observers rejected the position
that the Soviet leaders’ attitudes reflected a defensive response to the equally hostile
Western governments, citing the Soviet Union’s authoritarian ideology as the reason
for their distrust. For Kennan, Western governments came to hate the Soviet leaders
‘for what they did ’, whereas the Bolsheviks hated the Western states ‘for what they
were, regardless of what they did’ (Kennan 1961, p. 181, emphasis in original). This
distinction has become common in Western scholarship of Soviet foreign policy since
the Cold War.8
Despite the end of the Cold War, many observers have continued to interpret Russia
as an authoritarian state with expansionist instincts, and not as a normal state or one
abiding by acceptable rules of international behaviour. Conservative representations
of the Russia-threat argument tend to focus on the nation’s political culture (Pipes
1997; Odom 2001; Cohen 2007), while more liberal interpretations place responsibility
for Russia’s ‘anti-Western’ policies on the Kremlin’s leadership (Council on Foreign
Relations 2006; Lapidus 2007; Legvold 2007, p. 98; Wallander 2008). Conservative
perception was especially visible in justifications of expanding NATO to the east by
incorporating former parts of Russia’s sphere of influence. For example, the New York
Times columnist William Safire (1994) pursued the ‘window of opportunity’ argument
by insisting on the need to extend alliance membership to Poland, Hungary, the Czech
Republic, the Baltic states and ultimately Ukraine, because ‘Russia is authoritarian at
heart and expansionist by habit’. It had to be done promptly, he added, ‘while Russia
is weak and preoccupied with its own revival, and not later, when such a move would
be an insufferable provocation to a superpower’ (Safire 1994). Richard Pipes provided
the perspective of an academic and historian. He reminded his readers about Russia’s
‘heavy burden of history’ and failure to make ‘a clean break with its Soviet past’ (Pipes
1997, p. 67). To Pipes, Russians are yet to ‘overcome not only the communist legacy
but also that of the czars and their partner, the Orthodox Church, which for centuries
collaborated in instilling in their subjects disrespect for law, submission to strong and
wilful authority, and hostility to the West’ (Pipes 1997, p. 70). He then cautioned
against viewing the country as a potential ally, as Russia might still return as an enemy
‘if those who guide its destiny, exploiting the political inexperience and deep-seated
prejudices of its people, once again aspire to a glory to which they are not yet entitled’
(Pipes 1997, p. 78).
The Kremlin’s international assertiveness in the wake of the coloured revolutions in
the former Soviet region has instilled additional fears in both conservative and liberal
8For important exceptions, see revisionist scholarship on the West–Soviet relations (Holloway 1984;
Gartoff 1985; Cohen 1985; Kolko 1994). For analysis of Western scholarship as reflective of an
enemy’s perception, see Oren (2002) and Foglesong (2007). For a recent study of Sovietologists, see
Engerman (2010).
700 ANDREI P. TSYGANKOV
Western analysts. Russia has been frequently viewed as reviving the lost empire, ‘back-
pedalling’ on democracy and challenging the West’s vital interests in the world
(Brzezinski 2004; Council on Foreign Relations 2006; Cheney 2006; Satter 2007; Lucas
2009; Bugajski 2009). Russia’s intervention in Georgia in August 2008 provided a
fresh pretext for resorting to the theory of authoritarian expansionism. Although
Russia has legitimate interests in the Caucasus, many scholars and commentators
explained the Kremlin’s intervention either in terms of Russia’s expansionist
determination to secure full control over Georgia’s territory and resources (Asmus
2010; Blank 2009; Cornell & Starr 2009b, p. 8; Sherr 2009), or the Kremlin’s perceived
insecurity in response to the coloured revolutions and its search for internal legitimacy
(Cohen 2007; Lapidus 2007; Allison 2008; Ambrosio 2009; Filippov 2009). As a result,
both conservative and liberal perspectives were sceptical about Moscow entering
cooperative arrangements with Western nations voluntarily. As an authoritarian
revisionist state, it was expected instead that Russia would use available opportunities
to upset American plans to remain the dominant world power. If this reasoning
is correct, it is suggested, American policy makers would be wise to abandon any
search for partnership with post-Soviet Russia and stay firm in resisting its power
aspirations.
Critique
The theory of authoritarian expansionism suffers from biases of essentialism, cultural
ethnocentrism and political hypocrisy.
Essentialism
The first problem concerns the theory of authoritarian expansionism’s presentation of
Russia as a never changing entity that is constantly preoccupied with imperialist plans
to subjugate and occupy other nations. This tendency to essentialise Russia and its
foreign policy downplays the role of factors others than the nation’s political culture
or the regime’s strategic design. As a result, little serious consideration is given to the
possibility that Russia’s international assertiveness may be designed as a response to
actions by the West and to seek relatively limited objectives.
For example, despite frequent claims that St Petersburg’s nineteenth-century policy
sought to topple the Ottoman Empire and conquer Constantinople,9 Russia’s eastern
goals were far less ambitious. These objectives included protection of the Orthodox
Christians in the Balkans and the right to have a secure passage of Russian vessels
through the Black Sea. Although inside Russia there had been supporters of the drive
to Constantinople within intellectual and foreign-policy circles, it would be a mistake
to view Russia’s foreign policy as driven by their views. Even after defeat in the
Crimean War, the government did not turn away from Europe as Russia’s hard-liners
had hoped. As Chancellor Alexander Gorchakov’s activities demonstrated, St
9For such claims, see, for example, Kissinger (1994, pp. 140–44), Geyer (1987, p. 65) and MacKenzie
(1993, p. 220).
EXPLANATIONS OF RUSSIA’S FOREIGN POLICY 701
Petersburg wanted recognition of its interests in the Black Sea, which Russia was
prepared to defend even at the cost of German unification.
Even Soviet international policy had more limited goals than many Western
scholars and politicians believed. With the exception of the brief period of the drive for
world revolution, the Kremlin mainly sought to establish the Soviet Union as a great
power and recognised member of the international community, not to expand the
Soviet geopolitical boundaries. The Cold War, including the Soviet occupation of
Eastern Europe, the Cuban missile crisis in 1962 and the military intervention in
Afghanistan in 1979, also cannot be adequately understood without considering
actions by the Western nations. Western suspicion and mistrust toward the Soviet
Union served to strengthen its determination to act assertively. From the willingness
to work with Russia before and during the meeting at Yalta, Great Britain and the
United States soon moved to unilateral and potentially confrontational behaviour.
Ideological differences notwithstanding, Stalin and his entourage did not abandon
their attempts to mend fences with the West until Truman had made public his
doctrine of globally containing communism on 12 March 1947 and the Marshall Plan
had been proclaimed in June of the same year.
It is equally problematic to present Russia’s more recent assertiveness as a part of a
plan by the Kremlin to restore the empire and dominate its neighbours, even at the
price of confrontation with the West. Those accusing Russia of reviving the lost
empire, back-pedalling on democracy and challenging the West’s vital interests in the
world oversimplify the extremely complex process of Russia’s transformation and its
relations with Western nations. In particular, much of Russia’s assertiveness was a
product of the United States’ regime-change policy, efforts to achieve nuclear
superiority and the West’s post-Cold War advancement into what Russia perceived as
the sphere of its geopolitical interests.10 It is misleading to ignore the interactive nature
of Russia–West relations, presenting Russia as an essentialist entity with once-and-
forever formed values and behavioural patterns.
Ethnocentrism
The above-noted essentialist presentation of Russia’s foreign policy in part results
from the theory of authoritarian expansionism’s cultural ethnocentrism. Rather than
viewing other cultural communities as a source of learning, ethnocentric theories tend
to perceive them as a potential threat precisely because of their difference from the self.
Ethnocentrism precludes the theory of authoritarian expansionism from being able to
appreciate Russia’s historical, geopolitical and institutional distinctness because
ethnocentric ideas assume the superiority of their own culture and the inferiority of
others.
A good example of a Western ethnocentric theory is that of democratic peace,
according to which democracies do not go to war with each other.11 Critics of the
democratic peace theory pointed out that it reflects American values of what is
10For development of this argument, see Tsygankov (2010, ch. 6).
11For a summary of the debate, see Brown et al. (1996). For other works critical of Western
ethnocentrism in analysing Russia, see Malia (1999), Cohen (2001) and Brown (2010).
702 ANDREI P. TSYGANKOV
‘democratic’ and that those values themselves have been shaped by the United States’
perception of external threats (Oren 1995, 2002). Upon closer inspection, the theory of
democratic peace is a mirror image of the authoritarian expansionism theory. Simply
put, the two theories say that by not fighting each other Western-style democracies
tend to act peacefully and cooperatively abroad, whereas the non-Western
authoritarian systems, such as Russia, are bullish and expansionist exactly because
they are non-democracies. Yet social structures and internal conditions are far more
complex than the two theories present. For example, in the post-communist context,
democratisation is not infrequently accompanied by state weakness, thereby allowing
the re-emergence and the rise of a previously dormant militant ethnic nationalism. As
a result, not only do some of the newly established democracies go to war against each
other, but they may also do so in part as a result of their moving away from
authoritarianism (Mansfield & Snyder 2007). Similarly, authoritarian regimes that
lack popular legitimacy may be cautious enough and abstain from assertive foreign
policy if they perceive such policy as potentially destabilising. Just as authoritarian
regimes may be compatible with building an inclusive national identity and an efficient
economy,12 such regimes may be compatible with a moderate international behaviour.
The highly simplistic treatment of Russia’s political system becomes especially
problematic in the post-Soviet context. Indeed, if judged by the degree of public
support, rather than by institutionalisation of effective checks and balances, Russia’s
political system can hardly be called undemocratic.13 Yet Russia’s system is still
emerging, and can hardly be labelled either as an established democracy or as pure
authoritarianism. More nuanced categories and theories need to be developed if we are
to match Russia’s domestic conditions to its foreign policy. Even within the West,
meanings of democracy change over time,14 and it makes little sense to analyse the
Russian post-communist ‘democracy’ by comparing it to the model of Western
societies (McFaul 2001; Fish 2005; Baker & Glasser 2005), rather than to Russia’s own
history.
Hypocrisy
The essentialism and ethnocentrism of the authoritarian expansionism theory also feed
into questionable policy recommendations. Presenting Russia as an autocratic power
that invariably threatens the outside world leaves other countries with few options
regarding engaging Russia. If Russia—especially in presentation of Version One of the
theory of authoritarian expansionism—was, is and will remain an autocratic and anti-
Western imperialist state, then the West must either contain or confront it. Such
recommendations do not only tend to perpetuate the tense state of West–Russia
relations; they are also politically hypocritical because they deny Russia interests and
12For an argument against universality of economic and political openness for advancing economic
growth, see Bremmer (2006).
13Public support for President Putin was consistently high, ranging from 70% to 80% during the
2000s. In addition, some polls showed that almost half (47%) of Russians thought that the country
needed a distinct kind of democracy that would correspond to Russia’s national traditions and specific
qualities, and only 17% were against a democratic form of government (Interfax, 18 December 2007).
14On contested meanings of democracy in the United States, see Foner (1998) and Oren (2002).
EXPLANATIONS OF RUSSIA’S FOREIGN POLICY 703
stakes that the Western nations themselves view as fundamental to their own existence.
Russia’s interests and values are not only perceived as incompatible with those of the
West; they are also viewed as illegitimate and not worthy of recognition.
An example of these kinds of recommendations for Western governments might be
the calls by many advocates of the theory of authoritarian expansionism to punish and
contain the Kremlin following its assertive post-9/11 policy. Disappointed by Russia’s
unwillingness to follow the United States’ international agenda, analysts and members
of the American political class, such as Senator John McCain and Vice President Dick
Cheney, issued multiple statements indicating their concerns with Russia’s new
‘imperialism’ and energy ‘blackmail’.15 Steps were proposed, such as revoking Russia’s
membership in the G8, severing its ties with other Western institutions, banning
private investments and recognising the independence of secessionist territories (in
the case of Chechnya) (McCain 2003; Frum & Perle 2003, p. 263; Pipes 2004;
Edwards & Kemp 2006; Council on Foreign Relations 2006). These would amount to
a policy of containing Russia or returning to where the two nations were during the
Cold War.
Blaming Russia alone for the breakup of the post-9/11 international coalition is
insufficient at best and misleading at worst; and recommendations to contain or
punish Moscow are counter-productive. Denying Russia its political and energy
interests and the right to set an independent foreign policy is sure to come with large
political and economic costs. Such an approach is not likely to discipline a Russia that
continues to be in a position not to yield to external pressures. Continuous treatment
of Russia as a potential threat, rather than a legitimate member of international
society, may indeed bring to power in Moscow those who are interested in
exacerbating relations with the West. Politically, it may generate a prolonged cycle
of hostilities shaped by Russia and the West’s clashing perceptions of each other’s
intentions. NATO expansion, as well as military interventions in Kosovo and Iraq, has
already done its share of damage in this respect. Hard-line nationalists in Russia will
only be grateful to hawkish pundits and politicians for assisting them in constructing
an image of the West as a threat.
Three illustrations
This section reviews several cases of Russia’s assertiveness in order to highlight
empirical problems with employing the theory of authoritarian expansionism for
interpreting Russia’s behaviour. I have selected cases across historical eras—the
Crimean War, the Cold War and the Russia–Georgia War—which have been critically
important to the theory’s establishment and progression.
Crimean War
The advocates of the theory of authoritarian expansionism have advanced two
assumptions regarding the decision by Russia to go to war with the Ottoman Empire.
15For analysis of anti-Russian currents within the American political class and media circles, see
Tsygankov (2009) and English and Svyatets (2010).
704 ANDREI P. TSYGANKOV
First, they have argued that the Tsar’s ultimatum to the Sultan over the rights of
Orthodox Christians was predetermined by Russia’s traditional desire to conquer
Constantinople.16 Second, they have assumed that the autocratic nature of St
Petersburg’s decision making precluded any serious opposition to the Tsar’s plan.
Evidence for these assumptions is far from conclusive.
Nicholas did not seek to topple the Sultan. The Tsar’s objectives were more limited
and included the defence of the rights of Russia’s co-religionists residing within the
Ottoman Empire, preservation of the prestige of a European power, and the right to
maintain a fleet in the Black Sea. More than a third of the Ottoman Empire’s
population—approximately 13 million people—was Orthodox Christian, and the
Treaty of Kuchuk Kainardzhi provided Russia with special rights to protect Orthodox
Christians within the Ottoman Empire. Although these rights were not clearly defined,
Article 7 obligated the Porte to ‘give the Christian faith and its churches firm
protection’, and it granted ‘the Ministries of the Russian Imperial Court [the right] to
protect all interests of the church built in Constantinople’.17 As a member of the Holy
Alliance, Russia also viewed its commitment to the rights of Orthodox Christians as
consistent with its European obligations. In Nicholas’s perception, he was challenging
the Sultan on the issue of the Holy Places to return the Ottoman principalities to the
European Concert.18 Finally, the Tsar sought to confirm Russia’s control over the
Straits of the Bosphorus and the Dardanelles, which was vital to Russia’s economic
ties to Europe. The Crimean War resulted less from Russia’s expansionism and more
from the West and Russia’s incorrect perceptions of each other’s motives, as well as
from Nicholas’s overconfidence.
