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Este blog trata basicamente de ideias, se possível inteligentes, para pessoas inteligentes. Ele também se ocupa de ideias aplicadas à política, em especial à política econômica. Ele constitui uma tentativa de manter um pensamento crítico e independente sobre livros, sobre questões culturais em geral, focando numa discussão bem informada sobre temas de relações internacionais e de política externa do Brasil. Para meus livros e ensaios ver o website: www.pralmeida.org. Para a maior parte de meus textos, ver minha página na plataforma Academia.edu, link: https://itamaraty.academia.edu/PauloRobertodeAlmeida;

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Mostrando postagens com marcador Foreign Policy. Mostrar todas as postagens
Mostrando postagens com marcador Foreign Policy. Mostrar todas as postagens

domingo, 28 de maio de 2023

O não-alinhamento alinhado com equívocos de uma outra era, e que continua desalinhado com a realidade - Foreign Policy, Paulo Roberto de Almeida

 A Foreign Policy dedica o seu número de 28 de maio de 2023 (sumário abaixo), ao tal de não-alinhamento (sobretudo do Brasil e da África do Sul), que eu já critiquei acerbamente neste meu texto: 

4328. “Não ao inaceitável “Não Alinhamento Ativo”, que só significa um Desalinhamento Passivo e Inativo”, Brasília, 26 fevereiro 2023, 1 p. Nota sobre a postura proposta ao fantasmagórico Sul Global de Não Alinhamento Ativo em relação ao conflito da Ucrânia. Postado no blog Diplomatizzando (link: https://diplomatizzando.blogspot.com/2023/02/nao-ao-inaceitavel-nao-alinhamento.html).

Não creio que eu precise acrescentar mais críticas e justificativas a esse equívoco.

A Ucrânia não merece isso. Em todo caso, aqui estão alguns artigos sobre essa coisa.


Flash Points: Is nonalignment nonsensical?

Foreign PolicyMay 28, 2023


quarta-feira, 24 de maio de 2023

A China continua incrementando seu apoio à Rússia - Foreign Policy

 Deep Pockets, Deep Friendship

Foreign Policy, May 24, 2023

Mishustin and Xi shake hands in front of a row of alternating Chinese and Russian flags

Russian Prime Minister Mikhail Mishustin meets with Chinese President Xi Jinping in Beijing on May 24.Alexander Astafyev/Sputnik/AFP via Getty Images

Russia and China signed a series of bilateral agreements on Wednesday that strengthen the two countries’ economic ties. The deals come at a time when Moscow is increasingly looking to Beijing for economic and political support to offset the impact of Western sanctions and international isolation over the war in Ukraine.

Russian Prime Minister Mikhail Mishustin signed the agreements—which involve deepening investment in trade services, promoting Russian agricultural exports to China, and furthering sports cooperation—during a visit to Beijing, where he met with Chinese President Xi Jinping and Chinese Premier Li Qiang. It is the highest-profile trip to China by a Russian official since the beginning of Russia’s war in Ukraine, though Xi visited Russian President Vladimir Putin, whom he called his “dear friend,” in Moscow this past March. Li Hui, China’s special representative for Eurasian affairs, is set to visit Russia on Friday.

The two countries have increased trade since the start of the war. The first three months of this year saw trade between Russia and China reach $53.8 billion, a nearly 40 percent increase from the same period the year prior.

Meanwhile, a new Gallup poll found that, since the war started, Russia’s neighbors—including those traditionally favorable to it—have taken on a dimmer view of the country’s leadership. According to Gallup, “In four countries historically sympathetic to Russian leadership—Armenia, Moldova, Kazakhstan and Azerbaijan—the percentage who disapprove now exceeds the percentage who approve.” Disapproval also rose in Kyrgyzstan and Uzbekistan. Last week, China—not Russia—held a Central Asia summit, where Xi unveiled plans for development and pledged a “new blueprint” for the region.

domingo, 14 de maio de 2023

A má consciência americana e ocidental sobre as misérias do mundo - Foreign Policy sobre as "falhas" dos EUA e da ONU no Sudão

 Existe uma mania, no Ocidente, nos próprios EUA, de achar que o Ocidente e os EUA em particular deveriam se ocupar de todas as democracias, de todas as ditaduras, de todas as tragédias humanitárias do mundo, como neste questionamento abaixo.

