THE WESTERN RUSSOPHOBIC PARANOIA AFTER THE COLD WAR AND GLOBAL SECURITY

Vladislav B. Sotirovic

Abstract


In regard to international relations (IR), power is understood as the ability of state or other political actors to impose its own control or influence over other state(s) or other political actors, or at least to influence the outcome of events on the local, regional or global level. Power politics as a phenomena has two dimensions: internal and external. The internal dimension is applied in the inner policy of the state and the external in the foreign affairs or outside of the home politics. The powerfulness of a state depends on its real independence or sovereignty from outside influence on both formulation and realization of its own policy. The internal power is represented by the level of autonomy in the inner affairs while the external power corresponds to capacity to control the behaviour and influence from the outside in domestic affairs and to influence by itself the affairs and politics of the others. However, a majority of researchers suggest that power politics mostly means the potential capacity and practical ability to influence the behaviour of other actors in IR in accordance with its own aims calculated into the framework of public or secret national interests.

Keywords


Russia, West, Russophobia, International Relations, Global Politics

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DOI: https://doi.org/10.33865/JSSGP.003.02.0120

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License URL: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/