Evidence of Russia's Bush Doctrine in the CIS1

Authors: Wilhelmsen, Julie; Flikke, Geir

Source: European Security, Volume 14, Number 3, Number 3/September 2005 , pp. 387-417(31)

Publisher: Routledge, part of the Taylor & Francis Group

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Abstract:

The article discusses the emergence of a Russian version of the Bush doctrine in the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS) and Russian officials' conceptual stretching of the strategic culture embodied in the National Security Concept (NSC) and the Military Doctrine (MD) from 2000 onwards. While these documents seem to cherish multilateralism and United Nations (UN) primacy in questions of global and regional security, terrorist attacks on Russia proper have engendered a more assertive approach to regional security issues in the Caucasus and Central Asia and brought Russian officials to consider unilateral pre-emptive strikes against terrorist bases. In the case of the Caucasus, Russia has been striking against terrorist bases on Georgian territory and contributed to constructing a failed state, whereas in the Central Asian case, Russia has sought to revitalise the defunct CIS security framework and pledge assistance to ‘allies' in the fight against terrorism. The article argues that the war against terrorism has given Russia a new footing in the CIS. The issue of security is more salient, as is the reliance on military force to facilitate it.

Document Type: Research article

DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/09662830500411277

Affiliations: 1: Department of Russian Studies, Norwegian Institute of International Affairs, Oslo, Norway

Publication date: 2005-09-01

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