The History Behind Russia's Expansionary Foreign Policy with Stephen Kotkin | Policy Stories

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  • čas přidán 5. 06. 2024
  • Is Russia inherently imperialist and expansionist? Russia wasn’t forced to invade Ukraine, but its leaders chose to do so because they want Russia to become a great power. If Russian elites could somehow relinquish their unwinnable competition with the West, they could set their country on a less costly and more promising course.
    For more information, visit the PolicyEd page here: www.policyed.org/policy-stori...
    Additional resources:
    Read “Russia’s Perpetual Geopolitics: Putin Returns to the Historical Pattern,” by Stephen Kotkin via Foreign Affairs. Available here: www.foreignaffairs.com/articl....
    Read “Weakness and Grandeur,” by Stephen Kotkin. Available here: www.hoover.org/research/weakn....
    Watch or listen to “Pesci-ent Knowledge: Stephen Kotkin On Xi’s China, Putin’s Russia,” on GoodFellows. Available here: www.hoover.org/research/pesci....
    Watch “Why Putin Invaded Ukraine,” with Michael McFaul. Available here: www.policyed.org/policy-stori....
    Watch “Second Fronts in Great-Power Conflicts,” on PolicyEd. Available here: www.policyed.org/unarchived/s....
    - Subscribe to PolicyEd’s CZcams channel: bit.ly/PolicyEdSub.
    - Follow PolicyEd on Twitter: bit.ly/PolicyEdTwit.
    - Follow PolicyEd on Instagram: bit.ly/PolicyEdInsta.

Komentáře • 350

  • @shooter7a
    @shooter7a Před rokem +114

    In other words, Russia needs to grow up.

  • @chrisc2671
    @chrisc2671 Před rokem +11

    100% right. Joe Pesci is the best commentator on Russia. He really gets it.

  • @freeloader247
    @freeloader247 Před rokem +12

    At least Kotkin understands Russia. There are bunch of "talking heads" who have no idea what Russia is.

  • @jamesboekbinder3967
    @jamesboekbinder3967 Před rokem +29

    Concise and incisive! Thanks.

  • @simongee5879
    @simongee5879 Před rokem +47

    Great historical wisdom from Stephen Kotkin

  • @zaratustra00
    @zaratustra00 Před rokem +45

    Stephen Kotkin is great! I recommend to check his chat with Lex Fridmann.

    • @markenglish2270
      @markenglish2270 Před rokem +3

      One of the more informative, useful lectures on Russia and its place in geopolitics.

    • @Erik-ko6lh
      @Erik-ko6lh Před rokem +1

      He did three great lectures in Austria that are on youtube.

  • @Erik-ko6lh
    @Erik-ko6lh Před rokem +18

    I love playing Russia in computer games. Every direction is an enemy.

    • @tnndll4294
      @tnndll4294 Před rokem +1

      I support US/NATO. But I might borrow your quote.

  • @F1fan56
    @F1fan56 Před 9 měsíci +3

    From living with a Russian partner (who knows what a malignant force Putin is), after 10 years I have come to understand the Russian mentality. Great analysis by Kotkin. Spot on!

  • @zalman7208
    @zalman7208 Před rokem +6

    I try not to be arrogant and one-sided in my views, but I wonder how many of the many thousands of viewers thus far understood the details of what Mr Kotkin is saying. Not listened to them - but understood them.
    I grew up in Stalin's shadow and in Russia's reach. The man is exactly right. That's not a solution, but it's a start.

  • @patrickmoriarty7273
    @patrickmoriarty7273 Před rokem +25

    What a fine exposition of a complicated topic ~ well done Stephen

  • @coopoylozenge5964
    @coopoylozenge5964 Před rokem +30

    Worth catching up with Alex Stubb and Vlad Vexler. Along with Kotkin they cover the bases as regards the Russian problem. They are excellent analysts and communicators. We should listen with great care in the free world.

    • @rickemmet1104
      @rickemmet1104 Před rokem +12

      Coopoy, I would also recommend Prof. Snyder for insights into Russia's actions. His course on The Making Of Modern Ukraine was extremely interesting, it can be found here: czcams.com/video/bJczLlwp-d8/video.html - this is a semester long course and well worth the time.