It would be equally wrong to assume that Nicholas’s assertiveness met no opposi-
tion at home. Advocates of a more restrained policy within the political class included
Nicholas’s most influential advisors, such as Count Nesselrode and Baron Brunnow,
who urged him to be cautious in negotiations with the Ottomans and consultations
with Austria and Prussia. On the other side of the political spectrum, Slavophiles
proclaimed the Crimean War to serve the ‘holy’ purpose of reviving Russia’s Christian
mission and pressured the Tsar to extend military support for the Balkan Slavs—
advice that Nicholas never accepted.19
Cold War
The early Cold War provides another seminal case of the theory of authoritarian
expansionism which places emphasis on the Soviet expansionist ideology and
16See for example, Kissinger (1994, pp. 140–44), Geyer (1987, p. 65) and MacKenzie (1993, p. 220).
17For the text of the agreement, see Dmytryshyn (1974, pp. 97–107).
18The Tsar’s stated objectives were that ‘all the Christian parts of Turkey must necessarily become
independent, must become again what they [formerly] were, principalities, Christian states, as such re-
enter the family of the Christian states of Europe’ (Vinogradov 1993, p. 170).
19Part of it was that Nicholas was wary of the Slavophiles’ insistence on abolition of serfdom.
Domestic censorship for the Slavophiles remained tight, and the war objectives were kept as limited
and status-quo oriented. Disappointed in Nicholas and the course of the war, the Slavophiles soon
began to withdraw their support (for details, see Curtiss 1979, pp. 557–60). The Tsar also rejected plans
from his own court to attack Constantinople (Fuller 1992, pp. 235–36).
EXPLANATIONS OF RUSSIA’S FOREIGN POLICY 705
totalitarian structure of Josef Stalin’s decision making (Kennan 1961; Kissinger 1994).
Again, the reality is far too complex to be adequately expressed by supporters of the
theory of authoritarian expansionism.
The historical record shows that Soviet international objectives after World War II
were limited and shaped by the state’s perception of strategic interests, rather than
communist ideology.20 Before the end of 1945, Stalin acted with restraint and
generally in the spirit of the Yalta and Potsdam agreements as he interpreted them. He
was willing to tolerate Poland’s independence, although not outside the Soviet area of
influence (Suny 1998, p. 344). He also planned no communist takeovers in Europe and
advised the leaders of communist parties in Italy, France, Hungary and Bulgaria to
cooperate with national governments and not to expect to assume power within the
foreseeable future (Roberts 1999, p. 19; LaFeber 1997, p. 20)—partly because he
wanted to prevent the strengthening of independent communist centres (Daniels 1985,
p. 220). In addition—and consistent with the agreement on the division of influence he
had devised with Churchill—Stalin refused to interfere in Greece (Pikhoya 2007, p.
146). He further abstained from interfering in Finland, which he viewed as
maintaining a generally ‘friendly’ international posture (Alperovitz 1971, p. 22).
Outside Europe, Stalin advised Chinese communists to enter into a coalition with their
enemies, the nationalists (Roberts 1999, p. 19). He also refused to defy the United
States by intervening in Japan and landing in Hokkaido, as some of his advisers
encouraged him to do after Truman had dropped two nuclear bombs on Hiroshima
and Nagasaki in August 1945 (Suny 1998, p. 345).
The really radical turn in the Soviet attitude toward the West did not take place
until the Marshall Plan was officially proclaimed in June 1947. ‘There is little
evidence’, wrote Vladislav Zubok and Constantine Pleshakov, ‘that before the
Marshall Plan Stalin had any master plan for immediate expansion’ (Zubok &
Pleshakov 1996, p. 130). Even after Truman had proclaimed his new doctrine in
March 1947, Stalin was hoping to continue political ties and negotiations with the
United States and Great Britain. In April, during a long meeting with State Secretary
George Marshall, Stalin argued for a possible compromise on ‘all the main questions’
and insisted that ‘it was necessary to have patience and not become pessimistic’
(Kissinger 1994, p. 444). Marshall, however, was of a different opinion, and in his
radio address on 28 April he indicated that the United States was no longer in a mood
to deliberate and was planning to take decisive actions (Kissinger 1994, p. 445). On 5
June he delivered his Marshall Plan speech, in which he pledged financial assistance for
the post-war reconstruction of the European continent. In response, Stalin and
Molotov articulated their alternative to Western policy by creating a separate bloc
with the Eastern European states and suppressing any opposition to their policy
within the region. At home, the new course meant a return to the pre-war system of
mass mobilisation and repressions.
In addition, the Soviet power structure, as highly centralised as it was, did allow for
opposition to the policy of assertiveness. Immediately following the war, Stalin’s most
20This is not to say that ideology was unimportant. Yet, it was more important as ‘the internal lens
through which the state viewed the very legitimacy of its actions’ (Gaddis 1997, p. 290) than as a
justification for hard-line actions toward the West.
706 ANDREI P. TSYGANKOV
impatient comrades wanted him to cross the Elbe and occupy some parts of the
Western European nations—advice that he rejected as impractical.21 From the other
side of the political spectrum, a former Foreign Minister Maxim Litvinov and the
ambassador to the United States Andrei Gromyko defended the ‘liberal’ approach
that included more respect for the choices of Eastern European states and more
extensive negotiations with the Western ones (Zubok & Pleshakov 1996, pp. 29–30;
Pikhoya 2007, pp. 106–8). What exacerbated the situation, making it ever more
difficult to prevent a full-fledged political confrontation, was the two sides’
international ambitions and mistrust of each other’s intentions. Stalin’s geopolitically
limited ‘socialist imperialism’ was met with the West’s global ‘democratic imperial-
ism’.22 Had the West been be less revisionist and fearful of the Kremlin’s preparedness
to penetrate the Western nations,23 there was a possibility that Stalin would have
continued with post-war cooperative security arrangements.
The Russia–Georgia War
Similar problems exist with the claims of the theory of authoritarian expansionism
that an autocratic Moscow was seeking to establish imperial control over Tbilisi and
that the war with Georgia was part of a broader geopolitical plan to revive Russia’s
hegemony in the former Soviet region and to challenge the West globally (Asmus 2010,
pp. 9, 14, 217–18; Blank 2009, p. 104; Cornell & Starr 2009b, p. 8; Sherr 2009, p.
224).24
Russia’s relationship with its Caucasian neighbour has evolved through several
increasingly unhappy stages and Moscow’s objectives have been defensive, aiming
mainly to prevent NATO expansion and the inclusion of Georgia and potentially
Ukraine into the alliance. Just as Tbilisi was angry with Moscow’s unwillingness to
honour Georgia’s independence and the right to choose a foreign-policy orientation,
Russia was frustrated with the lack of recognition by the United States and NATO.
While it is plausible to assume the Kremlin’s intention was to gain full control over
Georgia, it is at least as plausible to interpret Russia’s motives as driven by defence
and security considerations. The interests of Russia’s security are at least as helpful in
determining its behaviour and explaining why it limited itself to recognising Abkhazia
and South Ossetia’s independence, but abstained from pursuing the more expansionist
objectives of removing Saakashvili from power and establishing a pro-Kremlin regime
in Tbilisi. The theory of authoritarian expansionism lacks nuance and a sense of
proportion and, by presenting Russia as inherently imperialist and anti-Western, this
theory is less inclined to consider seriously the impact of contemporary developments
and international interactions on Russia’s behaviour.
21For example, General Semyon Budennyi advocated such intervention. Stalin reportedly responded
to Budennyi by posing the rhetorical questions ‘how are we to feed them?’ (Akstyutin 1995).
22The terms of ‘socialist’ and ‘democratic’ imperialism come from Zubok and Gaddis, respectively
(Zubok 2009, ch. 2; Gaddis 1997, pp. 284, 289).
23See, for example, CIA (1948, pp. 4–7) and NSC (1948, pp. 1–2). For analysis of the United States’
inflated assessments of the Soviet threat after the war, see Evangelista (1982).
24Other scholars argued that the war assisted the Kremlin with its internal legitimacy (Allison 2008,
p. 1169; Filippov 2009).
EXPLANATIONS OF RUSSIA’S FOREIGN POLICY 707
Western nations and Georgia too bear responsibility for Russia’s increasingly
assertive behaviour in the Caucasus. By assisting Tbilisi with its political transition
after the Rose Revolution and not interfering with its efforts to restore control over
Adjara, the Kremlin expected Georgia to honour its interests in the Caucasus by not
pressing for immediate military withdrawals, excluding the use of force from dealings
with South Ossetia and Abkhazia, and consulting Russia on vital security issues such
as membership in NATO. Soon, however, Tbilisi adopted a strategy of solving
territorial disputes without assistance from Russia and by relying on support from the
United States. By 2004 Washington had provided $1.2 billion in aid in the previous
decade, and deployed military advisors in Georgia. The United States was determined
to secure its access to Caspian oil and strengthen its geostrategic presence in the
Caucasus, which the Kremlin saw as evidence of America’s bias and lack of
recognition of Russia’s role in the region. The United States did little to restrain
Georgia’s militarisation and ambitions to reign in its autonomous regions by force.25
While Russia was increasing its support for Abkhazia and South Ossetia, NATO and
US officials did not hide their backing of Tbilisi, and rarely criticised Georgia’s actions
in public. For example, less than a month before the war, the US Secretary of State
Condoleezza Rice travelled to Europe. She found no time to visit Moscow, but on 9
July she went to Tbilisi to demonstrate support for Georgia’s territorial integrity and
NATO aspirations.
It is also unrealistic to assume that the Kremlin’s decision-making system was
autocratic enough to exclude a serious debate within the ruling circles. According to
Gleb Pavlovski, one faction within the Kremlin wanted to march on Tbilisi in order to
challenge the West and fully revive Russia’s domination in the Caucasus (Felgenhauer
2009, pp. 178–79). Another faction had more modest objectives, but did consider a
decision to remove Saakashvili. Prime Minister Vladimir Putin and Russian Foreign
Minister Sergei Lavrov both indicated that they wanted the Georgian President ‘to go’
and at first considered this a condition for a ceasefire (Asmus 2010, pp. 199, 220). Still
another faction seems to have been satisfied with achieving a military victory over
Georgia and recognition of its rebellious provinces.26 The ruling structure was far
from uniform or consolidated.
Towards a better understanding of Russia
The analysis in this article suggests the theory of authoritarian expansionism has a
rather limited ability to understand Russia and its foreign policy. Not only does the
theory tend to misrepresent the direction and scope of Russia’s international actions,
but it is potentially misleading regarding the sources of such actions. Because of its
emphasis on the role of domestic ‘authoritarianism’ in determining foreign policy, the
theory of authoritarian expansionism tends to miss other important sources of state
international behaviour, such as security conditions and actions by outside powers
towards Russia. It is not that the theory of authoritarian expansionism is necessarily
25According to the former Defence Minister Irakli Okruashvili (2007), Georgia planned a military
invasion of South Ossetia in 2006.
26This objective seems to have been favoured by President Medvedev (2008).
708 ANDREI P. TSYGANKOV
wrong, but it is biased and incomplete and therefore potentially wrong. To apply the
late Martin Malia’s (1999, p. 9) diagnosis, ‘the West is not necessarily most alarmed
when Russia is in reality most alarming, nor most reassured when Russia is in fact
most reassuring’. The theory’s tendency to essentialise Russia’s internal conditions and
exaggerate its international ambitions should therefore make analysts pause before
adopting the theory of authoritarian expansionism framework and policy recommen-
dations.
A better approach to Russia would be to devise a more complex classification of
Russia’s foreign policy. The historical record will show that since its emergence as an
independent centralised state, Russia has followed not one but several distinct
trajectories in relations with the West (Tsygankov 2012). From opening a permanent
mission in Rome in the early seventeenth century to the collective security policy
before World War II, Russia frequently sided with a coalition of Western states
against those whom it viewed as challenging Russian values of security. The second
distinct trajectory of Russia’s relations with the West has been that of defensiveness or
balancing through domestic revival and flexible international alliances. It included
Russia’s periods of recovery after the Time of Troubles, the war with Sweden, the
Crimean War, the Communist Revolution and the Soviet disintegration. Finally,
historically Russia has resorted to assertiveness in relations with the West, as
exemplified by the cases considered above of the Crimean War, Cold War and the
Russia–Georgia war of August 2008. The theory of authoritarian expansionism is
applicable only to the third trajectory of Russia’s foreign policy and to a limited
degree.
A better approach to Russia would be one free from crude biases and hypocritical
recommendations. Such approaches should be eclectic and draw from various theo-
retical traditions by incorporating ideas of domestic institutions, considerations of
national security and international recognition as sources of the nation’s foreign
policy.27 The first task ought to be to establish a meaningful context in which Russia
acts and seeks to achieve its goals. Scholarly responsibility demands that we should
establish it by studying the relevant historical, social, psychological and political
contexts behind what ostensibly are ‘autocratic’ decisions. Proceeding from the 200-
year-old vision of Russia by the Marquis de Custine as an essentially aggressive
nation, or engaging in reconstruction of the Kremlin’s motives without sufficient
evidence at hand, is unlikely to facilitate a better understanding of the country or
produce sound policy recommendations. How the Russians themselves describe their
system of commitments to relevant social communities should give us a better clue as
to what the purpose, legitimacy and scope of their actions might be. The second task
should be to analyse the level of power and confidence that provides the state with the
required platform for acting, and it incorporates power capabilities, institutional
capacity and the leadership’s perceptions of actions necessary for implementing the
vision. Even if the domestic belief system supports assertive international behaviour,
Russia may lack the resources to act on it. Finally, a scholar of foreign policy must
carefully monitor the actions of the Western states toward Russia. As constructivism
27For a recent attempt to offer a more sophisticated analysis of relationships between
authoritarianism and foreign policy, see Chambers (2010).
EXPLANATIONS OF RUSSIA’S FOREIGN POLICY 709
teaches us, such external actions may serve the purpose of external legitimisation of
Russia’s behaviour on the international scene. By providing various forms of support
the outside world may have the power to encourage Russia not to resort to revisionist
behaviour. Only such an eclectic approach, sensitive to local systems of perceiving the
outside world, national security interests and the behaviour of outsiders, may bring us
closer to a better understanding of an enormously complex country, such as Russia.
San Francisco State University
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Zubok, V. M. & Pleshakov, C. (1996) Inside the Kremlin’s Cold War: From Stalin to Khrushchev
(Cambridge, MA, Harvard University Press).
EXPLANATIONS OF RUSSIA’S FOREIGN POLICY 713
http://www.csce.gov/index.cfm?FuseAction=ContentRecords.ViewTranscript&ContentRecord_id=423&ContentType=H&ContentRecordType=H&CFID=756971&CFTOKEN=19664130
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http://www.csce.gov/index.cfm?FuseAction=ContentRecords.ViewTranscript&ContentRecord_id=423&ContentType=H&ContentRecordType=H&CFID=756971&CFTOKEN=19664130
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UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
EMPIRE AND AN EMPIRE OF THE EAST?
