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Lonely Power: Why Russia Has Failed to Become the West and the West is Weary of Russia Hardcover – July 28, 2010
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Adapted from the Russian edition, this book analyzes the dominant stereotypes and myths that formed during the Putin presidency and that continue to hamper our understanding of Russia's current situation.
Author Lilia Shevtsova explains the origins of such political clichés as
Russia is not mature enough for democracy;
Capitalism first, and democracy will follow;
The humiliation of Russia by the West is the key cause of their soured relationship;
Arms talks between Russia and the United States will help to reset the relationship.
Shevtsova argues that an anti-mythology campaign is needed to deepen the understanding of Russia both within the Russian Federation and in the West, as well as to help nations build better policies toward Russia.
Praise for Lilia Shevtsova's RussiaLost in Transition
"An excellent volume... highly recommended."Choice
- Print length394 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherCarnegie Endowment for Int'l Peace
- Publication dateJuly 28, 2010
- Dimensions6.25 x 1 x 9 inches
- ISBN-10087003247X
- ISBN-13978-0870032479
Editorial Reviews
About the Author
Lilia Shevtsova co-chairs the Russian Domestic Politics and Political Institutions Project at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, dividing her time between the Carnegie office in Washington, D.C. and the Carnegie Moscow Center. She is author of Lost Russia--Lost in Transition: The Yeltsin and Putin Legacies (2007), Putin's Russia (2005) and Yeltsin's Russia: Myths and Reality (1999), and is the coeditor, with Archie Brown, of Gorbachev, Yeltsin, and Putin: Political Leadership in Russia's Transition (2001), all published by Carnegie.
Product details
- Publisher : Carnegie Endowment for Int'l Peace (July 28, 2010)
- Language : English
- Hardcover : 394 pages
- ISBN-10 : 087003247X
- ISBN-13 : 978-0870032479
- Item Weight : 1.35 pounds
- Dimensions : 6.25 x 1 x 9 inches
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In her view Russia must reject the current system and must adopt liberal democracy. She doesn't really give convincing reasons why. She doesn't give strong arguments why the Russians should prefer liberal democracy or even abandon mild authoritarian regime. In Shevtsova's world, liberalism and democracy are self-legitimizing. She is not the first "progressive" in Russia - Lenin and Trotsky a century ago were convinced that the "proletarian dictatorship" was necessary if Russia to advance. For them, it was more progressive and modern than the Czarism. The hell is always paved with best intentions. If the Russians could use MORE of something - it is skepticism.
She works in Moscow's office of The Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, a foreign-policy think-tank based in Washington, D.C. Like a member of any important American foundation, she participates in setting up an agenda for the American foreign policy. Creating bridges, making connections, understanding what makes Russia "tick" is important for the US. Presumably, it is what the Carnegie Center is trying to do. And yet, in the book there are no traces of a desirability of improving relations, or simply reaching modus vivendi.
Shevtsova advocates a risible notion that by sanctioning, isolating Russia and weakening her institutions the "West" could create and enhance freedom. But freedom is a tricky thing - it cannot be created by export or by destroying an existing regime or even removing tyranny. As we see the world moving from the Fukuyamian "end of history" back into an epoch of conflict animated by nationalist, religious, fundamentalist and soon, perhaps, Malthusian forces, it is not the neo-liberals whose advice Russia should listen (or American neoconservatives who gave their liberalism a fundamentalist pitch). It is Thomas Hobbes who predicted in 1651 that conflict, upheaval and "state of nature" will follow if strong government is lacking.
Shvetivsa creates a "Straw Man" (Putin ostensibly wants to re-create an imperialist superpower, a new Soviet Union). Then, she destroys it (Russia under Putin doesn't possess what it takes to be a superpower). I think everybody realizes that it's an absurd notion -- Russia cannot be a superpower like America, but Russia is a regional Great Power (like many other regional powers: Japan, India, Brazil, China).
In Shevsova's opinion, Russia must not peruse the Great Power Politics ("Derzhavnichesto", she uses this out-dates imperial term) because the liberal democracy is incompatible with the Great Power Politics. That is very doubtful. In the end she claims Russia could become a "challenge to liberal civilization". Whatever. The Russians should think about the national interests, not phantoms like "liberal civilization". If it serves human needs, it's good enough.