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Hang Separately: Cooperative Security between the United States and Russia, 1985-1994     Email    Printer-Friendly
Leon V. Sigal, Century Foundation Press, 2/15/2001
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Table of Contents (pdf)
Many politicians and pundits are posing the question, Who lost Russia? This is the wrong question, argues Leon V. Sigal. Russia is not lost, and Russia was never America’s to lose. Many who raise this question are convinced that Russia’s democrats and reformers have been vanquished forever and that the country is on a downward spiral. They regard corruption and Chechnya as symptoms of Russia’s irredeemable decline and fall. Others see signs of hope in Russia's pluralist politics, budding entrepreneurship, and a new generation of Russians who reject the past even as they face an uncertain and daunting future. Sigal attempts to answer more important questions about the relationship between Russia and the United States, such as, What are the United States’ interests in Russia? How has America advanced those interests in the past? And how can it better realize them in the future?

Edition: Cloth    ISBN: 0870784501    Pages: 400   
Price: $24.95


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