WHERE DID WE GET TO BEFORE THE BREAK?
IS IT JUST ABOUT TERRTITORY (UKRAINE AND TAIWAN) OR IS IT ABOUT IDEAS (FREEDOM VERSUS DICTATORSHIP) AS WELL?
WHERE IS ALL THIS HEADING?
UGLY AMERICAN OR EMPIRE OF LIBERTY? – THERE ARE TWO BIG STORIES ABOUT THE UNITED STATES IN THE WORLD TODAY.
FOR CENTURIES, THE UNITED STATES DENIED THAT IT WAS AN EMPIRE. NOW MOST COMMENTATORS ARE HAPPY TO DESCRIBE
IT AS AN EMPIRE, BUT AS A DIFFERENT EMPIRE TO, SAY, THE RUSSIAN EMPIRE.
CHINA AND USA RUB UP AGAINST EACH OTHER IN THE SOUTH CHINA AND EAST CHINA SEAS.
SINCE THE 1500S, WHAT IS NOW THE UNITED STATES LOOKED LIKE A EUROPEAN EMPIRE
REMEMBER THAT THERE HAS ONLY BEEN A UNITED STATES SINCE 1776.
Of course, the Americas were settled from Asia and by roaming 20,000 years hunter ago. gatherer bands between 11
Another was Europe thing and to not think China about that is the conquered fact that the it Americas in the 1500s.
For the best part of one thousand years, 300- with wars, 1300, no migrations Europe unity was (except and a squabbling
invasions. Christianity) jumble and of states many
EUROPEANS WERE CLOSEST TO THE AMERICAS – CLOSER THAN THE ROMANS, INDIANS OR CHINESE!
EUROPEANS WERE RELATIVELY POOR AND WARLIKE WITH POWERFUL INCENTIVES TO SAIL THE OCEAN AND TO ROB
RESOURCES WHERE THEY COULD.
Vasco Da Gama rounded the Cape of Good Hope, making it clear that there was an easy sea route to the Indian Ocean, India and the
SPICE ISLANDS. THE MONGOLS HAD BLOCKED THE LAND ROUTE – THE OLD SILK ROAD. It opened up sea routes to the East
Indies for the spice trade. Da Gama’s objective was a faster route to the East African slave trades. Da Gama was a wealthy slave
trader out for personal gain.
CHRISTOPHER COLUMBUS IN 1492 HOPED TO SAIL WEST TO THE RICHES OF ASIA BUT HE HAD UNDERESTIMATED THE SIZE OF
THE EARTH BY ABOUT HALF. AND COLUMBUS DID NOT REALISE THAT THE AMERICAN CONTINENT STOOD IN HIS WAY. BY
THE
1500S EUROPEANS HAD COLONISED JUST ABOUT ALL OF THE AMERICAS AND DISPOSSESSED THE NATIVE AMERICANS.
THE
SINO-RUSSIAN
CHALLENGE
TOTHE
WORLDORDER
MATIOMALIDENTITIES,BILATERALRELATIONS
GILBERTROIM
STEPHENF.COHEN
WAR
WITH
RUSSIA?
FROMPUTIN&UKRAINETO
TRUMP&RUSSIAGATE
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It was not long before the Colombian Exchange brought great wealth to Europe and disease and slavery to the Americas. The
marriage of racism and imperialism led European to enforce widespread enslavement and exploitation of millions of people in the
Americas. Diseases such as smallpox did the heavy lifting in terms of facilitating European imperialism.
Doris Lee, ‘Thanksgiving’ (ca. 1935). Gratitude in the face of challenges. 1620 the pilgrims compared their exodus to the exodus from
Egypt. Half of the people on the Mayflower died from starvation over the next year.
LEGACY OF SLAVERY HAUNTS THE UNITED STATES AND ITS SELF-PROCLAIMED IDEAL OF FREEDOM. 1619 was the year slaves
first came to what is now the United States. Critics argues that the whole purpose of the American project was racial domination and
slavery. It is
a
a
negative
image
of American
that
has
gained
traction.
MAP OF THE UNITED STATES WHEN IT FIRST CAME INTO EXISTENCE BACK IN 1776
THERE REALLY WAS A HAMILTON
BEFORE THE MUSICAL
Alexander Hamilton was one of the FOUNDING FATHERS
f American democracy in 1776.
The United States really was a TRAILBLAZER, the first modern state DEMOCRACY, to abolish and give monarchy, the vote to
set qualified up a adult REPRESENTATIVE men.
Democracy over the next two hundred years would become a big military thing muscle with the for United Team Democracy.
States acting as the inspiration and
And what was the real Hamilton famous for?
In The Federalist Papers, Alexander Hamilton noted that the United Kingdom and the United States were both islands and this
made them uniquely well placed to embrace the concept
f FREEDOM.
ACCORDING states like Russia TO HAMILTON, and China the and problem Germany with were big continental that they were
always fighting each other – constant wars encouraged the rise of dictatorial rule.
By contrast, Britain and the United States had no dangerous borders and therefore no dictator!
The United States was committed to preventing the rise of a king or dictator – that is why power in America to this day is the
divided Supreme three Court. ways between the President, the Congress and
the Hamilton USA needed also had to sound use PROTECTIONIST economic advice, tariffs which to protect was that its infant
industries from European competition.
FOR FIFTY YEARS, THE BIG ENEMY OF THE UNITED STATES WAS BRITAIN – SEEMS INCREDIBLE NOW. IN THE WAR OF 1812, THE
BRITISH BURNED WASHINGTON BEFORE AGREEING TO LEAVE!
FLAWED DEMOCRACY
THOMAS States and JEFFERSON a brilliant was Enlightenment the third president thinker/writer of the United who
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f the 1776 American
created “We hold equal, these that Truths they to are be endowed self-evident, by their that Creator all Men with are certain
unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the Pursuit of Happiness … ”
The UNITED STATES was supposed to be a ‘new’ and ‘different’ nation founded upon principles of freedom and EQUALITY.
However, there was SLAVERY since 1619 and it was the basis
f the southern economy – cotton, sugar etc.
Jefferson owned over 600 enslaved people during his
lifetime, inherited his the family most plantation of any American and needed president a workforce! – he had
Jefferson also kept hidden his long-term relationship with his six slave children Sally Hemmings with her. after his wife died and
fathered at least
Decades later, Jefferson freed all of Sally Hemings’s children
Jefferson did not grant freedom to any other enslaved family unit.
It is not a good look from today’s perspective on slavery and hypocrisy.
penned Declaration the of Independence: immortal words
OL’ MAN RIVER
• QUESTION: GEOGRAPHICAL DIFFERENT BETWEEN
WHAT IS THE BIG
THE UNITED STATES AND AUSTRALIA?
ANSWER: THE AMERICANS HAVE THE MISSISSIPPI RIVER AND NOT A DESERT IN THE MIDDLE OF THE CONTINENT.
IN 1803, THE AMERICANS BOUGHT THE MIDDLE OF THE AMERICAN CONTINENT FROM A CASH-STRAPPED NAPOLEON OF
FRANCE.
It is called the Louisiana Purchase and was centred on the Mississippi River and the mid-west from Canada to New Orleans.
THE LOUISIANA PURCHASE cost 15 million dollars – a bargain for some of the best farmland in the world.
In 1867, the United States purchased ALASKA from Russia for seven million dollars, another bargain.
BRAVE NEW
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WORLD
Did the United States travel a SPECIAL PATH (Sonderweg as the Germans would say) historically?
wanted America more has always FREEDOM. generated excitement among European visitors who
It all started with a tour of the United States in 1831 by a famous French writer Alexis de Tocqueville.
He described America as ‘exceptional’
influential In 1835, De books Tocqueville ever that wrote sang ‘Democracy the praises of in America America’, and one
democracy. of the most
What struck de Tocqueville was that the United States was more egalitarian than Europe.
This was because European migrants left behind their class system in Europe.
Class did not matter in this new rich land because there was so much
pportunity, social mobility unmatched anywhere else in the world.
by liberty. In the swearing United allegiance States, it was to the possible new nation to become and American its ideology
citizens of individual simply
“The position of the Americans is quite exceptional,”, wrote Tocqueville.
Of course, there was still slavery, patriarchy, prejudices of all kinds…
CHOSEN BY GOD?
O’SULLIVAN In 1845, a newspaper came up with man a named memorable JOHN MANIFEST phrase to sum DESTINY. up
American history –
means, If you are it is wondering similar to what ‘inevitable’ MANIFEST or ‘obvious’ or ‘clearly going to happen’
The 1846-48 war against Mexico drove the Mexicans out of Texas.
Americans were finally
Native Great dispossessed Plains were of all conquered their lands in the as 1880s the – as one Native American leader
famously put it – ‘the Americans made many promised promises, to but take they our only land kept and they one. did’. They
The United States annexed Hawaii in 1898.
States 1898 war in against control Spain of Cuba put the and United the Philippines.
The Americans took about half of Mexico’s territory in a war in the late 1840s. The Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo ended the Mexican-
American War (1846-1848) and was signed on February 2, 1848, at Guadalupe Hidalgo, a city north of the capital where the Mexican
government had fled. The present-day states of California, Nevada, Utah, New Mexico, most of Arizona and Colorado, and parts of
Oklahoma, Kansas, and Wyoming plus the south and west of Texas were originally native American and then Mexican before being
conquered by the United States.
THE SPANISH AMERICAN WAR
The United States opportunistically exploited geopolitical vacuums first of all in the Americas and then in the Pacific.
You the might Spanish not American know that War the of United 1898 States – the defeated Americans Spain won in the
control war over was about Philippines, at least Puerto in theory). Rico, Guam and Cuba (which
The victory over Spain meant that America’s possessions in the Pacific stretched from Hawaii to the Philippines, Guam,
American Samoa, Wake island).
Presidents Theodore Roosevelt and Woodrow Wilson called the new Pacific lands COLONIES.
But the idea of America being a colonial power created power problems that for defeated America’s the self-image British
Empire as the in 1776. anti-colonial rebel
So instead of colonies, Hawaii and the Philippines became simply OVERSEAS TERRITORIES.
Hawaii and Alaska became states in 1959 and now appear on virtually all published maps of the country.
American Samoa, Guam, the US Virgin Islands, the Northern Marianas remain TERRITORIES.
The Philippines in independent but closely linked to the United States.
Its critics argue that it the empire. United States is just another
THUS. THE UNITED STATES CLAIMED A PACIFIC EMPIRE IN THE NINETEENTH CENTURY: THE UNITED STATES TOOK CALIFORNIA
FROM MEXICO, ALASKA FROM RUSSIA, THE PHILIPPINES FROM SPAIN, AND SEVERAL ISLANDS FROM JAPAN.
AMERICA HAS ALWAYS HAD ITS SHARE OF DIVISIONS RACIAL DIVISIONS ARE THE BEST KNOWN. WHAT SAVED AMERICA WAS
AMAZING ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT.
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HOME OF MASS PRODUCTION
America in 1900 was the world’s workshop, much like China is today.
Migration, motor cars, mass production and mass consumerism transformed the American economy between 1900 and 1930.
Electricity brought light to homes, safety to streets and made possible the night-shift in factories.
The electric elevator permitted skyscrapers, leading to urban density;
Machine tools and assembly-line organization transformed the workplace.
The internal combustion engine transformed transportation.
Railways connected the east and west coasts of America opened up the farmland of the mid- West to trade through Chicago
and the GREAT LAKES.
The electric refrigerator changed food supply and eating habits.
A public water supply protected every household;
The retail store replaced homemade clothes and made shopping for clothes affordable
America was a home of PHILANTHROPY – charitable donations to universities and hospialts that would make everything from
X-rays and antibiotics to atomic bombs achievable. .
THE PROGRESSIVE ERA. In the decade before World War One, America was taking in a million migrants a year.
MIGRATION THE KEY TO SUCCESS
the A massive United migration States is program connected means to that all ethnic, regions and of cultural the world ties.
through family,
year In the arrived early in 1900s the United one million States. migrants a
America has always attracted the bright and ambitious.
Of the 104 Americans who have been awarded Nobel Prizes in chemistry, been medicine, immigrants. and physics since 2000,
40 have
American performing students students attract from the around highest- the world.
There are 330 million Americans with
20. living standards higher than that living per capita standards are about in Australia.
DISILLUSIONMENT WITH WORLD WAR ONE
This is a tricky bit.
The United States entered the war late, in 1917, and was on the winning side.
BUT
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WORLD WAR ONE GREATLY UNSETTLED THE UNITED STATES- 116,000 mostly young American men died in the fighting,
about two million were disabled, and more than half a million Americans died been from called the the Spanish American Flu Flu
– which as it should started have in a military base in Kansas.
The United States had tried to stay out of the war and only got involved in 1917, just as the Russians exited.
The argument against the war was that the British had tricked the Americans into helping out the Allies basically to save Britain
and France and with no benefit to the United States.
After World War One, Americans voted for REPUBLICAN presidents who made it clear that it DID NOT WANT to be entangled in
Europe’s problems.
This mood is called ‘ISOLATIONISM’.
ISOLATIONISM
A First’ huge – sound political familiar? movement arose called ‘America
In the 1920s and 30s, the United States did not join the the continent Imperial League rise Japan of could of Fascist Nations on
shield the Italy, grounds and Nazi itself did Germany little that from the to the counteract and American world’s even problems.
THE GUY ON THE LEFT IS THE FAMOUS AIRMAN CHARLES LINDBERGH, THE FIRST MAN TO FLY SOLO NONSTOP ACROSS
THE ATLANTIC IN THE 1920S.
AMERICA Lindbergh FIRST was the COMMITTEE best-known and supporter was a constant of the thorn in the side of President
Roosevelt who wanted America to do more to defend DEMOCRACY and fight the NAZIS.
If Democratic you are President wondering Roosevelt why (FDR) the did American not do was more because to help that Britain
would and have France led fight to his the defeat Nazis, in it the 1940 Presidential election.
Most Americans, until Pearl Harbor, did not want to be involved in another European war.
PEARL HARBOR ATTACK IN 1941 ENDED ISOLATIONISM
FIG H
WORLD WAR TWO DREW AMERICA DEEPER AND DEEPER INTO THE PACIFIC WORLD. AUSTRALIA BECAME AMERICA’S MAIN BASE
AND SIGNED THE ANZUS AGREEMENT IN 1951. JAPAN WAS OCCUPIED AND HAS BEEN AN AMERICAN ALLY SINCE WORLD WAR
TWO. THE UNITED STATES HAS REMAINED CLOSELY CONNECTED TO SOUTH KOREA, THE PHILIPPINES AND TO TAIWAN,
EFFECTIVELY CONTAINING THE EASTERN COAST OF MAINLAND CHINA.
WORLD WAR TWO TURNED THE PACIFIC INTO AN AMERICAN LAKE
THE UNITED STATES defeated the Japanese with a fair bit of help from the Chinese who bogged the Japanese down and from
Australia which provided a huge air and sea base for fighting Japan.