    • @coopoylozenge5964
      @coopoylozenge5964 Před rokem +3

      Good call Rick.

    • @MarcosElMalo2
      @MarcosElMalo2 Před rokem

      @@rickemmet1104 I’ll second that nomination for Snyder and his course on Ukrainian history.

    • @freeloader247
      @freeloader247 Před rokem

      Stubb is a CIA propaganda stooge. Well, on the other hand, if u looking for propaganda then why not

    • @LowenKM
      @LowenKM Před rokem

      Yep, and Brit journalist Peter Hitchens (Christopher's brother), is also a keen observer of Russian history & culture. For example he has noted that the Russian word for 'safety' is a negative word meaning 'without danger'... _"where danger is the default position in a country that's been invaded by the French, the Poles, the Golden Horde, the Swedes, the Germans, and the Germans..."_

  • @susanparkhurst7952
    @susanparkhurst7952 Před rokem +21

    My favorite mind, my favorite speaker... I am reading his first of three Books on Stalin: "Stalin, Volume I: Paradoxes of Power, 1878-1928" and when the Third Volume is published this year I am sure it will win the Pulitzer Prize. Find any of his interviews on CZcams and enjoy his knowledge, his humor and his courteous approach to teaching us about Russian history, Eurasia and geopolitics.

    • @gabrielmedrano6875
      @gabrielmedrano6875 Před rokem

      Read Michael Parenti instead of this clown paid to lie to you.

  • @yossarianmnichols9641
    @yossarianmnichols9641 Před rokem +6

    Peter the Great turned to Western Europe to modernize the country and the military. He was quite successful on all his borders. He built St Petersburg to increase trade with Europe.

    • @f4ust85
      @f4ust85 Před rokem +1

      ... at huge human cost and without really changing the worldview or principles the nation lived by.

    • @tnndll4294
      @tnndll4294 Před rokem +1

      Also, adopting Capitalism revived Russia, another example of turning to the west.
      If only the Russians would just listen when we tell them putting liberty above the state will make them a better country too.

    • @j.d.snyder4466
      @j.d.snyder4466 Před rokem

      B A Excellent point. I would also just add that Peter was a complete despot, not a recipe for any enduring process of modernization.

    • @frostyab7579
      @frostyab7579 Před rokem

      and his reward for attempting to integrate into Europe was attempted invasion by France.

  • @Seekthetruth3000
    @Seekthetruth3000 Před rokem +5

    Excellent analysis.

  • @johnlaudenslager706
    @johnlaudenslager706 Před rokem +22

    I wish a Russian elite would accept the goal you advise: not trying to be a super power, but a healthy power like present day Germany, France, Britain, Japan, The Netherlands ...

    • @user-bf1yq6oj8z
      @user-bf1yq6oj8z Před rokem

      To become “normal” USA-occupied protectorates like Germany and Japan? To have USA-approved president schooled before elections on the American military base like France? Normalcy, U say:)

    • @parsahasselhoff7986
      @parsahasselhoff7986 Před rokem +2

      Exactly. At the end of the day, it's the prosperity of the people that matters, not some Imperial pissing match.

    • @mrvn000
      @mrvn000 Před rokem

      All of those are american pupets.

    • @user-rn2bj3dh6j
      @user-rn2bj3dh6j Před rokem

      I dont want my country to be like those.

  • @ennediend2865
    @ennediend2865 Před rokem +2

    Excellent 👍 thank you !

  • @mathiasbartl903
    @mathiasbartl903 Před rokem +4

    If you are a big country surrounded by smaller countries, there is a certain compulsion.

  • @Adhikpost
    @Adhikpost Před 8 měsíci

    Important presentation indeed!

  • @richardsimms251
    @richardsimms251 Před rokem +1

    Great video and advice

  • @mrniceguy7168
    @mrniceguy7168 Před rokem +26

    Kotkin is right that it is a choice…but why do they always seem to make the same choice? Not sure I agree that it isn’t innate to the culture if it always goes back to old habit s

    • @michaeldelisieux
      @michaeldelisieux Před rokem

      @Mr Nice Guy It is " abnormal " the way they tend to go back in cycles, repeating themselves to the minimal detail stamped on their failed previous attempts.
      You are absolutely right on your assertion.

