How should Russia's "national interests" be redefined to suit its new relationship with the outside world? This question is one of the most controversial in the current debate about post-communist Russia. In this book, an international group of contributors come together to address rival conceptions of what constitutes Russia's military, economic, political and even ideological interests.
Russian and American interests after the Cold War, Henry A. Kissinger; the ambiguity of "national interest", Francis Fukuyama; toward a new "national idea", Sergei B. Stankevich; Russia, Ukraine and Eastern Europe, Nikolai Travkin; Russia as a Eurasian power - Moscow and the post-Soviet successor states, Paul A. Goble; the US-Russian strategic partnership, Paul D. Wolfowitz; military interests and the interests of the military, Sergei Rogov; adapting to the world economy - interests and obstacles, Anders Aslund; preserving economic sovereignty, Aleksandr Shokhin; Russian and its interests, Vladimir P. Lukin.
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