Soon 1941, after Australian the Japanese Prime attack Minister on Pearl John Harbour Curtin in December put the importance
of the United States this way: ‘Without any that inhibitions Australia of any looks kind”, to America, he declared, free of “I any
make pangs it quite as to clear our traditional links or kinship with the United Kingdom’.
The, New Zealand Prime Minister Peter Fraser put it this way: “New Zealand realises that the security and future development
in cooperation of with the the Pacific United can States’. only be satisfactorily achieved
Pearl Harbor attack had utterly discredited the pre-war isolationist movement.
JAPAN, THE PHILIPPINES, SOUTH KOREA AND TAIWAN BECAME COMPLETELY DEPENDENT UPON AMERICAN MILTIARY
POWER FOR THEIR DEFENSE.
complete For decades, monopoly the of United power States in the Pacific maintained an almost
The United States is still in the box seat because so many Australia, Pacific islands New and Zealand coastal and states
Vietnam – Japan, – Philippines, prefer the Taiwan United States to China.
TRUMAN DOCTRINE
Truman’s ‘Truman Doctrine’ speech of March 1947 was an important statement about what role America would play in the
world.
According to Truman, there could be no return to ISOLATIONISM because WORLD COMMUNISM represented a deadly threat to
the American way
f life and had to be stopped.
‘At the present moment in world history nearly every nation must choose between alternative ways of life. The choice is too
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often not a free
ne…One way of life is based upon the will of the majority, and is distinguished by free institutions, representative
government, free elections, guarantees of individual liberty, freedom of speech and religion, and freedom from political
ppression….The second way of life is based upon the will of a minority forcibly imposed upon the majority. It relies upon
terror and oppression, a controlled press and radio; fixed elections, and the suppression of personal freedoms’.
After the speech, Truman’s approval rating rose from 49% to 60%.
MARSHALL PLAN
WAS A BIG DEAL
But it would take more than military force to save Europe, which was economically ruined by the war.
What Europe needed was American money!
In June 1947 Truman’s new Secretary of State George C. Marshall announced that the United States was willing to assist
European nations in need if they made formal requests for assistance.
Marshall warned that the collapse of Europe’s postwar economy would lead to another economic and political crisis and a third
world war.
According to Marshall, Europe would be able to rebuild and become stable and prosperous with American help.
It all sounded so generous and altruistic!
Britain and France got the most.
Marshall Plan aid went to Turkey in the east, Portugal in the west, Sweden in. the north and Greece in the south!
13 billion US dollars at the time was a small fortune.
And it was money well spent.
No country that took Marshall Plan aid ever turned Communist…
The Europeans built economies that were linked to an American supply chain, ensuring that American firms did well
ut of the new arrangement.
AMERICA WAS INVOLVED ON MULTIPLE FRONTS DURING THE COLD WAR
established North Atlantic in Washington Treaty Organisation on 4 April 1949. (NATO) was
was Up President until opposition the Truman American to had him to election play spending it of cool November more in case
money there 1948 defending Europe.
In 1948, Britain formed the Brussels Pact with four
ther countries and urged the Americans to join.
wish In April and 1949, set up Truman a military gave alliance the United known Kingdom as NATO. its
States. It had twelve Canada founding and ten members countries – in the Western United Europe.
It was the most successful military alliance in all
f history.
To this day, no NATO member has ever left.
ARTICLE on COLLECTIVE 5 of NATO’s DEFENCE founding – an principles attack is on based one member is an an attack on
them all.
The Soviet Union never attacked a NATO member.
called after Ironically, the into 9/11 the play attacks only was time in in support 2001. that ARTICLE of the United 5 has States
been
NATO (THE ORANGE BITS) IS THE MOST SUCCESSFUL MILITARY ALLIANCE SINCE WORLD WAR TWO – NO ALLY OF THE UNITED
STATES HAS EVER DEFECTED.
TEAM AMERICA OR AMERICAN EMPIRE?
It is a bit of both – TEAM and EMPIRE are appropriate UNITED STATES. terms to use in relation to the
alliance. countries begged Historians the like have United Britain, noted States France that to and join West West in a European
Germany military
The historian Geir Lundestad has described the distinct new American from Nazi empire invasion as ‘empire or Soviet by
invitation’ occupation as in Eastern Europe.
the On the Americans other hand, had ‘bought’ we aid need and plenty to anti-Communist remember of good that will through
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Propaganda. Marshall Plan
American In money other as allies. words, well as there love of was democracy love of motivating American
This was the strength of of countries Team America that were – a willing opposed partnership to Stalin and Communism.
There and States Italy was in Parties. which Western plenty had of Europe, massive opposition especially Communist to the in
and/or France United Socialist
strong But no enough Communist to win Party an election. in the West was ever
By 1947, the Cold War was under way and Europe was divided into rival blocs, Team America and Team Stalin. Orthodox historians
blame Stalin and Revisionist historian blame Truman. There is a case to be made that both
sides motives were defensive rather than aggressive. But there was simply no common ground, no bond of trust once Roosevelt
departed the stage. After the Berlin Airlift ended in stalemate, Europe was frozen into Western and Communist spheres of influence
for forty years.
POPULAR CULTURE DURING THE COLD WAR HELPED THE IDEA THAT AMERICA STOOD FOR FREEDOM. AMERICA IS STILL
WINNING THAT ‘SOFT POWER’ WAR. YOUNG ONES AROUND THE WORLD JUST LOVE AMERICAN CULTURE.
WEST AS THE HOME OF FREEDOM – THE BATTLE OF IDEAS
There were some IMAGE problems for America along the way. The Vietnam War was not just a military disaster for the United States
and a human tragedy all round, but also a propaganda disaster for the West. One of the worst of the American atrocities in Vietnam
occurred in 1969 at My Lai when Lieutenant William Calley ordered his company to massacre 500 Vietnamese villagers (almost all
non-combatant elderly and children). While many in America saw Calley as just another messed-up victim of the war, My Lai severely
harmed the American brand across the world. It was widely assumed that My Lai was a typical atrocity/war crime and not just a one-
off tragedy.
The distressing image of nine-year-old PHAN THI KIM PHUC on fire and fleeing a napalm attack – the front page of the New York
Times in 1972 – was another damaging moment for the American brand. You will be pleased to know that she survived and is still
alive and still campaigning against this type of weapon.
GORBACHEV
HISTORY SOMETIMES SEEMS INEVITABLE WHEN IN FACT INDIVIDUALS MATTER A GREAT DEAL.
There were fundamental flaws in Soviet economy but nothing too fatal.
Then in 1985, the new, youthful General Secretary Gorbachev of took the over Communist the Soviet Party state Mikhail
GORBACHEV’S REFORMS – GLASNOST AND PERESTROIKA destabilised the Soviet Union, which began to unravel.
Gorbachev was the first democratically- Alexander inclined person Kerensky to took lead over Russia from since the tsar back
in 1917 – Kerensky and Gorbachev were equally unsuccessful.
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Team Western America Europe, Canada, – United Australia Kingdom, and than itself Pope Team John bigger, Soviet. Paul richer
the Second and more had popular proven
GORBACHEV DECIDED TO ALLOW THE COUNTRIES OF EASTERN
EUROPE TO JOIN TEAM AMERICA!
POLAND BROKE FROM THE SOVIET UNION IN AUGUST 1989
HUNGARY BROKE FROM THE SOVIET UNION IN OCTOBER 1989
EAST GERMANY BROKE FROM THE SOVIET UNION IN NOVEMBER 1989 WHEN THE BERLIN WALL CAME DOWN
CZECHOSLOVAKIA AND ROMANIA BROKE AWAY FROM THE SOVIET UNION IN DECEMBER 1989
BULGARIA BROKE AWAY FROM THE SOVIET UNION IN 1990.
Bottom line here is that Communism was not without popular Soviet enough support. in Eastern Europe to hang on
But Gorbachev was reassured by Western leaders that the former Russian allies in Eastern Europe would not be allowed to join
NATO.
DRUM
ROLLS,
PAY
ATTENTION
BECAUSE
THIS
GETS
COMPICATED.
AT THIS POINT, YOU NEED TO KNOW THAT THE SOVIET UNION WAS MADE UP OF FIFTEEN ‘REPUBLICS’ hence the name the
Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR). By far the largest was the Russian federation, which stretched from Moscow to the Far
East. Look at the bit in yellow. There were three Baltic republics – Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia. Apart from Russia, there were two
large Slavic republics – Ukraine and Belarus. In the south were Georgia and Azerbaizhan plus Armenia. In central Asia, there were five
‘STANS’ – Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, Kyrgyzstan, Tadzhikistan, and Turkmenistan. THEY ARE ALL INDEPENDENT COUNTRIES NOW.
EXPANSION OF NATO from the 1990s ANGERED RUSSIA
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• REALISTS like Mearsheimer, Kissinger and Kennan argued WITH SOME JUSTIFICATION THAT RUSSIA WOULD NEED TO
BE TREATED CAREFULLY AND WITH RESPECT.
George Kennan, the father of CONTAINMENT during the Cold War recently warned left against the Warsaw enlarging Pact:
NATO “the to the most countries fateful that error had of American policy in the entire post Cold War era”.
According Cold War” to to Kennan, which “the it would Russians mark will ‘the gradually beginning react of a quite new
adversely’.
The problem for the Americans is that Poland, Romania, Bulgaria and the Baltic States desperately WANTED to join NATO.
NATO is very popular; the Americans prioritized the security feelings concerns of of Russia. Poles, Romanians and Estonians
over the hurt
The East Europeans who joined NATO are now happier than ever that they did so.
The Ukrainian War seems to be evidence that the only way to safeguard member of yourself NATO.
from Russian attack is to become a
Putin’s invasion of Ukraine can be read as reinforcing safety Kennan’s from warning a Russian OR as invasion! evidence that
only NATO can provide
WHAT WAS TO BE AMERICA’S ROLE AFTER THE COLD WAR?
TWO TERRIBLE EVENTS IMPACTED UPON ELITE PERCEPTIONS OF THE WORLD IN THE 1990S.
In April 1994, there was a terrible genocide in Rwanda, again a mostly ethnic massacre.
estimated crash More 1994, caused than the deaths 150,000 one by million a of rocket to the 250,000 people Presidents
attack, are women ignited estimated of Burundi several were to also and have weeks Rwanda raped. perished of intense On in a
and 6 plane April and an systematic massacres.
AT THE SAME TIME, THERE WAS A TERRIBLE ETHNIC-BASED WAR in Former Yugoslavia all through the 1990s.
140,000 PEOPLE LOST THEIR LIVES IN EUROPE’S WORST WAR BETWEEN WORLD WAR TWO AND THE RUSSIA UKRAINE
WAR.
The most notorious moment was the GENOCIDAL killing been of taken 7,000 as to prisoners 8,000 Bosnian by Serbian Muslim
paramilitary. men and boys who had
war In many in Ukraine ways – the disputed wars of borders former after Yugoslavia the collapse resemble of a multi-ethnic the
current state.
created US President United Bill Nations Clinton doctrine and British of RESPONSIBILITY PM Tony Blair TO PROTECT cited a
newly (R2P) as even their GENOCIDE justification, of Albanians. accusing Belgrade of ETHNIC CLEANSING and
It all sounded good on paper – American military power would be used to prevent GENOCIDE.
But in practice, much more difficult.
RESPONSIBILITY
TO PROTECT
In practice, however, military interventions to help the weak and vulnerable did not please everybody.
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In May 1999, the Americans bombed the Serbian capital Belgrade to prevent what was feared would be a Serbian ethnic
cleansing campaign against Albanians in the Serbian province of Kosovo.
During the bombing, NATO officials speculated that over 100,000 Albanians had been killed
the number of Albanian deaths is now calculated at 10,000 – not quite an Iraq WMD miscalculation but this did not go
down well in Serbia or its backer, Russia.
THE AMERICANS DID ACHIEVE REGIME CHANGE IN SERBIA
The Serbian dictator Milosevic was eventually ousted in what would become known as a COLOUR REVOLUTION in October
2000.
Kosovo now is effectively independent but its conflict with Serbia continues.
The United States officially recognized the Republic of Kosovo as a country, which declared independence from Serbia on
February 17, 2008, the next day.
Serbia is just about the only country in Europe that supports the Russians in the conflict with Ukraine.
Here is a post on the Russia Today site:
‘AS A SERB, I KNOW THEM! THE WEST. THEIR SOCIAL- DEMOCRATS, LIBERALS AND GREENS. THEY ARE VERY VERY VERY
EVIL! THEY ARE HUMEN TRASH WHICH NEED TO BE TOTALY DEFEETED !! NO PEACE WITH THEM IS POSIBLE!! RUSSIANS
AND CHINESE PEOPLE JUST NEED TO TAKE A LOOK WHAT THE WEST DID TO YUGOSLAVIA. THE SAME SCENARIO WEST
HAS FOR THEM AND ALL INDEPENDENT NATIONS’.
THE 9/11 TERRORIST ATTACKS SUCCEEDED IN TWO WAYS. ONE WAY WAS THE DESTRUCTION OF SYMBOLS OF AMERICAN
WEALTH AND POWER ON AMERICAN SOIL, A BLOW THE LIKE OF WHICH AMERICA HARDLY EVER HAS EXPERIENCED. THE
SECOND SUCCESS WAS IN PROVOKING THE AMERICANS TO INVADE AFGHANISTAN, WHICH PROVED COSTLY AND FAILED TO
PRODUCED A STABLE PRO-AMERICAN GOVERNMENT.
IRAQ WAR OF 2003 DID NOT HELP THE REPUTATION OF THE UNITED STATES
On 20 March 2003, a United States-led international ‘coalition of the willing’ – which included Britain, Australia and Spain –
launched an invasion of Iraq.
The stated aims were to rid Iraq of weapons of mass free destruction, the Iraqi end people Saddam from Hussein’s his
repressive support regime. for terrorism and
But when the Americans invaded, they could find no evidence of Iraq’s WEAPONS OF MASS DESTRUCTION.
There were mass protests around the world pointing out that the United States had no mandate from the United Nations to
invade IRAQ.
By 9 April, US troops were in Baghdad – effectively ending Saddam Hussein’s regime.
On 1 May, US President George W Bush made a speech on an aircraft battle of carrier Iraq is in one which victory he declared in
a war the on war terror over, that saying: began ‘The on September 11, 2001’.
Above President Bush was a huge sign proclaiming MISSION ACCOMPLISHED.
Greek In retrospect, word the sign was for an example ARROGANT of HUBRIS, the PRIDE. fancy
4/1/2023, 7:29 pmUNITED STATES OF AMERICA
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BRAND DAMAGE FOR
THE UNITED STATES
Looting in Baghdad and other major cities had destroyed much of the country’s infrastructure and there was high
unemployment previous regime’s – army. made worse by the disbandment of the
Across Iraq, the fighting continued as a violent insurgency developed.
Coalition forces and Iraqis working with them were targeted.
IT HAS TO BE SAID THAT MANY AND ALMOST CERTAINLY MOST IRAQIS WANTED SADDAM HUSSEIN TO BE OVERTHROWN.
At the same time, most Iraqis had no wish to become subjects of an American occupation.
looted, Large quantities further fuelling of arms the insurgency. and ammunition had also been
killed No one and knows wounded with certainty in Iraq since how many the 2003 people United have States been invasion.