    • @Vzzdak
      @Vzzdak Před rokem +2

      They have historically had this mentiality for hundreds of years, and whenever they seek inspiration for revitalizing the country, they refer to their history.

    • @andreykaminskiy2391
      @andreykaminskiy2391 Před rokem +4

      Your question is a consequence of your poor education. Russia is not something special and unique, it is simply backward. All those processes that are happening now in Russia took place earlier in more developed countries. As befits a poorly educated person, you are not familiar with literature. Otherwise, you would have read the book "18 Brumaire Louis Bonaparte" and you would be surprised to find that this book describes not only the political processes of France in the 19th century, but also Russia in the 21st century.

    • @andreykaminskiy2391
      @andreykaminskiy2391 Před rokem

      @@michaeldelisieux Rather, we have here the case of "Hand washes hand" or when one ignoramus supports the ignorance of another ignoramus "yes, yes, you were right!".

    • @linleonid
      @linleonid Před rokem

      You are 100% right. I wonder why Kotkin does not see it. He is a very knowledgeable person.

  • @kevindorland738
    @kevindorland738 Před rokem

    Fascinating library's worth of knowledge.

  • @collintrytsman3353
    @collintrytsman3353 Před rokem

    VERY WELL SAID

  • @francescos7361
    @francescos7361 Před rokem

    Thanks .

  • @archangel807
    @archangel807 Před rokem +1

    The problems have become obvious and deadly....find the "management"....

  • @williamkauffman5745
    @williamkauffman5745 Před rokem

    good analysis

  • @jamesk7433
    @jamesk7433 Před rokem +2

    screw their policy. I have a policy to be a billionaire by the time I'm 40 but I don't destroy my neighbors for it.

  • @user-rn2hx1fs8w
    @user-rn2hx1fs8w Před rokem +1

    great job summarising all your studies!

  • @jotsingh8917
    @jotsingh8917 Před rokem +3

    Compare that to the expansion of the USA or Great Britain? Where is the difference?

    • @ladydustin7811
      @ladydustin7811 Před rokem +2

      Indeed, imagine Britain wanted to conquer their former colonies again, like say, reconquer India. That is what Russia is doing in Ukraine

    • @Marvin-dg8vj
      @Marvin-dg8vj Před rokem +2

      Many countries have an aggressive and imperialist past but Russia has an aggressive present

    • @Roqu3Quinc0t
      @Roqu3Quinc0t Před rokem

      the difference is that the US and the UK always had better economic systems, political models, strong institutions, check and balances among powers, rule of law and the quality of life of most of their citizens is good...
      the west didnt need a "strong leader" to put his face everywhere and obey him until he dies..
      the law was and still is above all individuals who are in charge..
      this is why they ruled and still rule the world or at least most of it...
      Russia is still primitive compared to the west.

    • @F1fan56
      @F1fan56 Před 9 měsíci

      For one thing, USA and UK didn't have leaders that clung to power by murdering, poisoning and imprisoning the political competition. That indicates the level of fairness in the relative systems, or lack thereof.

  • @mryouben
    @mryouben Před rokem

    Tx Kotkin

  • @dr.edwardfreeman
    @dr.edwardfreeman Před rokem

    If you do not have a (strategic) choice, how then can it be a choice?

  • @bobsnow1996
    @bobsnow1996 Před rokem +19

    Russia is a true mystery to those who live outside the borders of Russia, few understand Russia, but I have found in listening to and reading Stephen Kotkin someone who can tell Russia's story very much like Solzhenitsyn without having experiencing the Gulag system.

    • @andreykaminskiy2391
      @andreykaminskiy2391 Před rokem +1

      I assure you, inside the borders of Russia there are just as many fools who are not aware of the essence of the processes taking place with Russia. Even such an elementary truth that a political reaction is taking place in Russia is something like a scientific discovery.