Por que os EUA teriam "falhado" no Sudão?

Eles têm a obrigação moral e material de vigiar cada transição, de dar cenoura ou aplicar porrete cada vez que algum general golpista se apresenta no horizonte dos lugares mais problemáticos do mundo? 

Em metade do mundo, talvez mais, povos e nações nunca conheceram qualquer semelhança de regime democrático ou respeitador dos DH. Por que teria de haver um "policial" (good coop) para certificar que todo o mundo está no bom caminho.

Seja por razões morais, ou por ameaças reais à paz e à segurança regional, ou até internacional, por que os EUA, e o Ocidente em geral deveria sair em busca dos bons companheiros em todas as partes?

Esse tipo de sanção moral, como se os EUA fossem os garantidores obrigatórios da Carta da ONU e do bem-estar internacional é algo arrogante: ninguém gosta do imperialismo, mas depois reclamam quando ele deixa as pessoas se matarem se não intervir para acabar com o morticínio.

Alguém já deu uma olhada na fronteira do México e na própria zona fronteiriça dos EUA? Quantos miseráveis tentam entrar, alguns morrem, outros ficam meses, talvez anos, em centros de detenção insalubres e até desumanos.

Os EUA são culpados por serem ricos e livres?

Abaixo, uma série de artigos na Foreign Policy, quase todos acusatórios dos EUA, e da ONU...

Paulo Roberto de Almeida

How the U.S. failed Sudan
Chloe Hadavas
Foreign Policy, May 14, 2023
In mid-2019, after the ouster of Sudanese dictator Omar al-Bashir, political analysts hoped that Washington might be able to help Sudan chart a path to democracy. That hope was short-lived. In late 2021, Sudan’s generals staged a coup, and after 18 months of controversial U.S. policies attempting to revive the country’s democratic transition, armed conflict erupted again in Khartoum last month.
“Maybe we couldn’t have prevented a conflict,” one U.S. official told FP’s Robbie Gramer. “But it’s like we didn’t even try and beyond that just emboldened [the warring generals] by making repeated empty threats and never following through.”
Today, we’re featuring our best reporting and essays on how Sudan got here—and the role that the United States and other Western powers have played in what many fear will become a full-blown civil war.
How the U.S. Fumbled Sudan’s Hopes for Democracy

quinta-feira, 4 de maio de 2023

Zelensky pede um Nuremberg para Putin - Alexandra Sharp (Foreign Policy)

 Putin merece um Nuremberg só seu.

domingo, 23 de abril de 2023

Foreign Policy especial sobre a contraofensiva ucraniana para retomar terrenos conquistados por forças invasoras russas

 FOREIGN POLICY, April 23, 2023

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Foreign Policy Flashpoints
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For months, there has been speculation over Ukraine’s spring counteroffensive. Now, as the weather gets warmer, observers are wondering: What is Kyiv waiting for? The reporting and essays below explore this question and more, delving into the reasons for the holdup, the innerworkings of Ukrainian military training and decision-making, and what the highly anticipated offensive might look like.—Chloe Hadavas


Ukraine’s Spring Offensive Is Waiting on Weapons Every day Kyiv waits, the Russians dig deeper trenches.
By Jack Detsch


Ukraine’s Longest Day The first 24 hours of the expected counteroffensive will likely be decisive.
By Franz-Stefan Gady


Crimea Has Become a Frankenstein’s Monster The Ukrainian government is now trapped by its own uncompromising—and increasingly indefensible—policy.
By Anatol Lieven


How Ukraine Learned to Fight Russia’s full-scale war started a year ago. Ukraine’s military started slashing its Soviet roots long before.
By Jack Detsch


Ukraine’s Leopard Tank Crews Are Trained and Ready to Fight Advanced tanks will be critical to any summer offensive.
By Elisabeth Braw

Photo: Paula Bronstein for Foreign Policy

quinta-feira, 23 de março de 2023

Can Russia Ever Become a ‘Normal’ European Nation? - Adrian Karatnycky (Foreign Policy)

Can Russia Ever Become a ‘Normal’ European Nation?