Around four thousand American soldiers would die in Iraq, mostly in suicide attacks and roadside bombings.
violence AS many caused as 200,000 by the Iraqis U.S., its died allies, from the direct Iraqi war military related and police, and
opposition forces from the time of the invasion up to the present.
The upside is that Iraq today has regular elections, although there are still many, many governance problems.
WAS IT WORTH IT? THERE IS A GOOD CASE FOR SAYING THAT IRAQ DAMAGED AMERICA’S REPUTATION MORE THAN
VIETNAM.
AMERICA’S MAGNITSKY ACT ANGERED RUSSIA
RUSSIA AND CHINA COMPLAIN THAT AMERICA IS THE BIGGEST HYPOCRITE IN THE WORLD AND ALWAYS INTERFERES IN
THE INTERNAL AFFAIRS OF OTHER COUNTRIES.
According to Russia and China, the United States claims to respect HUMAN RIGHTS but has no respect for the rights of China
or Russia.
For Russia, the classic case of American interference is MAGNITSKY ACT.
Sergei MAGNITSKY was a lawyer in Russia who blew the whistle on corrupt practices.
Magnitsky ended up dead in Moscow mysterious circumstances.
In 2012, the American Congress BLACKLISTED Russian officials in connection with the suspicious death of Magnitsky.
MAGNITSKY-TYPE LEGISLATION HAS BEEN ADOPTED BY COUNTRIES ALL AROUND THE WORLD, INCLUDING AUSTRALIA.
THE AIM OF ‘MAGNITISKY’ LEGISLATION IS TO SANCTION INDIVIDUALS (AS DISTINCT FROM THE RUSSIAN STATE) WHO DO
BAD THINGS LIKE THE MURDER OF MAGNITSKY.
In response, Moscow prevented US-funded non-governmental organisations from working in Russia.
Moscow also banned Americans from adopting Russian children.
EVEN BEFORE THE WAR WITH UKRAINE, RUSSIA FELT THE WEST’S COLD SHOULDER.
According to Russia, the United States should not be sticking its nose into the affairs of other GREAT POWERS.
The chaotic American withdrawal from Afghanistan in 2021 was not a good look for the
United States or President Joe
Biden. The Americans spent a fortune in Afghanistan. They did some good things – women went to school and university for
example. However, it all collapsed in a matter of months and the TALIBAN were back in power. The Americans had built shallow roots
in the country with support mainly from a Westernised elite in the cities. 13 American troops died in the last days in Afghanistan amid
chaotic scenes at Kabul airport. Not quite as bad as Vietnam, but not a whole lot better. The image of American weakness may have
encouraged President Putin to think that there
would be a weak American response to an invasion of Ukraine.
IS AMERICAN DECLINE INEVITABLE?
IT IS TOO EARLY TO TELL.
China
and Russia have rushed forward, claiming that their time has come.
In February 2022, Chinese President Xi Jinping and Russian President Vladimir Putin issued a joint declaration of principles for
a NEW ERA when the United States does not lead the world.
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Russia and China claim to represent the new GLOBAL MAJORITY.
On the other hand, we in the West still seem to live in the American era: a period dominated by AMERICAN power, wealth,
institutions, ideas, alliances, and partnerships.
IS AMERICA AN EMPIRE? AND AN EMPIRE OF THE EAST?
MOST AMERICANS DO NOT SEE THINGS THAT WAY, BUT …
Americans have long mostly viewed themselves as the ANTI- and EMPIRE, equality. that is, a democratic republic committed to
freedom
Americans acting as the pride anti-empire themselves that on fought having Hitler’s served Racial the Reich world the by
Japanese Co-Prosperity Sphere and the EVIL EMPIRE that was the Soviet Union.
You will recall that George Lucas in STAR WARS framed the Galactic basic principle Empire was as the DEMOCRACY evil enemy
– of Darth a good Vader REPUBLIC fought for whose the EMPIRE while Luke, Hans and Leia fought for the REPUBLIC.
odd Of course given to that our the modern United eyes, States it all was looks clearly hypocritical founded and on slaves
conquest to of work the the native plantations Americans – and clearly then that the is kidnapping the modus of
perandi of an EMPIRE!
The resulted war in of the 1846 United against States Mexico expanded and American 1898 against territory Spain to Texas,
California, Hawaii and the Philippines.
After World War Two, South Korea and Japan joined TEAM AMERICA – clearly the United States GEOGRAPHICALLY is an
EMPIRE OF THE EAST and not just the WEST!
Since 1945, American troops have served abroad 211 times in 67 countries – the Americans maintain around 800 military bases
across the globe.
The well-known interventions in Korea, Vietnam, Iraq, Afghanistan are the tip of the iceberg.
MOST AMERICANS THINK THAT THE YEARNING FOR FREEDOM FROM REPRESSIVE GOVERNMENT IS BASIC HUMAN NATURE
• Have a read of President Truman’s famous prediction in American 1953 about optimism how the about Cold War the DEMOCRATIC
would end sums future up of humanity.
• ‘Last week, in my take State the of time the Union to read Message it–I explained to the Congress–and how I think we I will united,
hope finally you more will win attractive all through…As to men the free on both world sides grows of the stronger, Iron Curtain–and
more
as have the to Soviet come hopes a time for of easy change expansion in the Soviet are blocked–then world. there will • or come
Nobody by a about, change can say whether inside for sure the by when Kremlin. revolution, that is going or trouble to be, in or the
exactly satellite how states, it will • will–or Whether whether the Communist the change that rulers a comes change shift about their
will occur. in policies some of other their way-I own have free
not a doubt in the world
• that wonderful patience I have science a and deep golden has courage, and forged age–an abiding earth.’ we for shall age us faith
to when some do in the we day away can destiny move with use on poverty of the into free peaceful a and men. new human era–a
tools With misery everywhere on
• Truman was almost certainly right that the attractiveness of the ‘free world’
was a decisive factor in
causing the collapse of the Soviet Union.
Is Russians the Western and young ‘way of Chinese? life’ still a big attraction for young
We will find out the answer to that question in your lifetimes.
RUSSIA’S LEADERSHIP VIEWS THE WEST AS A WHINGING ENTITLED WOKE PRINCESS THAT HAS HAD ITS DAY AND WILL, LIKE
NARCISSUS, DROWN IN THE POOL AFTER FALLING IN LOVE WITH ITS OWN REFLECTION. IF YOU THINK I EXAGGERATE, YOU
NEED TO READ RUSSIA TODAY. IF YOU HAVE NEVER HEARD OF NARCISSUS, TIS A GREEK MYTH.
IS THIS A CHANCE FOR AMERICAN REDEMPTION?
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China and Russia have rushed forward, claiming that their time has come.
Vladimir when In February the Putin United 2022, issued States Chinese a does joint President not declaration lead Xi the
Jinping of world. principles and Russian for a NEW President ERA
Russia and China claim to represent the new GLOBAL MAJORITY.
On the other hand, we in the West still seem to live in the American era: ideas, a alliances, period dominated and partnerships.
by AMERICAN power, wealth, institutions,
UKRAINE IS IN MANY WAYS THE PERFECT WAR FOR THE UNITED STATES – AN OPPORTUNITY TO WEAKEN RUSSIA
WITHOUT LOSING AMERICAN TROOPS.
winner In the West, in terms supporting of popular ‘brave’ opinion. Ukraine against ‘oppressive’ Russia is a
nearly In 2022, $50 the billion Biden in administration assistance to Ukraine, and the U.S. Congress have directed
It included humanitarian, financial, and military support.
This help refugees, is but a new money law Ukrainian enforcement, going tof version Ukrainian and of independent the people
Marshall and radio Plan institutions, broadcasters, not just military including
The billion European EUROS worth Union recently of aid to promised Ukraine. that in 2023 it will send 18
Arguably North Korea repressive make America policies look on good the part in the of eyes China, of two Russia key Iran
Western and demographics – young and female voters.
IS THE UKRAINE WAR A SECOND CHANCE FOR AMERICA, A SHOT AT REDEMPTION?
Will America blow it? We will see.
The War in Ukraine May Be Impossible to Stop.
And the U.S. Deserves Much of the Blame.
Caldwell, Christopher
ProQuest document link
FULL TEXT
In the Paris daily Le Figaro this month, Henri Guaino, a top adviser to Nicolas Sarkozy when he was president of
France, warned that Europe’s countries, under the shortsighted leadership of the United States, were
“sleepwalking” into war with Russia. Mr. Guaino was borrowing a metaphor that the historian Christopher Clark
used to describe the origins of World War I.
Naturally, Mr. Guaino understands that Russia is most directly to blame for the present conflict in Ukraine. It was
Russia that massed its troops on the frontier last fall and winter and —having demanded from NATO a number of
Ukraine-related security guarantees that NATO rejected —began the shelling and killing on Feb. 24.
But the United States has helped turn this tragic, local and ambiguous conflict into a potential world conflagration.
By misunderstanding the war’s logic, Mr. Guaino argues, the West, led by the Biden administration, is giving the
conflict a momentum that may be impossible to stop.
He is right.
In 2014 the United States backed an uprising —in its final stages a violent uprising —against the legitimately
elected Ukrainian government of Viktor Yanukovych, which was pro-Russian. (The corruption of Mr. Yanukovych’s
government has been much adduced by the rebellion’s defenders, but corruption is a perennial Ukrainian problem,
even today.) Russia, in turn, annexed Crimea, a historically Russian-speaking part of Ukraine that since the 18th
century had been home to Russia’s Black Sea Fleet.
One can argue about Russian claims to Crimea, but Russians take them seriously. Hundreds of thousands of
Russian and Soviet fighters died defending the Crimean city of Sevastopol from European forces during two sieges
—one during the Crimean War and one during World War II. In recent years, Russian control of Crimea has seemed
to provide a stable regional arrangement: Russia’s European neighbors, at least, have let sleeping dogs lie.
But the United States never accepted the arrangement. On Nov. 10, 2021, the United States and Ukraine signed a
“charter on strategic partnership” that called for Ukraine to join NATO, condemned “ongoing Russian aggression”
and affirmed an “unwavering commitment” to the reintegration of Crimea into Ukraine.
That charter “convinced Russia that it must attack or be attacked,” Mr. Guaino wrote. “It is the ineluctable process
of 1914 in all its terrifying purity.”
This is a faithful account of the war that President Vladimir Putin has claimed to be fighting. “There were constant
supplies of the most modern military equipment,” Mr. Putin said at Russia’s annual Victory Parade on May 9,
referring to the foreign arming of Ukraine. “The danger was growing every day.”
Whether he was right to worry about Russia’s security depends on one’s perspective. Western news reports tend to
belittle him.
The rocky course of the war in Ukraine thus far has vindicated Mr. Putin’s diagnosis, if not his conduct. Though
Ukraine’s military industry was important in Soviet times, by 2014 the country barely had a modern military at all.
Oligarchs, not the state, armed and funded some of the militias sent to fight Russian-supported separatists in the
east. The United States started arming and training Ukraine’s military, hesitantly at first under President Barack
Obama. Modern hardware began flowing during the Trump administration, though, and today the country is armed
to the teeth.
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Since 2018, Ukraine has received U.S.-built Javelin antitank missiles, Czech artillery and Turkish Bayraktar drones
and other NATO-interoperable weaponry. The United States and Canada have lately sent up-to-date British-
designed M777 howitzers that fire GPS-guided Excalibur shells. President Biden just signed into law a $40 billion
military aid package.
In this light, mockery of Russia’s battlefield performance is misplaced. Russia is not being stymied by a plucky
agricultural country a third its size; it is holding its own, at least for now, against NATO’s advanced economic,
cyber and battlefield weapons.
And this is where Mr. Guaino is correct to accuse the West of sleepwalking. The United States is trying to maintain
the fiction that arming one’s allies is not the same thing as participating in combat.
In the information age, this distinction is growing more and more artificial. The United States has provided
intelligence used to kill Russian generals. It obtained targeting information that helped to sink the Russian Black
Sea missile cruiser the Moskva, an incident in which about 40 seamen were killed.
And the United States may be playing an even more direct role. There are thousands of foreign fighters in Ukraine.
One volunteer spoke to the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation this month of fighting alongside “friends” who
“come from the Marines, from the States.” Just as it is easy to cross the line between being a weapons supplier
and being a combatant, it is easy to cross the line from waging a proxy war to waging a secret war.
In a subtler way, a country trying to fight such a war risks being drawn from partial into full involvement by force of
moral reasoning. Perhaps American officials justify exporting weaponry the way they justify budgeting it: It is so
powerful that it is dissuasive. The money is well spent because it buys peace. Should bigger guns fail to dissuade,
however, they lead to bigger wars.
A handful of people died in the Russian takeover of Crimea in 2014. But this time around, matched in weaponry
—and even outmatched in some cases —Russia has reverted to a war of bombardment that looks more like World
War II.
Even if we don’t accept Mr. Putin’s claim that America’s arming of Ukraine is the reason the war happened in the
first place, it is certainly the reason the war has taken the kinetic, explosive, deadly form it has. Our role in this is
not passive or incidental. We have given Ukrainians cause to believe they can prevail in a war of escalation.
Thousands of Ukrainians have died who likely would not have if the United States had stood aside. That naturally
may create among American policymakers a sense of moral and political obligation —to stay the course, to
escalate the conflict, to match any excess.
The United States has shown itself not just liable to escalate but also inclined to. In March, Mr. Biden invoked God
before insisting that Mr. Putin “cannot remain in power.” In April, Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin’s explained that
the United States seeks to “see Russia weakened.”
Noam Chomsky warned against the paradoxical incentives of such “heroic pronouncements” in an April interview.
“It may feel like Winston Churchill impersonations, very exciting,” he said. “But what they translate into is: Destroy
Ukraine.”
For similar reasons Mr. Biden’s suggestion that Mr. Putin be tried for war crimes is an act of consummate
irresponsibility. The charge is so serious that, once leveled, it discourages restraint; after all, a leader who commits
one atrocity is no less a war criminal than one who commits a thousand. The effect, intended or not, is to foreclose
any recourse to peace negotiations.
The situation on the battlefield in Ukraine has evolved to an awkward stage. Both Russia and Ukraine have
suffered heavy losses. But each has made gains, too. Russia has a land bridge to Crimea and control of some of
Ukraine’s most fertile agricultural lands and energy deposits, and in recent days has held the battlefield
momentum. Ukraine, after a robust defense of its cities, can expect further NATO support, know-how and weaponry
—a powerful incentive not to end the war anytime soon.
But if the war does not end soon, its dangers will increase. “Negotiations need to begin in the next two months,”
the former U.S. secretary of state Henry Kissinger warned last week, “before it creates upheavals and tensions that
will not be easily overcome.” Calling for a return to the status quo ante bellum, he added, “Pursuing the war beyond
that point would not be about the freedom of Ukraine but a new war against Russia itself.”
In this, Mr. Kissinger is on the same page as Mr. Guaino. “To make concessions to Russia would be submitting to
aggression,” Mr. Guaino warned. “To make none would be submitting to insanity.”