    • @JonROlsen
      @JonROlsen Před rokem +1

      Stephen F. Cohen is very good.

    • @megamillionfreak
      @megamillionfreak Před rokem

      His bloodline instituted deadly communism in Russian Empire. Now he’s sitting here, still hoping to butcher Russians.

    • @f4ust85
      @f4ust85 Před rokem +1

      Thats pure orientalism. In fact, Russia, Russian popular worldview, ideology and state policy are very much comprehensible if you simply see it as a country that didnt undergo the Renaissance or Enlightenment and his always about 150 years behind mentally.

    • @frostyab7579
      @frostyab7579 Před rokem

      Russia is completely understandable if you know history. Ever since Peter the Great, Russia has been attempting to become part of Europe. It has also been endlessly invaded by European and Asian powers.

  • @eddielindaa
    @eddielindaa Před rokem +3

    Visionary

    • @sj4632
      @sj4632 Před rokem

      western imperialist propagandist more like...

  • @dimitrirazine
    @dimitrirazine Před rokem

    A vignette!

  • @michaelmazowiecki9195
    @michaelmazowiecki9195 Před rokem +1

    The more Russia changes over the centuries, the more it stays the same: a post-Mongol autocratic state which is aggressively expansionist towards its neighbors.

  • @jjreddick377
    @jjreddick377 Před rokem +1

    Yes, one only needs to look at a map.

  • @shaun906
    @shaun906 Před rokem +3

    i was just about to say the uk was pretty open about the collapse of our empires, which was the greatest. i dont say this as a brag but as evidence its possible to manage the decline. the present decline of the UK as a power is just pure miss management but our soft power rules now, whereas Russia has nothing to offer culturally.

    • @F1fan56
      @F1fan56 Před 9 měsíci

      People talk about the 'collapse' of the British Empire, but it was more of a winding down as the various territories matured and developed. Obviously it at a certain point it didn't make sense for Canada, Australia and India, etc. to be run from London. 'Collapse' implies a failure, but the Empire was in fact quite successful.

  • @anniekuruvila5273
    @anniekuruvila5273 Před rokem +4

    True that, a 100% true that steaven kotkin is the canary of the coal mine which our times call for.

    • @j.calvert3361
      @j.calvert3361 Před rokem

      Well he is sorting out past events, isn't he? Not making predictions.

  • @SeattlePioneer
    @SeattlePioneer Před rokem

    All very true. But WHEN will we get Volume III of "Stalin"?!

  • @rocketman1058
    @rocketman1058 Před rokem +3

    This monologue felt like a father talking about a very problematic child

    • @F1fan56
      @F1fan56 Před 9 měsíci

      Putin is acting like a very problematic child who happens to have an army.

  • @ageualves704
    @ageualves704 Před rokem

    How could be a country with a GDP lesser than Italy GDP imperialist?

  • @Calidore1
    @Calidore1 Před rokem

    Oh yes.

  • @Stilicho19801
    @Stilicho19801 Před rokem +3

    Is it time for a new-style Treaty of Westphalia to bring to a close today's calamitous period in European history? Perhaps it would give Russia both the recognition it craves and the security it wants.

    • @ladydustin7811
      @ladydustin7811 Před rokem

      But the security is there. Nobody wants to invade Russia in the west. We tried peaceful associations with them trough trade. They refused this peaceful cooperation. It are their neighbors who need security garantees against Russia

    • @maxsportsman2416
      @maxsportsman2416 Před rokem +2

      I agree. It's time the West started treating Russia with respect and diplomatic instead of always acting like they're the villain, If you treat someone like a villain, then they will act like a villain, But if you treat someone with respect, then most of the time, they will return the respect to you. BTW, Happy New Years

    • @zacharypereira1450
      @zacharypereira1450 Před 9 měsíci

      @@maxsportsman2416 Russia is behaving like a villain hence the treatment as a villain. As to respect if Russia respected its neighbors as peers and not as breakout states that need to be brought back into the fold of mother then perhaps its neighbors and more broadly the West would be more incline to respect to respect. Right now when I think of Russia I think of the brutality and savagery they brought the Chechnya in both wars, the genocide they carried out against Georgians in South Ossetia, the senseless slaughter in Syria and now their idiotic, imbecilic, illegal and unprovoked war of aggression against Ukraine none of these actions inspire respect. Since 1990 Russia has produced 4 Nobel prize winners, Canada my home country has produced 11and Japan has produced 19 perhaps they should focus on investment in education over the military.

