From Yeltsin to Putin

Russia has developed multipolar paradigm in its effort to reobtain the position of the Great Power since it realized that it could not exert influence strong enough to stake its claim in the world politics. The advocacy of a multipolar world order, referred to as the “Primakov Doctrine,” shifted Mo...

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Main Author: Wonhee Lee
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: International Association for Political Science Students (IAPSS) 2013-10-01
Series:Politikon
Subjects:
Online Access:https://politikon.iapss.org/index.php/politikon/article/view/157
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author Wonhee Lee
author_facet Wonhee Lee
author_sort Wonhee Lee
collection DOAJ
description Russia has developed multipolar paradigm in its effort to reobtain the position of the Great Power since it realized that it could not exert influence strong enough to stake its claim in the world politics. The advocacy of a multipolar world order, referred to as the “Primakov Doctrine,” shifted Moscow’s attitude toward the two Koreas as well. In its pursuit of multipolarity in East Asia, Russia has designed its strategy toward Korea’s nuclear crisis and unification to best suit its national interest. Considering the competition among the Great Powers in East Asia, Russia’s Korea policy can better be understood under such a multilateral framework.
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spelling doaj.art-b031e796b6fb429794353743fe87b3b22023-10-13T18:23:34ZengInternational Association for Political Science Students (IAPSS)Politikon2414-66332013-10-012110.22151/politikon.21.4From Yeltsin to PutinWonhee Lee0Johns Hopkins University Russia has developed multipolar paradigm in its effort to reobtain the position of the Great Power since it realized that it could not exert influence strong enough to stake its claim in the world politics. The advocacy of a multipolar world order, referred to as the “Primakov Doctrine,” shifted Moscow’s attitude toward the two Koreas as well. In its pursuit of multipolarity in East Asia, Russia has designed its strategy toward Korea’s nuclear crisis and unification to best suit its national interest. Considering the competition among the Great Powers in East Asia, Russia’s Korea policy can better be understood under such a multilateral framework. https://politikon.iapss.org/index.php/politikon/article/view/157RussiaKorean peninsulaPutinYeltsinPrimakov Doctrinepeace processes
spellingShingle Wonhee Lee
From Yeltsin to Putin
Politikon
Russia
Korean peninsula
Putin
Yeltsin
Primakov Doctrine
peace processes
title From Yeltsin to Putin
title_full From Yeltsin to Putin
title_fullStr From Yeltsin to Putin
title_full_unstemmed From Yeltsin to Putin
title_short From Yeltsin to Putin
title_sort from yeltsin to putin
topic Russia
Korean peninsula
Putin
Yeltsin
Primakov Doctrine
peace processes
url https://politikon.iapss.org/index.php/politikon/article/view/157
work_keys_str_mv AT wonheelee fromyeltsintoputin