The United States is making no concessions. That would be to lose face. There’s an election coming. So the
administration is closing off avenues of negotiation and working to intensify the war. We’re in it to win it. With time,
the huge import of deadly weaponry, including that from the newly authorized $40 billion allocation, could take the
war to a different level. President Volodymyr Zelensky of Ukraine warned in an address to students this month that
the bloodiest days of the war were coming.
The Times is committed to publishing a diversity of letters to the editor. We’d like to hear what you think about this
or any of our articles. Here are some tips. And here’s our email: letters@nytimes.com.
Follow The New York Times Opinion section on Facebook, Twitter (@NYTopinion) and Instagram.
DETAILS
Subject: World War II; Presidents; Military aid
Location: Russia; United States–US; Black Sea; Crimea; Ukraine
Company / organization: Name: North Atlantic Treaty Organization–NATO; NAICS: 928120
Identifier / keyword: Russian Invasion of Ukraine (2022); War and Armed Conflicts; United States
International Relations
Publication title: New York Times (Online); New York
Publication year: 2022
Publication date: May 31, 2022
Section: opinion
Publisher: New York Times Company
Place of publication: New York
Country of publication: United States, New York
Publication subject: General Interest Periodicals–United States
Source type: Blog, Podcast, or Website
Language of publication: English
Document type: News
ProQuest document ID: 2671533557
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Discussion Article
Assessing Cultural and
Regime-Based Explanations
of Russia’s Foreign Policy.
‘Authoritarian at Heart and
Expansionist by Habit’?
Andrei P. Tsygankov
Pages 695-713 | Published online: 08 May 2012
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Scholars disagree on how to interpret Russia’s
assertive foreign policy. According to some
observers, Russia’s authoritarian culture and
political system have historically required the
Kremlin to depend on the Western threat
image at home and to engage in revisionist
behaviour abroad. These observers
recommend that Western nations abstain
from engaging Russia as an equal contributor
to shaping the global system. This article
assesses the validity of the authoritarian
expansionism theory by comparing it to other
prominent perspectives on foreign policy,
realism and constructivism. The article argues
that, by perceiving Russia’s historical and
institutional distinctness as fundamentally
threatening to the West, the theory overlooks
important sources of foreign policy
contestation at home and potentially varying
directions abroad. The article selects the
historically important cases of the Crimean
War, the Cold War and the Russia–Georgia
War to demonstrate the theory’s !aws and to
highlight the role of factors other than Russia’s
authoritarianism in the nation’s
foreign policy.
RUSSIA’S INTERNATIONAL BEHAVIOUR CONTINUES TO
provoke lively disagreementsamong scholars
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In this article
and policy makers alike. While some view
Russia as largely accommodationist and non-
threatening to the West, others perceive the
Kremlin’s objectives as expansionist and
disrespectful towards existing international
rules.1The arrival of Barak Obama to power in
the USA and his attempts to ‘reset’ relations
with Russia have yet to clarify the question of
the motives for the Kremlin’s international
behaviour. Those on the sceptical side argue
that the reset advocates misread Russia’s
intentions and undermine Western allies
(Kramer 2010a, 2010b; Cohen 2010; LeVine
2010). According to this line of reasoning,
Russia’s authoritarian culture and political
system require the Kremlin to depend on the
Western threat image at home and to engage
in revisionist behaviour abroad (Shlapentokh
2009; Cohen & Dale 2010; Shevtsova 2010). It
leads to the conclusion that the Western
nations are better o” trying to contain or
transform Moscow, rather than engaging with
it as an equal contributor in shaping the global
system.
Behind the policy debate about Russia’s
intentions are profound theoretical, historical
and ethical questions. Is a more democratic
Russia likely to act in accordance with the
United States and Europe in international
a”airs? Does an authoritarian
Russia
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Abstract
The theory of
Russia’s
authoritarian
expansionism
Critique
Three
illustrations
Towards a better
understanding of
Russia
Additional
information
Footnotes
necessarily present a threat to the West?
Should Russia’s cultural and regime-based
di”erence serve as a su#cient basis for
excluding the nation from the list of partners
and potential allies? More generally, should a
di”erence in political system and values—
whether it concerns Russia, China, Iran or
another country—be treated by Western
nations as potentially threatening their values
and interests?
This article seeks to assess the validity of the
authoritarian or expansionist Russia approach
by comparing it to two other prominent
perspectives on foreign policy: realism and
constructivism. Instead of focusing on Russia’s
domestic authoritarianism, realism and
constructivism study the foreign-policy impact
of international anarchy and norms,
respectively. I argue that as a guide to
understanding Russia’s international
behaviour, the theory of authoritarian
expansionism is at best insu#cient and at
worst misleading. By emphasising Russia’s
purportedly autocratic nature, it overlooks
important sources of contestation within the
nation’s political system and the potentially
varying directions of its foreign policy. By
perceiving Russia’s historical and institutional
distinctness as fundamentally threatening the
West, the theory of authoritarian
Vladimir Putin’s
last stand: the
sources of
Russia’s Ukraine
policy
Andrei
Tsygankov
Post-Soviet A”airs
Published online:
4 Feb 2015
##
In search of an
identity: Russian
foreign policy
and the end of
ideology
Margot Light
Journal of
Communist
Studies and
Transition Politics
Published online:
12 Aug 2006
##
Russian foreign
policy and
geopolitics in
the Post-Soviet
“”””
“”””
$$
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expansionism also displays the tendency to
deny Russia its own interests and stakes
within the international system. As a result,
many of the theory’s advocates blame
Moscow for everything that has gone wrong in
relations with Western nations and invariably
o”er policy advice that amounts to isolating or
containing Russia.
The article is organised in four parts. The next
section re!ects on the theory of authoritarian
expansionism’s assumptions and historical
evolution. After identifying the theory’s
propositions and intellectual roots, I o”er an
analysis of several biases from which it su”ers.
I then move to an empirical analysis by
selecting three cases of Russia’s foreign policy
that have been important to the progression
of
the theory of
authoritarian expansionism.
My interpretation of these seminal cases—the
Crimean War
, the Cold War and the Russia–
Georgia War—highlights the role of factors
other than Russia’s authoritarianism. The
conclusion summarises the article’s $ndings
and calls for a more complex and dynamic
understanding of Russia than the theory of
authoritarian expansionism-based
understanding.
The theory of Russia’s authoritarian
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expansionism
Authoritarian expansionism and other
theories of Russia’s foreign policy
The central claims of the theory of
authoritarian expansionism may be
summarised in terms of two main
propositions—one of a descriptive and one of
a causal nature. The descriptive proposition
states that Russia’s main foreign-policy
objectives include the preservation and
expansion of the country’s imperial borders
and institutions. The causal proposition comes
in two distinct versions. Version One links
Russia’s expansionism to its authoritarian
culture and propensity to impose itself onto
other nations. The latter is expressed through
the political regime’s overcon$dence and
readiness to act unilaterally, rather than in the
spirit of international cooperation. Version
Two places emphasis on the leadership’s low
con$dence and internal insecurity. The
regime’s insecurity and preoccupation with
political survival lead to a diversionary form of
expansionism. This version assumes the public
to be generally passive and uninterested in the
state’s international activities.
The two versions assume diverse types of
expansionism and have distinct policy
implications. While Version One identi$es
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what might be called ‘expansionism from
strength’ or ‘missionary expansionism’, Version
Two describes expansionism that is driven by
weakness or desperation and seeks to divert
the internal public’s attention from the
regime’s lack of legitimacy and e”ectiveness.
The two versions also di”er with respect to the
perception of cooperation of Western nations
with Russia (see ). While both versions
are sceptical of the possibility of developing a
robust relationship with Russia, Version One—
by highlighting broad authoritarian support
for international expansionism—is
considerably more pessimistic than Version
Two.
The description of Russia’s international
objectives and main causes of behaviour
abroad by the theory of authoritarian
expansionism contrasts with other theories of
Russia’s foreign policy. In particular, the theory
of authoritarian expansionism di”ers from
realist and social constructivist theories.
Realists typically emphasise material
capabilities and the status of a great power as
Table 1
TABLE 1
PROPOSITIONS ABOUT RUSSIA’S
AUTHORITARIAN EXPANSIONISM
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state international objectives. Scholars
working in this tradition view the Russian state
as acting within the same constraints of an
international anarchical system that de$nes
the choices of other states. Although internal
factors such as ideology, nature of
government and political culture matter as
well, their role is to specify, and sometimes to
cover for but never to contradict, ‘genuine’
national interest. Realists view national
interest as a geopolitically enduring reality,
rather than something open to
interpretations, and de$ne such interest as a
preservation and enhancement of power
within the existing international system. For
instance, realists have argued that the Soviet
leaders, while employing a revolutionary
ideology and acting under a totalitarian
system of government, defended Russia’s
traditional state interests.2
To social constructivists, what matters most is
not power or material capabilities objectively
de$ned but what those may mean to the Self
in terms of acquiring recognition from its
signi$cant Other. In the Russian context,
Europe and the West in general played the
role of the signi$cant Other and prominently
$gured in Russia’s debates about national
identity by creating the meaningful
environment in which Russia’s rulers defended
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their foreign-policy choices.3Constructivists
argue that although state behaviour is shaped
by power calculations, such behaviour can
only be understood in contexts of everyday
interactions and socio-historical development.
Even if anarchy is ‘out there somewhere’,
constructivists say, we ought to focus on
everyday interactions for understanding what
anarchy means and how social contexts of
power are being formed and unformed.
Constructivist scholars of Soviet foreign policy
therefore view such policy in terms of
signalling to the Western nations the Kremlin’s
desire for equality and recognition (Nation
1992; Ringman 2002).
compares the theory of authoritarian
expansionism to other theories of Russia’s
foreign policy.
Evolution of the theory of
authoritarian expansionism
The context and the long history of the theory
of Russia’s expansionism may be traced to
European reactions to Nicholas’s suppression
Table 2
TABLE 2
THEORIES OF RUSSIA’S FOREIGN
POLIC Y
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of Polish demands for independence in 1830–
1831. Russia did not limit itself to suppressing
what was then an internal revolt, but also
played a prominent role during the nationalist
revolutions of the 1840s in Europe. In 1846,
Russia led the way in suppressing the Polish
uprising in Kraków, which was a part of the
Hapsburg state under the Vienna convention.
InJuly 1848, Nicholas suppressed revolutions
in the Danubian Principalities of Moldavia and
Wallachia—partly to assist Turkey in defeating
the Romanian nationalist movement. In 1849,
Russia provided Austria with $nancial and
diplomatic assistance to strengthen its
position in Italy and Nicholas committed
almost 200,000 troops to help the Hapsburgs
to suppress the revolt in Hungary (Riazanovsky
1959, p. 248).
By suppressing internal opposition to the
monarchical rule, Nicholas acted within the
constraints of the Holy Alliance and had no
hegemonic ambitions of his own.4Although
Russia acted in a multilateral spirit and only
did what the system expected the Tsar to do,
Nicholas was labelled the Gendarme of Europe.
Such a presentation of Russia was partly a
product of the continent’s power struggle.
Britain and France were not satis$ed with the
Vienna system and each sought to challenge
Russia’s rise as a great power competitor
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(Taylor 1954, p. 61). No less signi$cant,
however, was Russia’s and Europe’s growing
divergence in values. European liberals now
associated Poland, and other nations that
challenged monarchies, with progressive
values, and Russia with imperialism and
repression. Russia was now deemed too
‘barbaric’ and ‘autocratic’ (Malia 1999, p. 99).
Today, scholars such as John LeDonne
continue to argue that during the 1830s and
1840s the Russians were ‘dangerously close to
the establishment of their hegemony in the
Heartland’, and that Russia’s ‘expansionist
urge’ remained ‘unabated until 1917’ (LeDonne
1997, pp. 314, 348).
Such was the political context for the
emergence of the theory of authoritarian
expansionism in the liberal West. The Polish
question did not go away, and the Polish elite
led another uprising in 1863, during which the
European powers, again, opposed Russia’s
e”ort to manage the issue and preserve
existing territorial boundaries.5Intellectually,
the view of Russia as a barbaric expansionist
power was supported by foreign travellers,
such as the Marquis de Custine, who began to
promote this view even before the Polish
uprising. The United States had begun to
develop negative perceptions of Russia after
the assassination of Alexander II in 1881, as
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immigrant groups (especially Jewish ones)
engaged in anti-Russian lobbying in the United
States to ‘liberate’ Russia from autocracy and
anti-Semitism.6The perception of Russia as a
dangerous autocratic power grew stronger as
Alexander III and Nicholas II sought to
preserve their in!uence in the Balkans. As
theories of authoritarian Panslavism began to
develop in the early twentieth
century,7scholars became convinced of the
primacy of ‘Panslavist imperialism’ in the Tsar’s
outlook (Geyer 1987; Tuminez 2000).
The social revolution in Russia in October 1917
provided another powerful impetus for
developing the perception of the country as an
expansionist autocracy. The Soviet Union
diverged from the West in terms of internal
institutions and it challenged the West’s sense
of military security. The Bolsheviks’ dissolution
of the Constituent Assembly in January 1918,
its doctrine of world revolution, and the
establishment of the Communist International
(Comintern) in 1919 in order to spread
communist ideas and set up new communist
parties abroad, all contributed to the
perception of Soviet Russia as perpetuating—
in the most dangerous way—the mode of
authoritarian expansionism. Even after the
Bolsheviks had renounced the idea of world
revolution and dissolved the Comintern, the
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majority of the West’s politicians and scholars
could not change their mind about the Soviet
system. Scholars became convinced that the
idea of peaceful coexistence was a Soviet
cover for an ideological expansion or an
o”ensive war on the West. A classic statement
of this position can be found in George
Kennan’s (1961, p. 179) condemnation of ‘a
regime, the attitude of which towards Western
governments, psychologically and politically,
was equivalent to that which would prevail
toward an enemy in time of war’. Many
observers rejected the position that the Soviet
leaders’ attitudes re!ected a defensive
response to the equally hostile Western
governments, citing the Soviet Union’s
authoritarian ideology as the reason for their
distrust. For Kennan, Western governments
came to hate the Soviet leaders ‘for what they
did’, whereas the Bolsheviks hated the
Western states ‘for what they were, regardless
of what they did’ (Kennan 1961, p. 181,
emphasis in original). This distinction has
become common in Western scholarship of
Soviet foreign policy since the Cold War.8
Despite the end of the Cold War, many
observers have continued to interpret Russia
as an authoritarian state with expansionist
instincts, and not as a normal state or one
abiding by acceptable rules of international
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behaviour. Conservative representations of
the Russia-threat argument tend to focus on
the nation’s political culture (Pipes 1997;
Odom 2001; Cohen 2007), while more liberal
interpretations place responsibility for Russia’s
‘anti-Western’ policies on the Kremlin’s
leadership (Council on Foreign Relations 2006;
Lapidus 2007; Legvold 2007, p. 98; Wallander
2008). Conservative perception was especially
visible in justi$cations of expanding NATO to
the east by incorporating former parts of
Russia’s sphere of in!uence. For example, the
New York Times columnist William Sa$re (1994)
pursued the ‘window of opportunity’ argument
by insisting on the need to extend alliance
membership to Poland, Hungary, the Czech
Republic, the Baltic states and ultimately
Ukraine, because ‘Russia is authoritarian at
heart and expansionist by habit’. It had to be
done promptly, he added, ‘while Russia is
weak and preoccupied with its own revival,
and not later, when such a move would be an
insu”erable provocation to a superpower’
(Sa$re 1994). Richard Pipes provided the
perspective of an academic and historian. He
reminded his readers about Russia’s ‘heavy
burden of history’ and failure to make ‘a clean
break with its Soviet past’ (Pipes 1997, p. 67).