  • @p.h.3987
    @p.h.3987 Před rokem +9

    Simple answer: Yes! It is aggressive and imperialist. It is lost in the past with an incredible arrogance.

    • @user-bf1yq6oj8z
      @user-bf1yq6oj8z Před rokem +1

      Incredible arrogance isn’t only American prerogative

  • @christianlibertarian5488

    This is an excellent description, but doesn't really tell us why the Russians always want a strong man.

    • @SeattlePioneer
      @SeattlePioneer Před rokem

      Sure it does. Russia wants national strength which it doesn't hve organically, through the natural growth of it's own culture and economy. It tries to bypass that lack by resort to state power, and that state power overreach becomes one man, autocratic rule as Russia keeps struggling for that which it can't get and keep any other way.
      The United States is has had far greater power than Russia, and far more defensible borders. The United States didn't NEED the ambitions for world power that Russia developed.
      Despite this, the United States has become the American World Empire and now feels insecure and that it must dispute Ukraine with Russia on Russia's border and Taiwan on China's border.
      The really BIG question is what to do about the ambitions for world empire of the United States! Are there NO limits? Can the United States NEVER be satisfied?

  • @henrykung1983
    @henrykung1983 Před rokem

    Although I understand and appreciate Mr. Stephen Kotkin's specialty on Stalin, I feel like this extent of knowledge greatly influencing/limiting his view on greater picture. Some of the arguements he makes in this video feel more like reverse causation - such as western superiority, which was very debatable when Russia first came to entity in the Middle Ages. Hell, Golden Horde once pressed greater threat to Russia than any other western powers, if we can define these then political entities in western Europe as "powers!" This feels more like a fixated prejudice, rather than a objective presentation.

  • @janetleeadams7287
    @janetleeadams7287 Před 8 měsíci

    I have simplified politics in this way: China wants respect; Russia wants money/power; the United States wants love.

  • @sulla5288
    @sulla5288 Před rokem +3

    Kotkin has spoken. Dr. Kotkin, how can I get an English copy of Socialism In One Country?

  • @krisr5497
    @krisr5497 Před rokem +1

    Wouldn`t making another choice imply that Russia simply had to trust the USA not to use military or economic power to exert influence in regions far away from Washington, but quite close to Moscow? What if Russia doesn`t choose to make that choice? Does Russia have to be subdued like Germany was, i. e. in World War III? Do not we also have a choice?

    • @j.calvert3361
      @j.calvert3361 Před rokem +3

      The last 10 years at least the US interest had shifted to East Asia and the Pacific.
      Involvement in Europe was being reduced.
      Russia has been obsessed with the idea that the USA is somehow competing against them, which simply wasn't true anymore.
      Russia would exert much more influence on its neighbourhood if it used its huge resources to create attraction by wealth, by developing its own economy and society.
      But, regrettably, that option was rejected and destroyed for the coming decades.

    • @F1fan56
      @F1fan56 Před 9 měsíci +1

      Russian leadership is far more antagonistic to the USA than vice-versa. No one is trying to 'subdue' Russia, just expect them to do business normally and not illegally invade neighbours.

  • @elessartelcontar6578
    @elessartelcontar6578 Před rokem +7

    I believe the diagnosis for Muscovite political culture is “malignant narcissism”

  • @morm608
    @morm608 Před rokem

    5:00 as the spanish empire fell against an in theory weaker british empire at the moment, throuh alliances , same can happen to US.
    Time will tell, but democracy(I mean universal vote, US expanded when only a few had the right to vote, it wasan oligarchy or aristocracy in essencd) or liberalism are not the key elements.

