Jump to content

User:Lappspira/sandbox5

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Russian aggression or the portrayal of Russia as an aggressive actor has been the subject of political analysis. The term is common term in Western media where it is used to criticize Russia.[1] It has been used to refer to both Catherine the Great's 18th century agenda[2] and 21st century Russian policies.[3] The use of the concept has been challenged, for example in the case of the 2008 Russo-Georgian War which escalated not due "Russian aggression" but due to Georgian activity in South Ossetia.[4] Further the whole concept has been claimed to be a myth.[1] In the 1990s supporters of NATO expansion into Eastern Europe claimed this would diminish "Russian aggression".[5]

The post-Maidan conflict in the Ukraine is usually blamed on "Russian aggression".[6] NATO-sponsored analysts have described what they call a cybenetic "Russian aggression" against the Ukraine in the 2010s.[3]


the so-called Testament of Peter the Great continued to circulate, seeming to present Russia's conquests of the eighteenth century as proof that its tsar aspired to world domination.

— Emanuel Sarkisyanz[2]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b Cartalucci, Tony. "The Myth of Russian Aggression". New Eastern Outlook. Retrieved August 3, 2014.
  2. ^ a b Ragsdale, H. (1988). Evaluating the Traditions of Russian Aggression: Catherine II and the Greek Project. The Slavonic and East European Review, 66(1), 91-117.
  3. ^ a b Geers, Kenneth, ed. Cyber war in perspective: Russian aggression against Ukraine. CCDCOE, NATO Cooperative Cyber Defence Centre of Excellence, 2015.
  4. ^ Milne, Seumas. "This is a tale of US expansion not Russian aggression." The Guardian 14 (2008): 8.
  5. ^ Michael E. Brown (1995). The flawed logic of NATO expansion, Survival: Global Politics and Strategy, 37:1, 34-52, DOI: 10.1080/00396339508442775
  6. ^ Mearsheimer, John J. "Why the Ukraine crisis is the West's fault: the liberal delusions that provoked Putin." Foreign Affairs 93 (2014): 77.

Category:Anti-Russian sentiment Category:Foreign relations of Russia Category:Political theories Category:Propaganda Category:Russian studies