To Pipes, Russians are yet to ‘overcome not
only the communist legacy but also that of the
czars and their partner, the Orthodox Church,
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which for centuries collaborated in instilling in
their subjects disrespect for law, submission to
strong and wilful authority, and hostility to the
West’ (Pipes 1997, p. 70). He then cautioned
against viewing the country as a potential ally,
as Russia might still return as an enemy ‘if
those who guide its destiny, exploiting the
political inexperience and deep-seated
prejudices of its people, once again aspire to a
glory to which they are not yet entitled’ (Pipes
1997, p. 78).
The Kremlin’s international assertiveness in
the wake of the coloured revolutions in the
former Soviet region has instilled additional
fears in both conservative and liberal Western
analysts. Russia has been frequently viewed as
reviving the lost empire, ‘back-pedalling’ on
democracy and challenging the West’s vital
interests in the world (Brzezinski 2004; Council
on Foreign Relations 2006; Cheney 2006;
Satter 2007; Lucas 2009; Bugajski 2009).
Russia’s intervention in Georgia in August
2008 provided a fresh pretext for resorting to
the theory of authoritarian expansionism.
Although Russia has legitimate interests in the
Caucasus, many scholars and commentators
explained the Kremlin’s intervention either in
terms of Russia’s expansionist determination
to secure full control over Georgia’s territory
and resources (Asmus 2010; Blank 2009;
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Cornell & Starr 2009b, p. 8; Sherr 2009), or the
Kremlin’s perceived insecurity in response to
the coloured revolutions and its search for
internal legitimacy (Cohen 2007; Lapidus 2007;
Allison 2008; Ambrosio 2009; Filippov 2009).
As a result, both conservative and liberal
perspectives were sceptical about Moscow
entering cooperative arrangements with
Western nations voluntarily. As an
authoritarian revisionist state, it was expected
instead that Russia would use available
opportunities to upset American plans to
remain the dominant world power. If this
reasoning iscorrect, it is suggested, American
policy makers would be wise to abandon any
search for partnership with post-Soviet Russia
and stay $rm in resisting its power
aspirations.
Critique
The
theory of authoritarian expansionism
su”ers from biases of essentialism, cultural
ethnocentrism and political hypocrisy.
Essentialism
The $rst problem concerns the theory of
authoritarian expansionism’s presentation of
Russia as a never changing entity that is
constantly preoccupied with imperialist plans
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to subjugate and occupy other nations. This
tendency to essentialise Russia and its foreign
policy downplays the role of factors others
than the nation’s political culture or the
regime’s strategic design. As a result, little
serious consideration is given to the possibility
that Russia’s international assertiveness may
be designed as a response to actions by the
West and to seek relatively limited objectives.
For example, despite frequent claims that St
Petersburg’s nineteenth-century policy sought
to topple the Ottoman Empire and conquer
Constantinople,9Russia’s eastern goals were
far less ambitious. These objectives included
protection of the Orthodox Christians in the
Balkans and the right to have a secure
passage of Russian vessels through the Black
Sea. Although inside Russia there had been
supporters of the drive to Constantinople
within intellectual and foreign-policy circles, it
would be a mistake to view Russia’s foreign
policy as driven by their views. Even after
defeat in the Crimean War, the government
did not turn away from Europe as Russia’s
hard-liners had hoped. As Chancellor
Alexander Gorchakov’s activities
demonstrated, St Petersburg wanted
recognition of its interests in the Black Sea,
which Russia was prepared to defend even at
the cost of German uni$cation.
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Even Soviet international policy had more
limited goals than many Western scholars and
politicians believed. With the exception of the
brief period of the drive for world revolution,
the Kremlin mainly sought to establish the
Soviet Union as a great power and recognised
member of the international community, not
to expand the Soviet geopolitical boundaries.
The Cold War, including the Soviet occupation
of Eastern Europe, the Cuban missile crisis in
1962 and the military intervention in
Afghanistan in 1979, also cannot be
adequately understood without considering
actions by the Western nations. Western
suspicion and mistrust toward the Soviet
Union served to strengthen its determination
to act assertively. From the willingness to work
with Russia before and during the meeting at
Yalta, Great Britain and the United States soon
moved to unilateral and potentially
confrontational behaviour. Ideological
di”erences notwithstanding, Stalin and his
entourage did not abandon their attempts to
mend fences with the West until Truman had
made public his doctrine of globally containing
communism on 12 March 1947 and the
Marshall Plan had been proclaimed in June of
the same year.
It is equally problematic to present Russia’s
more recent assertiveness as a part of a plan
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by the Kremlin to restore the empire and
dominate its neighbours, even at the price of
confrontation with the West. Those accusing
Russia of reviving the lost empire, back-
pedalling on democracy and challenging the
West’s vital interests in the world oversimplify
the extremely complex process of Russia’s
transformation and its relations with Western
nations. In particular, much of Russia’s
assertiveness was a product of the United
States’ regime-change policy, e”orts to
achieve nuclear superiority and the West’s
post-Cold War advancement into what Russia
perceived as the sphere of its geopolitical
interests.10It is misleading to ignore the
interactive nature of Russia–West relations,
presenting Russia as an essentialist entity with
once-and-forever formed values and
behavioural patterns.
Ethnocentrism
The above-noted essentialist presentation of
Russia’s foreign policy in part results from the
theory of authoritarian expansionism’s
cultural ethnocentrism. Rather than viewing
other cultural communities as a source of
learning, ethnocentric theories tend to
perceive them as a potential threat precisely
because of their di”erence from the self.
Ethnocentrism precludes the theory of
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authoritarian expansionism from being able to
appreciate Russia’s historical, geopolitical and
institutional distinctness because ethnocentric
ideas assume the superiority of their own
culture and the inferiority of others.
A good example of a Western ethnocentric
theory is that of democratic peace, according
to which democracies do not go to war with
each other.11Critics of the democratic peace
theory pointed out that it re!ects American
values of what is ‘democratic’ and that those
values themselves have been shaped by the
United States’ perception of external threats
(Oren 1995, 2002). Upon closer inspection, the
theory of democratic peace is a mirror image
of the authoritarian expansionism theory.
Simply put, the two theories say that by not
$ghting each other Western-style democracies
tend to act peacefully and cooperatively
abroad, whereas the non-Western
authoritarian systems, such as Russia, are
bullish and expansionist exactly because they
are non-democracies. Yet social structures and
internal conditions are far more complex than
the two theories present. For example, in the
post-communist context, democratisation is
not infrequently accompanied by state
weakness, thereby allowing the re-emergence
and the rise of a previously dormant militant
ethnic nationalism. As a result, not only do
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some of the newly established democracies go
to war against each other, but they may also
do so in part as a result of their moving away
from authoritarianism (Mans$eld & Snyder
2007). Similarly, authoritarian regimes that
lack popular legitimacy may be cautious
enough and abstain from assertive foreign
policy if they perceive such policy as
potentially destabilising. Just as authoritarian
regimes may be compatible with building an
inclusive national identity and an e#cient
economy,12such regimes may be compatible
with a moderate international behaviour.
The highly simplistic treatment of Russia’s
political system becomes especially
problematic in the post-Soviet context. Indeed,
if judged by the degree of public support,
rather than by institutionalisation of e”ective
checks and balances, Russia’s political system
can hardly be called undemocratic.13Yet
Russia’s system is still emerging, and can
hardly be labelled either as an established
democracy or as pure authoritarianism. More
nuanced categories and theories need to be
developed if we are to match Russia’s
domestic conditions to its foreign policy. Even
within the West, meanings of democracy
change over time,14and it makes little sense
to analyse the Russian post-communist
‘democracy’ by comparing it to the model of
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Western societies (McFaul 2001; Fish 2005;
Baker & Glasser 2005), rather than to Russia’s
own history.
Hypocrisy
The essentialism and ethnocentrism of the
authoritarian expansionism theory also feed
into questionable policy recommendations.
Presenting Russia as an autocratic power that
invariably threatens the outside world leaves
other countries with few options regarding
engaging Russia. If Russia—especially in
presentation of Version One of the theory of
authoritarian expansionism—was, is and will
remain an autocratic and anti-Western
imperialist state, then the West must either
contain or confront it. Such recommendations
do not only tend to perpetuate the tense state
of West–Russia relations; they are also
politically hypocritical because they deny
Russia interests and stakes that the Western
nations themselves view as fundamental to
their own existence. Russia’s interests and
values are not only perceived as incompatible
with those of the West; they are also viewed as
illegitimate and not worthy of recognition.
An example of these kinds of
recommendations for Western governments
might be the calls by many advocates of the
theory of authoritarian expansionism to
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punish and contain the Kremlin following its
assertive post-9/11 policy. Disappointed by
Russia’s unwillingness to follow the United
States’ international agenda, analysts and
members of the American political class, such
as Senator John McCain and Vice President
Dick Cheney, issued multiple statements
indicating their concerns with Russia’s new
‘imperialism’ and energy ‘blackmail’.15Steps
were proposed, such as revoking Russia’s
membership in the G8, severing its ties with
other Western institutions, banning private
investments and recognising the
independence of secessionist territories (in the
case of Chechnya) (McCain 2003; Frum & Perle
2003, p. 263; Pipes 2004; Edwards & Kemp
2006; Council on Foreign Relations 2006).
These would amount to a policy of containing
Russia or returning to where the two nations
were during the Cold War.
Blaming Russia alone for the breakup of the
post-9/11 international coalition is insu#cient
at best and misleading at worst; and
recommendations to contain or punish
Moscow are counter-productive. Denying
Russia its political and energy interests and
the right to set an independent foreign policy
is sure to come with large political and
economic costs. Such an approach is not likely
to discipline a Russia that continues to be in a
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position not to yield to external pressures.
Continuous treatment of Russia as a potential
threat, rather than a legitimate member of
international society, may indeed bring to
power in Moscow those who are interested in
exacerbating relations with the West.
Politically, it may generate a prolonged cycle of
hostilities shaped by Russia and the West’s
clashing perceptions of each other’s
intentions. NATO expansion, as well as military
interventions in Kosovo and Iraq, has already
done its share of damage in this respect. Hard-
line nationalists in Russia will only be grateful
to hawkish pundits and politicians for assisting
them in constructing an image of the West as
a threat.
Three illustrations
This section reviews several cases of Russia’s
assertiveness in order to highlight empirical
problems with employing the theory of
authoritarian expansionism for interpreting
Russia’s behaviour. I have selected cases
across historical eras—the Crimean War, the
Cold War and the Russia–Georgia War—which
have been critically important to the theory’s
establishment and progression.
Crimean War
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The advocates of the theory of authoritarian
expansionism have advanced two
assumptions regarding the decision by Russia
to go to war with the Ottoman Empire. First,
they have argued that the Tsar’s ultimatum to
the Sultan over the rights of Orthodox
Christians was predetermined by Russia’s
traditional desire to conquer
Constantinople.16Second, they have assumed
that the autocratic nature of St Petersburg’s
decision making precluded any serious
opposition to the Tsar’s plan. Evidence for
these assumptions is far from conclusive.
Nicholas did not seek to topple the Sultan. The
Tsar’s objectives were more limited and
included the defence of the rights of Russia’s
co-religionists residing within the Ottoman
Empire, preservation of the prestige of a
European power, and the right to maintain a
!eet in the Black Sea. More than a third of the
Ottoman Empire’s population—approximately
13 million people—was Orthodox Christian,
and the Treaty of Kuchuk Kainardzhi provided
Russia with special rights to protect Orthodox
Christians within the Ottoman Empire.
Although these rights were not clearly de$ned,
Article 7 obligated the Porte to ‘give the
Christian faith and its churches $rm
protection’, and it granted ‘the Ministries of
the Russian Imperial Court [the right] to
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protect all interests of the church built in
Constantinople’.17As a member of the Holy
Alliance, Russia also viewed its commitment to
the rights of Orthodox Christians as consistent
with its European obligations. In Nicholas’s
perception, he was challenging the Sultan on
the issue of the Holy Places to return the
Ottoman principalities to the European
Concert.18Finally, the Tsar sought to con$rm
Russia’s control over the Straits of the
Bosphorus and the Dardanelles, which was
vital to Russia’s economic ties to Europe. The
Crimean War resulted less from Russia’s
expansionism and more from the West and
Russia’s incorrect perceptions of each other’s
motives, as well as from Nicholas’s
overcon$dence.
It would be equally wrong to assume that
Nicholas’s assertiveness met no opposition at
home. Advocates of a more restrained policy
within the political class included Nicholas’s
most in!uential advisors, such as Count
Nesselrode and Baron Brunnow, who urged
him to be cautious in negotiations with the
Ottomans and consultations with Austria and
Prussia. On the other side of the political
spectrum, Slavophiles proclaimed the Crimean
War to serve the ‘holy’ purpose of reviving
Russia’s Christian mission and pressured the
Tsar to extend military support for the Balkan
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Slavs—advice that Nicholas never accepted.19
Cold War
The early Cold War provides another seminal
case of the theory of authoritarian
expansionism which places emphasis on the
Soviet expansionist ideology and totalitarian
structure of Josef Stalin’s decision making
(Kennan 1961; Kissinger 1994). Again, the
reality is far too complex to be adequately
expressed by supporters of the theory of
authoritarian expansionism.
The historical record shows that Soviet
international objectives after World War II
were limited and shaped by the state’s
perception of strategic interests, rather than
communist ideology.20Before the end of 1945,
Stalin acted with restraint and generally in the
spirit of the Yalta and Potsdam agreements as
he interpreted them. He was willing to tolerate
Poland’s independence, although not outside
the Soviet area of in!uence (Suny 1998, p.
344). He also planned no communist
takeovers in Europe and advised the leaders
of communist parties in Italy, France, Hungary
and Bulgaria to cooperate with national
governments and not to expect to assume
power within the foreseeable future (Roberts
1999, p. 19; LaFeber 1997, p. 20)—partly
because he wanted to prevent the
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strengthening of independent communist
centres (Daniels 1985, p.
220).
In addition—
and consistent with the agreement on the
division of in!uence he had devised with
Churchill—Stalin refused to interfere in Greece
(Pikhoya 2007, p. 146). He further abstained
from interfering in Finland, which he viewed as
maintaining a generally ‘friendly’ international
posture (Alperovitz 1971, p. 22). Outside
Europe, Stalin advised Chinese communists to
enter into a coalition with their enemies, the
nationalists (Roberts 1999, p. 19). He also
refused to defy the United States by
intervening in Japan and landing in Hokkaido,
as some of his advisers encouraged him to do
after Truman had dropped two nuclear bombs
on Hiroshima and Nagasaki in August 1945
(Suny 1998, p. 345).