  • @user-pq7jj3vs3e
    @user-pq7jj3vs3e Před rokem

    I can’t help but hear Joe Pesci every time this man speaks. I think he is funny

  • @kevintewey1157
    @kevintewey1157 Před rokem +1

    1:27 wise listening Eric until he's about to tell you about the free market but he's actually going to pretend it's real

  • @danielhutchinson6604
    @danielhutchinson6604 Před rokem +2

    Western Europe attempts again and again to overcome Russia, but Kokin seems to overlook that fact.
    Propaganda for Propaganda's sake?

  • @TehMorbidAtheist
    @TehMorbidAtheist Před rokem +1

    This all comes down to jealousy. Russia considers itself part of Europe but they always fell behind Europe but many generations. They are trying to overcompensate for their shortcomings.

  • @simongee5879
    @simongee5879 Před rokem +5

    A chronic problem for russia has always been a lack of warm water ports, but rather than seek alliances with it's coastal neighbours that could be beneficial for both parties, russia has always sought to conquer and take what it feels should rightly belong to them. So profoundly delusional

    • @JonROlsen
      @JonROlsen Před rokem +2

      Isn't that the USA?

    • @frostyab7579
      @frostyab7579 Před rokem

      who would they conquer? Any ports leading to the Indian Ocean are too far to utilize effectively or economically.

  • @johnurquhart4614
    @johnurquhart4614 Před rokem

    Interesting. I look forward to your next video entitled 'The History Behind the USA's Expansionary Foreign Policy'.

    • @alexanderscott2456
      @alexanderscott2456 Před rokem

      What a disgusting, dishonest moral equivalence.

    • @j.calvert3361
      @j.calvert3361 Před rokem +1

      Another attempt at whataboutism?
      Kotkin presents the subject he specialises in.
      Others may study and explain American geopolitics.
      Trying to somehow justify crimes and mistakes of one country with the crimes and mistakes of another is neither useful nor ethical.

    • @F1fan56
      @F1fan56 Před 9 měsíci

      @@j.calvert3361 good reply to a Russian troll.

  • @mishagofman1706
    @mishagofman1706 Před rokem +8

    Listen to John Mearsheimer, Stephen Cohen, Henry Kissinger - totally different view!!!

    • @aldaedalus
      @aldaedalus Před rokem +2

      Exactly. Can't stand Kotkin outside of his writings on Stalin.

    • @ladydustin7811
      @ladydustin7811 Před rokem

      Indeed, like always Kissinger finds himself on the right side of history. (Joke)

    • @JonROlsen
      @JonROlsen Před rokem

      Finally!

    • @F1fan56
      @F1fan56 Před 9 měsíci

      Measheimer, different yes. But totally wrong.

  • @mistycloud4455
    @mistycloud4455 Před rokem +1

    The country that creates an intelligent A.I Will rule the world

  • @chun-mailiu4329
    @chun-mailiu4329 Před rokem

    Dear Prof. Kotkin: How about China?

  • @giselameunier4788
    @giselameunier4788 Před 9 měsíci

    I think you mixed it up with Nato expansion eastwards to Rusdsias border, be honest

  • @SaxSith
    @SaxSith Před rokem

    Can you do the same video but about usa 😂

    • @SeattlePioneer
      @SeattlePioneer Před rokem +1

      THAT certainly needs to be done! A hundred years ago the United States had the most secure position of any country in the world. Today we imagine that our security rests with defeating Russia in Ukraine and China in Taiwan! How nutty is THAT?

  • @peterkray5676
    @peterkray5676 Před 11 měsíci

    Stephen can I ask a question, What do you think would happen if Ukraine took the war to Russia, to bomb their cities with missiles and drones. Would Russia then realize the cost was too high, especially the population at large and sue for peace or would it lead to a catastropic escalation? Thank you

  • @williamwells1862
    @williamwells1862 Před rokem +1

    The Kerch Bridge is Falling Down, Falling down, Falling down. Good bye Kerch Bridge

  • @QuizmasterLaw
    @QuizmasterLaw Před rokem

    。。。Is Russia a rational power maximizer?
    I have an answer. It is very ... Realistic.

  • @ritalifshiz7647
    @ritalifshiz7647 Před rokem

    Ivan the terrible wasn’t Russian , even Peter the Great hardly was .

