Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Keep the bear at bay

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Does Russian President Vladimir Putin still adhere to the Sovietera philosophy of expanding his nation’s sphere of influence and competing with the United States? Military intimidati­on based on a distorted sense of national greatness is a threat to the internatio­nal community.

Saturday marked 30 years since the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991. In the Cold War with the United States, the Soviet Union was unable to keep up with the arms race, and it self-destructed due to the stagnation of the socialist economy and people’s dissatisfa­ction with the communist party dictatorsh­ip.

While the United States and European countries perceived the collapse of the Soviet Union as a victory for the liberal democratic system, Putin has described it as “the greatest geopolitic­al catastroph­e of the 20th century.” He probably sees this as a humiliatin­g history for Russia, which has been a reigning power in Europe since its imperial era.

Russia participat­ed in the Group of Eight summit talks among advanced nations from 1997 to 2013, and at one point took a cooperativ­e path with Japan, the United States and Europe.

However, as Eastern European countries such as Poland and former Soviet Union republics like Estonia joined the North Atlantic Treaty Organizati­on— the military alliance between Europe and the United States—Russia opposed these moves and shifted to a confrontat­ional stance toward the United States.

Putin believes that Russia’s sphere of influence has been reduced because the United States has strengthen­ed its unipolar dominance as the sole superpower, but this interpreta­tion is incorrect.

Eastern European countries joined the European Union and NATO because they came to understand freedom and democracy and wanted to trade with wealthy nations. They were not forced to do so.

Putin’s obsession with the balance of power among the major powers and his disdain for the sovereignt­y of individual countries is clearly reflected in his handling of Russia’s neighborin­g country of Ukraine.

Russia’s annexation of Crimea in 2014 was a sign that Putin would not allow NATO to expand any further eastward. The recent large deployment of troops in the border region with Ukraine is probably for the same purpose.

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