Ironically, a defeat by Ukraine could trigger Russians to reexamine their national identity.

By Adrian Karatnycky, a senior fellow at the Atlantic Council and the founder of Myrmidon Group.

Foreign Policy, February 20, 2023


Can Russia become a normal nation-state following the pattern of other European countries and former empires—and abandon half a millennium of imperial conquest and propaganda? Because the imperial mindset has been intertwined with the Russian sense of nationhood for so long, such a change is unlikely to come from within. Ironically, it is the Ukrainians, who, by handing the imperial center a decisive defeat, can trigger a reexamination of Russia’s national identity. Only in defeat will Russians have a chance to refocus their country’s priorities away from empire and toward a domestic agenda of economic, social, and democratic development.


A Russian sense of nationhood focused on reform at home instead of domination over non-Russians had a brief shining moment in the waning days of the Soviet Union. Around 1990, a group of reformist politicians in Moscow, Leningrad (now St. Petersburg), and other major Russian cities organized around a liberal, patriotic agenda in the Democratic Russia movement. The movement’s leaders—such as the human rights activist Lev Ponomaryov, the civic activist Mikhail Astafyev, the Orthodox priest Gleb Yakunin, and soon-to-be-Moscow-Mayor Gavriil Popov—articulated an agenda of domestic reform that sought to repair the damage that 70 years of communist dictatorship had inflicted on the Russian people. Leaders of this nascent movement were the first to unfurl the Russian tricolor at the Congress of People’s Deputies of the Russian Socialist Federative Soviet Republic (RSFSR), one of the Soviet Union’s 15 constituent republics. Most people have forgotten it, but the modern Russian flag actually started as a symbol of liberalism and resistance—led by Boris Yeltsin, then the president of the newly formed Russian republic—to the August 1991 coup attempt by military hard-liners seeking to quash reforms and restore the Soviet dictatorship.


The Democratic Russia movement’s moderate agenda coincided with Yeltsin’s political ambitions—including his desire to undermine the central Soviet apparatus and transfer power to the Russian republic he was leading at the time. Yeltsin’s inner circle included influential anti-imperial patriots, such as Gennady Burbulis, one of the drafters of the accords that dissolved the Soviet Union, and Galina Starovoitova, a former dissident. Liberal nationalists, led by economic reformer Yegor Gaidar, then went on to found the Democratic Choice of Russia party, which won 18 percent of the seats in the Russian parliamentary elections of 1993 and became a key part of Yeltsin’s coalition.

In the first years of the country’s post-Soviet independence, Yeltsin promoted the idea of Russia as the homeland of the Russian people. Although he hoped to bind all 15 independent post-Soviet states to each other in a confederation, Yeltsin worked constructively with neighboring non-Russian states, ultimately recognizing their sovereignty. With the exception of Russian support for separatist movements in newly independent Georgia and Moldova, Yeltsin generally avoided destabilizing territorial disputes outside Russia’s borders. Soviet symbols and references to the Russian Empire were jettisoned. In their place came a focus on building state and civic institutions, including political parties, trade unions, veterans organizations, environmental groups, and cultural associations. Instead of the Soviet national anthem, Russsia used the “Patriotic Song,” a melody by the classical composer Mikhail Glinka, without any accompanying lyrics.

