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Dugin,Eurasianism, and Central Asia
Institution:History Department, College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Indiana University, 1700 Mishawaka Avenue, South Bend, IN 46634, USA;Institute for Conflict Analysis and Resolution, George Mason University, 3330 N. Washington Blvd,. Truland Building, 5th Flr, Arlington, VA22201, USA.;Institute for Conflict Analysis and Resolution, George Mason University, 3401 N, Fairfax Drive, Arlington, VA 22201, USA
Abstract:Eurasianism as a concept emerged among Russian émigrés in the 1920s, with the premise that Russia is a unique ethnic blend, primarily of Slavic and Turkic peoples. Its geopolitical implications for Russia include gravitation toward mostly Turkic Central Asia. Alexander Dugin, one of its best-known proponents, believes that the demise of the Soviet Union was simply a tragic incident. The people of the former USSR should again be united in a grand Eurasian empire, with Russia a benign and generous patron, providing its “younger brothers” clients economic largesse and defense, mostly against the predatory USA. The “orange revolutions” and the rise of Russian nationalism, for whose proponents a restored imperial presence is rather marginal, indicate that Eurasianism—along with the dream of the resurrection of the USSR—is becoming less viable.
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