Perceptions of foreign threats to the regime: From Lenin to Putin |
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Authors: | Vladimir Shlapentokh |
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Affiliation: | Department of Sociology, Michigan State University, 316 Berkey Hall, 48824-1111 East Lansing, MI, United States |
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Abstract: | During his second term, Putin's foreign policy was strongly influenced by the belief that the West's hostility could help the opposition change the current regime, as the West had done in Ukraine and Georgia. A regime change would deprive the ruling elite, mostly people from the security police and army, of their power and illegally acquired wealth. Moscow restored, in early 2000, the ideology of Russia's “encirclement” from the 1920s, which suggested that the country was surrounded by enemies in order to legitimize the regime. At the same time, as in the past, Moscow tried to punish the Western governments for their disrespect for the regime with an aggressive and uncooperative foreign policy. |
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