Crimea, Global Rivalry, and the Vengeance of History critically examines the causes and consequences of Russia's annexation of Crimea and reviews differing annexations in history from the Seven Years War to today. It develops a unique comparative historical approach designed to compare and contrast alliance formations after Soviet collapse with alliance formations in previous eras. It argues that contemporary Russia-Ukraine conflict is more reminiscent of conflict during the Bolshevik revolution than Hitler's annexation of the Sudetenland, but that a nascent Russian-Chinese alliance can be compared to that between Weimar Germany and Soviet Russia. And although the US-NATO-European-Japanese reaction is not that of 'appeasement,' it is reminiscent of French reaction to Prussian annexation of Alsace before World War I, or European reaction to Russian annexations before the Crimean War. Based on these historical analogies and others, the book urges an alternative global strategy toward both Russia and China in the effort to prevent a renewed arms race, if not global war.
Author(s): Hall Gardner
Publisher: Palgrave Macmillan
Year: 2015
Language: English
Pages: viii+252
Tags: Международные отношения;Международные отношения;
General Introduction: The Vengeance of History
1. Renewed Cold War? World War I? World War II? Or Nothing of the Kind?
2. Genesis of the Russia-Ukraine Conflict
3. Soviet Collapse and Russia-Ukraine Conflict
4. Origins of the Russian Backlash
5. Uneven Polycentrism and the Global Crisis
6. A Cross-Historical Method
7. Why Major Power War is Still Possible—Though NOT Inevitable!
8. Future Pessimistic Scenarios
9. Once, and If, the Dust Settles