Understanding Russia: Nikolas K. Gvosdev, PhD

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  • Опубликовано: 26 сен 2024

Комментарии • 15

  • @pitthistoryguy1301
    @pitthistoryguy1301 3 месяца назад +4

    Russia / Putin's regime are described as a black box, a collection of characteristics with no insight on the how or why of their perspective. I attended many or Dr Joseph Wieczynski's Slavic History classes at Va Tech and am very interested.

  • @Anilkumar-ze8po
    @Anilkumar-ze8po 2 месяца назад

    Amazing...thanks a tonne for this work.

  • @Discipe
    @Discipe 2 месяца назад +3

    Calling Dugin a Russian political philosopher is too far-fetched, in my view. He looks, speaks, and behaves as a marginal freak. It's truly hard to believe he could have any weight in political system.
    This claim is so out of reach that I'm not sure how good other points are. They sound logical, but still, it is a view of an outsider who only pretends that he "thinks like a russian leader."

  • @justinmathews8507
    @justinmathews8507 3 месяца назад +13

    12 minutes in, and the lecture sounds like he has been reading off Russia's Wikipedia page.

  • @sophiaplastun8972
    @sophiaplastun8972 2 месяца назад +3

    In terms of Russia we always should remember that we are talking about archaic outdated society and economy with traditional mind rooted neglect of individual rights and interest and clear genocidal practices toward culture, traditions, languages of national groups. Look at Russian map in terms of population distribution and roads infrastructure - you will notice how easily can this “country” fall apart

  • @jorgemario1586
    @jorgemario1586 2 месяца назад +1

    US relations with the world are based on the respect of self determination of all countries... 😂😂 Ask a guatemalan citizen... 😂😂😂😂

  • @Leonardo-or1ll
    @Leonardo-or1ll Месяц назад

    53:30 Seems like the realist perspective is the correct perspective and the idealist democratic perspective is only one that can be afforded by a wealthy country which has never experienced desperation

  • @sophiemariekung5086
    @sophiemariekung5086 2 месяца назад

    Ambassadors must comprehend Axis Forces' 21st-century grand strategy to explain the current events. Japan sent Francis Fukuyama to carry out the WWIII plan as the Policy Planning Staff at the U.S. State Department from 1981 to 1989. Fukuyama is a city in Hiroshima where the U.S. dropped the atomic bomb. In 1989, Fukuyama was the deputy director for European political-military affairs, leading to NATO expansion in central and eastern Europe, i.e., Georgia and Ukraine. Being inside, Fukuyama knew the Soviet Union would collapse due to Brezhnev's 'Era of Economic Stagnation' 1964-1982, so he published 'The End of History' on Feb 1, 1989, resulting in U.S. policy change towards international liberal order, aiming at against Russia and China. The tensions in Europe and Asia are caused by the Axis Forces wanting WWIII in the Atlantic and the Pacific theaters to achieve WWII's failure, expanding their territories. War requires planning; it isn't spontaneous: Ukraine against Russia or Taiwan province and the Philippines against China.

  • @massimo9533
    @massimo9533 3 месяца назад +6

    Long live to the american empire! Kind regards from the subject nation of Italy. Stay strong dear american masters.

  • @bdnevins
    @bdnevins 2 месяца назад

    Great lecture. In this brief time, he did not address the failures of US policy regarding Latin America and Iran.
    These events were carried out "under the radar" of Congress and US voters. The agreed on policy of the voters and
    most of the government is that Japan, Germany, etc should govern their own affairs. This is quite different than the
    situation of the Warsaw pact nations during the Cold War, or of Belarus now.