elections, its annexation of Crimea and the nerve agent attack on Putin’s leading opposition leader, Alexei Navalny, who’s currently imprisoned.Īnd while former president Donald Trump has maintained his esteem for Putin, anti-Russian opinion has uncommon bipartisan support. According to Gallup poll conducted in February, 85% of Americans viewed Russia unfavorably, easily the country’s worst rating in more than three decades - a slide accelerated by Russia’s meddling in U.S. A Russian Foreign Ministry official, Alexander Darchiyev, according to an Interfax report, recently suggested that “perhaps it would be worth recalling the well-forgotten principle that worked during the Cold War - peaceful coexistence.”Įven before war began in Ukraine, Americans had a historically dim view of Russia. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres has said “the threat to global security now is more complex and probably higher” than during the Cold War, partly because there aren’t the same back channels of communication. The invasion of Ukraine is intended to deter Western influence and NATO infringement from Russia’s sphere of influence, and potentially to restore a Texas-sized part of the former Soviet Union.īarely two weeks in, the Cold War has often been invoked. A former KGB agent, he once called the collapse of the Soviet Union “the greatest geopolitical catastrophe” of the 20th century. The Cold War is innately connected to the crisis in Ukraine partly because it so much informs Putin’s world view. “But,” Logevall says, “if we’re talking more generally about a cold war, if we mean a titanic struggle that involves all aspects of national power waged between two incompatible systems but short of outright military conflict - then yeah, I guess this is a cold war.” “If we’re talking about a capitalized Cold War, I don’t think I could call this Cold War II,” says Fredrik Logevall, professor of history and international affairs at Harvard and Pulitzer-Prize winning author most recently of “JFK: Coming of Age in the American Century, 1917-1956.” and its European allies have enacted crippling economic sanctions on Russia - which Biden on Tuesday extended to Russian crude oil - while still drawing the line on military engagement with Russia. In repudiating Putin’s invasion, the U.S. The largest land conflict in Europe since World War II, Russia’s two-plus weeks of war in Ukraine has rallied Western alliances like few events before it. “We are in a second Cuban Missile Crisis in many ways in terms of the danger of escalation,” says Hershberg, whose books include “Marigold: The Lost Chance for Peace in Vietnam.” “Putin is acting so irrationally he makes Nikita Khrushchev appear like a rational actor in comparison.” A Russian strategic overreach, Hershberg says, is again sparking a potentially perilous moment in international order. But in a crisis that pits two nuclear superpowers on opposing sides, history is repeating in other ways.
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