But powerful revanchist and chauvinist imperial forces never went away. Their most prominent public voice was a powerful conservative opposition in the Russian Duma that nearly toppled Yeltsin in a bid to replace him with his own vice president, Alexander Rutskoy. Imperialist ideas also retained strength in the security services, whose influence grew amid political ferment among Russia’s many ethnic minorities. Amid the economic hardships of a difficult transition from Soviet rule—and as Chechnya’s drive for independence pitted Russians against non-Russians—the influence and popularity of the liberal nationalists eroded. In their place, Yeltsin gradually allowed hard-liners with imperial ideas to return to positions of influence. These hard-liners convinced Yeltsin that Chechnya’s secessionists should be crushed by force.


The imperial hard-liners’ total victory came in 1999 with the appointment of Vladimir Putin as Yeltsin’s prime minister and designated successor as president. Putin moved quickly to redefine Russia and reawaken its sense of imperial grandeur. In 2000, he jettisoned Yeltsin’s national anthem, restored the melody of the Soviet anthem, and added new lyrics with an imperial twist, celebrating Russia as the “age-old union of fraternal peoples.”

Today, there is little impetus for a Russian patriotic movement focused on domestic development. Even among what’s left of the opposition, there are few voices trying to convince Russians to build a future within the country’s recognized borders. Even the imprisoned opposition activist Alexey Navalny, while he has spoken out against the war, argues that Crimea belongs to Russia and is unapologetic for having used ethnic slurs against Russia’s national minorities. He has also spoken with regret about the separation of the Orthodox Ukrainians from Moscow and blames Putin for destroying the prospects for a “Russian world”—Russkiy mir—that reaches far beyond Russia’s borders, an ideological construct promoted by far-right Russian nationalists and used by Putin and his media mouthpieces to justify Russia’s genocidal denial of Ukrainian nationhood. Navalny and most other Russian opposition figures focus their attention on the state’s authoritarian rule and rampant corruption rather than the fundamental values—such as respect for sovereign countries’ borders and choices—that could lay the foundation of a post-imperial national identity.

Only a clear, unambiguous triumph by Ukrainians asserting their distinct national identity could help Russians transition to a post-imperial civic identity. By forcefully demonstrating that Ukrainians are in no way part of the Russian nation, they are already having important effects on many Russians’ understanding of their relationship to the nations beyond their border. Ukrainian resistance and unity has created impossible challenges for Russian propaganda about the so-called Russian world. Their solution has been to frame the war as Russia’s fight against NATO and the imaginary cabal of Nazis that have supposedly taken over Ukraine, but every battlefield defeat at the hands of better-organized and better-motivated Ukrainians pokes another hole in the Kremlin’s false narrative.


By compelling Russians to embrace a national narrative stripped of imperialism, a Ukrainian victory can help ensure a better future for Russia as well.

There are precedents for Russians changing their view of who belongs to the imperial Russian world. In the 19th century, when much of Poland was part of the Russian Empire, the Kremlin viewed Poles as a nation that was to undergo cultural, educational, and religious Russification. Count Sergei Uvarov, the Russian Empire’s education minister from 1833 to 1849, believed Poles could be transformed into Russians within one generation. But a series of Polish rebellions taught Russia that the forced assimilation of Poles would not work. Russians learned, as they are being taught by the Ukrainians today, that Poles were indeed a separate nation unwilling to lose its culture and identity.

Ukrainians, too, have rebelled against the Russians throughout their history—including under a succession of Cossack Ukrainian hetmans in the 17th and 18th centuries. The story of Ukrainians’ resistance to Russian rule—and ultimately independence—has to do with the fact that their nation has had a separate, Western-influenced history and identity from Russia’s for many centuries. But unlike the Poles’ fierce resistance to Russia, Ukrainian resistance was of insufficient duration and intensity to rid Russians of their illusions that Ukrainians—first called “little Russians” in the tsarist era as a way to erase their nationhood—were indeed a separate people with a separate language and culture. Only by winning this war will Ukrainians finally be able to drive home to Russians what is clear to Ukrainians and just about everyone else: Ukraine is not Russia.

