Empire Envy: Russia-US Relations Post 9/11

Authors

  • Kari Roberts University of Calgary

Abstract

Russia-US relations have been the focus of much attention recently, in light of the US-led “war on terror” in Afghanistan and the 2003 war in Iraq. There is concern, in many world capitals, including Moscow, for the implications of American unilateralism in the international system. This paper argues that in the absence of a clear sense of a new Russian identity and subsequently, collective agreement on the national interest, Russian policy makers rely, in part, on the legacy of the Cold War relationship between Moscow and Washington to influence their orientations toward America. As a result, a competitive mentality remains, thirteen years after the end of the Cold War, and as the US asserts its role as the last remaining global superpower, Russia attempts to balance this power, and does so through the promotion of multilateralism in its Foreign Policy Concept, and through its position on the expansion of NATO into East-Central Europe and its opposition to the war in Iraq in 2003. As regards these two issues, Russian foreign policy may be viewed as a direct reaction to its perception of the consolidation of American hegemonic power in the international system.

Author Biography

Kari Roberts, University of Calgary

Kari Roberts is a doctoral candidate and Sessional Instructor in the Department of Political Science at the University of Calgary. She recently defended her PhD thesis, which examined the effects of weak Russian foreign policy making institutions on Russia-US relations in the 1990s.

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