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NATO’s Enlargement and Russia


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Russian programmatic military documents as well as Russian power structures (siloviki).14 He also elaborates on some concrete proposals for Germany’s future Eastern policy, including the field of military cooperation.

      The volume contains a multifarious mixture of analytical reflections, competing interpretations and policy recommendations that can help to elaborate a more effective Western strategy towards Russia. The appearance of this collection is also an expression of the readiness of foreign policy experts from Russia, Poland, Ukraine, Germany and the USA to openly discuss and fundamentally reevaluate some burning security issues. This collection unites analysts with very different backgrounds and viewpoints within one volume. Hopefully, the book will thus serve as a forum upon which more fruitful future dialogue can be build.

      Acknowledgements

      My sincerest thanks go first and foremost to Marina and Alexander Stuppo. In addition, I am very grateful to Alexander Ebner, Joerg Forbrig, Andreas Umland, Robert Enz, Gabriele Metzler, Johannes Varwick, Marcus Pindur, Vladimir Kara-Murza, Peter Hoeres, Anatoliy Adamishin, Lilia Shevtsova, Ulrich Schlie, Daniel Hamilton, Kristina Spohr, Joseph Verbovszky, and Dominic Kahn for giving strength, providing a necessary word in a necessary moment, as well as for offering their support, wisdom, knowledge, encouragement and advice.

      Many thanks also personally to each of the fascinating authors for their interest in the topic, their inspiration, cordial openness, stimulating discussions as well as for new friendships and impulses for new ways forward in the field of political science.

      Normative rhetoric may seem “cannibalized” or “too visionary” for today’s times, but this volume profited from the wisdom of individuals who did not lose faith in values. These values will shape our future.

      * * *

      Despite its heavy-handed clumsiness, Russia’s anti-NATO rhetoric is only gaining momentum. It has intensified in connection with the protests in Russia that erupted after the return of Alexey Navalny in January 2021. Navalny is now probably the best-known Kremlin critic in the West, following the poison attack against him and his subsequent medical treatment in Germany. All people protesting against the Kremlin in Russia are being accused of alleged criminal cooperation with the West and also with NATO. The accusations are constructed by Russian organs of power very coarsely, having no logic, let alone factual basis. The consequences are however becoming more dangerous for individuals. These blatant accusations by the Russian regime towards its critics, as well its fundamentally wrong and intentionally perverted interpretation of the historical development of international democratic institutions—including NATO—must be addressed clearly, over and over again.