The really radical turn in the Soviet attitude
toward the West did not take place until the
Marshall Plan was o#cially proclaimed in June
1947. ‘There is little evidence’, wrote Vladislav
Zubok and Constantine Pleshakov, ‘that before
the Marshall Plan Stalin had any master plan
for immediate expansion’ (Zubok & Pleshakov
1996, p. 130). Even after Truman had
proclaimed his new doctrine in March 1947,
Stalin was hoping to continue political ties and
negotiations with the United States and Great
Britain. In April, during a long meeting with
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State Secretary George Marshall, Stalin argued
for a possible compromise on ‘all the main
questions’ and insisted that ‘it was necessary
to have patience and not become pessimistic’
(Kissinger 1994, p. 444). Marshall, however,
was of a di”erent opinion, and in his radio
address on 28 April he indicated that the
United States was no longer in a mood to
deliberate and was planning to take decisive
actions (Kissinger 1994, p. 445). On 5 June he
delivered his Marshall Plan speech, in which
he pledged $nancial assistance for the post-
war reconstruction of the European continent.
In response, Stalin and Molotov articulated
their alternative to Western policy by creating
a separate bloc with the Eastern European
states and suppressing any opposition to their
policy within the region. At home, the new
course meant a return to the pre-war system
of mass mobilisation and repressions.
In addition, the Soviet power structure, as
highly centralised as it was, did allow for
opposition to the policy of assertiveness.
Immediately following the war, Stalin’s most
impatient comrades wanted him to cross the
Elbe and occupy some parts of the Western
European nations—advice that he rejected as
impractical.21From the other side of the
political spectrum, a former Foreign Minister
Maxim Litvinov and the ambassador to the
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United States Andrei Gromyko defended the
‘liberal’ approach that included more respect
for the choices of Eastern European states and
more extensive negotiations with the Western
ones (Zubok & Pleshakov 1996, pp. 29–30;
Pikhoya 2007, pp. 106–8). What exacerbated
the situation, making it ever more di#cult to
prevent a full-!edged political confrontation,
was the two sides’ international ambitions and
mistrust of each other’s intentions. Stalin’s
geopolitically limited ‘socialist imperialism’ was
met with the West’s global ‘democratic
imperialism’.22Had the West been be less
revisionist and fearful of the Kremlin’s
preparedness to penetrate the Western
nations,23there was a possibility that Stalin
would have continued with post-war
cooperative security arrangements.
The Russia–Georgia War
Similar problems exist with the claims of the
theory of authoritarian expansionism that an
autocratic Moscow was seeking to establish
imperial control over Tbilisi and that the war
with Georgia was part of a broader geopolitical
plan to revive Russia’s hegemony in the
former Soviet region and to challenge the
West globally (Asmus 2010, pp. 9, 14, 217–18;
Blank 2009, p. 104; Cornell & Starr 2009b, p. 8;
Sherr 2009, p. 224).24
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Russia’s relationship with its Caucasian
neighbour has evolved through several
increasingly unhappy stages and Moscow’s
objectives have been defensive, aiming mainly
to prevent NATO expansion and the inclusion
of Georgia and potentially Ukraine into the
alliance. Just as Tbilisi was angry with
Moscow’s unwillingness to honour Georgia’s
independence and the right to choose a
foreign-policy orientation, Russia was
frustrated with the lack of recognition by the
United States and NATO. While it is plausible
to assume the Kremlin’s intention was to gain
full control over Georgia, it is at least as
plausible to interpret Russia’s motives as
driven by defence and security considerations.
The interests of Russia’s security are at least as
helpful in determining its behaviour and
explaining why it limited itself to recognising
Abkhazia and South Ossetia’s independence,
but abstained from pursuing the more
expansionist objectives of removing
Saakashvili from power and establishing a pro-
Kremlin regime in Tbilisi. The theory of
authoritarian expansionism lacks nuance and
a sense of proportion and, by presenting
Russia as inherently imperialist and anti-
Western, this theory is less inclined to consider
seriously the impact of contemporary
developments and international interactions
on Russia’s behaviour.
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Western nations and Georgia too bear
responsibility for Russia’s increasingly
assertive behaviour in the Caucasus. By
assisting Tbilisi with its political transition after
the Rose Revolution and not interfering with
its e”orts to restore control over Adjara, the
Kremlin expected Georgia to honour its
interests in the Caucasus by not pressing for
immediate military withdrawals, excluding the
use of force from dealings with South Ossetia
and Abkhazia, and consulting Russia on vital
security issues such as membership in NATO.
Soon, however, Tbilisi adopted a strategy of
solving territorial disputes without assistance
from Russia and by relying on support from
the United States. By 2004 Washington had
provided $1.2 billion in aid in the previous
decade, and deployed military advisors in
Georgia. The United States was determined to
secure its access to Caspian oil and strengthen
its geostrategic presence in the Caucasus,
which the Kremlin saw as evidence of
America’s bias and lack of recognition of
Russia’s role in the region. The United States
did little to restrain Georgia’s militarisation
and ambitions to reign in its autonomous
regions by force.25While Russia was
increasing its support for Abkhazia and South
Ossetia, NATO and US o#cials did not hide
their backing of Tbilisi, and rarely criticised
Georgia’s actions in public. For example, less
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than a month before the war, the US Secretary
of State Condoleezza Rice travelled to Europe.
She found no time to visit Moscow, but on 9
July she went to Tbilisi to demonstrate support
for Georgia’s territorial integrity and NATO
aspirations.
It is also unrealistic to assume that the
Kremlin’s decision-making system was
autocratic enough to exclude a serious debate
within the ruling circles. According to Gleb
Pavlovski, one faction within the Kremlin
wanted to march on Tbilisi in order to
challenge the West and fully revive Russia’s
domination in the Caucasus (Felgenhauer
2009, pp. 178–79). Another faction had more
modest objectives, but did consider a decision
to remove Saakashvili. Prime Minister Vladimir
Putin and Russian Foreign Minister Sergei
Lavrov both indicated that they wanted the
Georgian President ‘to go’ and at $rst
considered this a condition for a cease$re
(Asmus 2010, pp. 199, 220). Still another
faction seems to have been satis$ed with
achieving a military victory over Georgia and
recognition of its rebellious provinces.26The
ruling structure was far from uniform or
consolidated.
Towards a better understanding of
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Russia
The analysis in this article suggests the theory
of authoritarian expansionism has a rather
limited ability to understand Russia and its
foreign policy. Not only does the theory tend
to misrepresent the direction and scope of
Russia’s international actions, but it is
potentially misleading regarding the sources
of such actions. Because of its emphasis on
the role of domestic ‘authoritarianism’ in
determining foreign policy, the theory of
authoritarian expansionism tends to miss
other important sources of state international
behaviour, such as security conditions and
actions by outside powers towards Russia. It is
not that the theory of authoritarian
expansionism is necessarily wrong, but it is
biased and incomplete and therefore
potentially wrong. To apply the late Martin
Malia’s (1999, p. 9) diagnosis, ‘the West is not
necessarily most alarmed when Russia is in
reality most alarming, nor most reassured
when Russia is in fact most reassuring’. The
theory’s tendency to essentialise Russia’s
internal conditions and exaggerate its
international ambitions should therefore
make analysts pause before adopting the
theory of authoritarian expansionism
framework and policy recommendations.
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A better approach to Russia would be to
devise a more complex classi$cation of
Russia’s foreign policy. The historical record
will show that since its emergence as an
independent centralised state, Russia has
followed not one but several distinct
trajectories in relations with the West
(Tsygankov 2012). From opening a permanent
mission in Rome in the early seventeenth
century to the collective security policy before
World War II, Russia frequently sided with a
coalition of Western states against those
whom it viewed as challenging Russian values
of security. The second distinct trajectory of
Russia’s relations with the West has been that
of defensiveness or balancing through
domestic revival and !exible international
alliances. It included Russia’s periods of
recovery after the Time of Troubles, the war
with Sweden, the Crimean War, the
Communist Revolution and the Soviet
disintegration. Finally, historically Russia has
resorted to assertiveness in relations with the
West, as exempli$ed by the cases considered
above of the Crimean War, Cold War and the
Russia–Georgia war of August 2008. The
theory of authoritarian expansionism is
applicable only to the third trajectory of
Russia’s foreign policy and to a limited degree.
A better approach to Russia would be one free
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from crude biases and hypocritical
recommendations. Such approaches should
be eclectic and draw from various theoretical
traditions by incorporating ideas of domestic
institutions, considerations of national security
and international recognition as sources of the
nation’s foreign policy.27The $rst task ought
to be to establish a meaningful context in
which Russia acts and seeks to achieve its
goals. Scholarly responsibility demands that
we should establish it by studying the relevant
historical, social, psychological and political
contexts behind what ostensibly are
‘autocratic’ decisions. Proceeding from the
200-year-old vision of Russia by the Marquis
de Custine as an essentially aggressive nation,
or engaging in reconstruction of the Kremlin’s
motives without su#cient evidence at hand, is
unlikely to facilitate a better understanding of
the country or produce sound policy
recommendations. How the Russians
themselves describe their system of
commitments to relevant social communities
should give us a better clue as to what the
purpose, legitimacy and scope of their actions
might be. The second task should be to
analyse the level of power and con$dence that
provides the state with the required platform
for acting, and it incorporates power
capabilities, institutional capacity and the
leadership’s perceptions of actions necessary
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for implementing the vision. Even if the
domestic belief system supports assertive
international behaviour, Russia may lack the
resources to act on it. Finally, a scholar of
foreign policy must carefully monitor the
actions of the Western states toward Russia.
As constructivism teaches us, such external
actions may serve the purpose of external
legitimisation of Russia’s behaviour on the
international scene. By providing various
forms of support the outside world may have
the power to encourage Russia not to resort to
revisionist behaviour. Only such an eclectic
approach, sensitive to local systems of
perceiving the outside world, national security
interests and the behaviour of outsiders, may
bring us closer to a better understanding of an
enormously complex country, such as Russia.
Related Research Data
The Wilsonian Bias in the Study of
Russian Foreign Policy
Source: Informa UK Limited
Vladimir Putin’s last stand: the sources
of Russia’s Ukraine policy
Source: Informa UK Limited
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Linking provided by
Additional information
Notes on contributors
Andrei P. Tsygankov
The author thanks the editors of Europe-
Asia Studies and two anonymous
reviewers for their comments and
suggestions. The usual disclaimers apply.
Notes
For examples of scholarship on Russia’s
foreign policy, see Trenin (2009), Manko”
(2009), Tsygankov (2010), Lucas (2009),
Bugajski (2009) and Kanet (2009).
For realist studies of Soviet foreign policy, see,
for example, Ulam (1968), Wohlforth (1993)
and Donaldson and Nogee (1998).
For a development of this argument, see
Neumann (1996), English (2000), Hopf (2002),
Clunan (2009) and Larson and Shevchenko
(2010).
While Prussia wanted to help Austria in
exchange for dominating Germany, Russia had
no such conditions and was assisting Austria
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out of Holy Alliance obligations (Taylor 1954, p.
30).
For example, in April 1863, Britain, France and
Austria each sent similar notes to the Russian
government asking for Poland to be given
independence and for its borders to include
Lithuania and Ruthenia (Seton-Watson 1967,
p. 435).
In 1911 the American government even
abrogated the commercial treaty with Russia
(Foglesong 2007, pp. 43–44).
For overviews of Panslavist theories, see Kohn
(1953), Petrovich (1956), Duncan (2000) and
Tuminez (2000).
For important exceptions, see revisionist
scholarship on the West–Soviet relations
(Holloway 1984; Garto” 1985; Cohen 1985;
Kolko 1994). For analysis of Western
scholarship as re!ective of an enemy’s
perception, see Oren (2002) and Foglesong
(2007). For a recent study of Sovietologists, see
Engerman (2010).
For such claims, see, for example, Kissinger
(1994, pp. 140–44), Geyer (1987, p. 65) and
MacKenzie (1993, p. 220).
For development of this argument, see
Tsygankov (2010, ch. 6).
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For a summary of the debate, see Brown et al.
(1996). For other works critical of Western
ethnocentrism in analysing Russia, see Malia
(1999), Cohen (2001) and Brown (2010).
For an argument against universality of
economic and political openness for advancing
economic growth, see Bremmer (2006).
Public support for President Putin was
consistently high, ranging from 70% to 80%
during the 2000s. In addition, some polls
showed that almost half (47%) of Russians
thought that the country needed a distinct
kind of democracy that would correspond to
Russia’s national traditions and speci$c
qualities, and only 17% were against a
democratic form of government (Interfax, 18
December 2007).
On contested meanings of democracy in the
United States, see Foner (1998) and Oren
(2002).
For analysis of anti-Russian currents within the
American political class and media circles, see
Tsygankov (2009) and English and Svyatets
(2010).
See for example, Kissinger (1994, pp. 140–44),
Geyer (1987, p. 65) and MacKenzie (1993, p.
220).
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For the text of the agreement, see Dmytryshyn
(1974, pp. 97–107).
The Tsar’s stated objectives were that ‘all the
Christian parts of Turkey must necessarily
become independent, must become again
what they [formerly] were, principalities,
Christian states, as such re-enter the family of
the Christian states of Europe’ (Vinogradov
1993, p. 170).
Part of it was that Nicholas was wary of the
Slavophiles’ insistence on abolition of
serfdom. Domestic censorship for the
Slavophiles remained tight, and the war
objectives were kept as limited and status-quo
oriented. Disappointed in Nicholas and the
course of the war, the Slavophiles soon began
to withdraw their support (for details, see
Curtiss 1979, pp. 557–60). The Tsar also
rejected plans from his own court to attack
Constantinople (Fuller 1992, pp. 235–36).
This is not to say that ideology was
unimportant. Yet, it was more important as
‘the internal lens through which the state
viewed the very legitimacy of its actions’
(Gaddis 1997, p. 290) than as a justi$cation for
hard-line actions toward the West.
For example, General Semyon Budennyi
advocated such intervention. Stalin reportedly
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responded to Budennyi by posing the
rhetorical questions ‘how are we to feed
them?’ (Akstyutin 1995).
The terms of ‘socialist’ and ‘democratic’
imperialism come from Zubok and Gaddis,
respectively (Zubok 2009, ch. 2; Gaddis 1997,
pp. 284, 289).
See, for example, CIA (1948, pp. 4–7) and NSC
(1948, pp. 1–2). For analysis of the United
States’ in!ated assessments of the Soviet
threat after the war, see Evangelista (1982).
Other scholars argued that the war assisted
the Kremlin with its internal legitimacy (Allison
2008, p. 1169; Filippov 2009).
According to the former Defence Minister
Irakli Okruashvili (2007), Georgia planned a
military invasion of South Ossetia in 2006.
This objective seems to have been favoured by
President Medvedev (2008).
For a recent attempt to o”er a more
sophisticated analysis of relationships
between authoritarianism and foreign policy,
see Chambers (2010).
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