Discussions of Russia’s future have focused primarily on two scenarios—the removal of Putin and his replacement with a more pragmatic leadership, and Russia’s collapse into several states as its internal fractures can no longer be papered over by a common enemy and an authoritarian regime. Neither scenario, however, ensures long-lasting security for Ukraine and other countries formerly in the Soviet sphere. There is no security against Russia if the country and its people do not shed their imperial mindset and become a “normal” European nation-state. Ukrainians desperately want to live next to a normal Russia whose elite and citizenry accept their country’s borders and Ukraine’s right to statehood as a distinct nation.

Even if Ukraine prevails with Western help, Russia’s imperial instincts are unlikely to vanish completely. Imperial collapse usually leaves a long trail of resentment—just look at France’s loss of Algeria in 1962, which remains a point of contestation in the national memory and a source of mobilization for the far right. Still, imperial nations usually—even if only gradually—reconcile with the sovereignty of their former colonies. If Russia is stopped in Ukraine, there is ample reason to believe it will eventually follow this well-trodden path. But the abandonment of empire has almost always required defeat.

There is one glaring issue, however, that makes Russian imperialism different: It is really two imperialisms—the former external empire beyond its borders and Moscow’s internal empire consisting of dozens, if not hundreds, of conquered and colonized non-Russian peoples. Russia includes numerous subnational republics and other political units where a non-Russian ethnic group forms a clear—or even overwhelming—majority, including Bashkortostan, Chechnya, Dagestan, Ingushetiya, Kalmykia, Sakha, and Tatarstan. While a complete dissolution of Russia is unlikely, many of these regions—some with vast natural resources—have the potential for national mobilization, especially in cases where ethnic Russians are only a small minority. This, in turn, can reinforce chauvinist trends inside the Russian Federation for years to come and withdraw support from moderates, liberals, and anti-imperialists.


Putin has long argued that Ukraine is an essential part of Russian history and identity. In ways he did not anticipate, events may soon prove him right: A victory in which Ukraine reclaims control over its territories and successfully defends its national and European identity can become a crucial factor in pushing Russians onto a path of normal development previously trod by other European peoples and post-colonial states. By compelling Russians to embrace a national narrative stripped of imperialism—a narrative that seeks to build a civic state rooted in a clear national identity within its sovereign boundaries—Ukrainians can help ensure not only their own and the region’s security, but a better future for Russia as well.


Adrian Karatnycky is a senior fellow at the Atlantic Council and the founder of Myrmidon Group.

domingo, 12 de março de 2023

Foreign Policy: um número inteiramente dedicado ao imperialismo russo e seus reflexos no Ocidente

 


MARCH 12, 2023 | VIEW IN BROWSER
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“Russia’s nature as an imperial power is incontrovertible,”Artem Shaipov and Yuliia Shaipova write. “So why has this fundamental, foundational fact about Russia been all but ignored in the West for so long, including among those who study and analyze the region?”

Shaipov and Shaipova suggest that the answer lies in the way Russian studies is taught in the West. But regardless of the reason, the war in Ukraine has sparked a newfound awareness of Russia’s imperial project, past and present. The essays below explore the nature of Russian imperialism and its relationship to the country’s latest war of conquest.—Chloe Hadavas


What the Fall of Empires Tells Us About the Ukraine WarRussia’s war can only be understood as a bloody post-imperial conflict.
By Anatol Lieven


From Pushkin to Putin: Russian Literature’s Imperial Ideology Russian classical literature, chock full of dehumanizing nationalism, reads disturbingly familiar today.
By Volodymyr Yermolenko 


It’s High Time to Decolonize Western Russia Studies Why has it taken a war of conquest for experts to recognize Russia’s nature as a vast imperial enterprise?
By Artem Shaipov and Yuliia Shaipova


Why Putin’s Denunciations of Western Imperialism Ring Hollow Russia is among the world’s most ambitious imperial nations.
By Howard W. French


For Opposition to Putin’s War, Look to the Fringes of His Empire The dirty secret of the Russian military is that long-conquered subjects are the Kremlin’s cannon fodder.
By Alexey Kovalev 

Photo: Franz Roubaud/Museum of the History of Azerbaijan