  • @ShinyDee1303
    @ShinyDee1303 Před rokem +1

    Professor Kotkin...i beg you, for the love of God, drill some enlightenment into Professor Mearsheimer and his simplistic argument that completely omits historical analysis and individual leader characteristics.

  • @kevmar2567
    @kevmar2567 Před rokem

    Hmm... the US has 900 bases around the world... Russia has 1.

  • @lisachubrilo
    @lisachubrilo Před rokem

    BRICS?

  • @massaweed420am7
    @massaweed420am7 Před rokem +4

    2:48 - 3:05 I would have to disagree as historically Western nations *have* , in fact, used border nations as springboards for invasion of Russia. Look at Operation Barbarossa in more recent history, and the many different wars between Russia and various Western and Nordic nations.
    But overall a good analysis of historic Russian foreign policy. A good look into the choices Russia makes can be found in Caspian Reports video, "Understanding The Russian Mindset"

    • @PTParatrooper
      @PTParatrooper Před rokem

      Russia created the conditions for the German invasion of 1941 by helping with the defeat of Poland.

  • @foreverseeking8397
    @foreverseeking8397 Před rokem

    Ok if they would 've invade without being provoked but how can you ignore the Revolution in Ukraine 2014 with neo Nazy in Power , donbass and Nato expantion ?

  • @harryloo8544
    @harryloo8544 Před rokem +4

    Tell that to the US vis a vis China

  • @toi_techno
    @toi_techno Před rokem +1

    Russians are in a similar mindset to England a couple of centuries ago but without the ability.

    • @Marvin-dg8vj
      @Marvin-dg8vj Před rokem

      Most societies have moved on from 200 years ago. They abolished slavery and allowed ordinary men and women rights for a start.

  • @gabrielmedrano6875
    @gabrielmedrano6875 Před rokem

    Pretty wild for an American to wonder if Russia is inherently imperialist. Look in the mirror.

  • @bagsjr1
    @bagsjr1 Před rokem +1

    Kotkin is one of my favorite historians. When he's done with Stalin 3, I wish he'd write on the CCP's evolution and their threat to the West. He is an expert on China too. I wish he'd answer the question: Is China showing the world that capitalism doesn't need Democracy?

  • @user-oo8xp2rf1k
    @user-oo8xp2rf1k Před rokem

    If Europe and Russia were succotash and economically working together, America and China would be proportionally less powerful. But also Europe, Russia, China and America would be richer and more peaceful. Every body would win esp. Russia

  • @hdckdsadd
    @hdckdsadd Před rokem +1

    managing the Russian problem by inviting Ukraine to join NATO I guess was an imbecilic idea.

    • @dzikiwaz8987
      @dzikiwaz8987 Před rokem

      It was rather wise idea - Russians stuck in Ukraine, like their predecessors in Afghanistan.

  • @johnd2058
    @johnd2058 Před rokem +3

    As a longtime Kotkin fan, I must complain that y'all are making him look too fine here. This level of devastating good looks, combined with his intellect, is producing a below-the-neck response.

  • @wingedpearloyster
    @wingedpearloyster Před rokem

    in other words we're all screwed

  • @NineInchTyrone
    @NineInchTyrone Před rokem

    And American aggression?

  • @DogeickBateman
    @DogeickBateman Před rokem +8

    Is Russia inherently imperialist and expansionist? I dunno, take a look at their borders.
    Large swathes of uninhabited buffer territory, client states bordering those massive boundaries, yeah I think by its own self (not including current policy) you could classify Russia as both imperialist and expansionist.

  • @iljastalberg5610
    @iljastalberg5610 Před rokem

    IS US aggression innate ? Yes out of 250 years US have been at peace only for 2 years and its not straight 2 years but a cumulative sum of days and it is all for Resources that US need to keep it economy going as its version of "capitalism" dose not work with out cheap resources from outside.

  • @buckbenelli8
    @buckbenelli8 Před rokem

    But my whole life as a capitalist pig, I was conditioned and programmed to invade and conquer Russian women. Oh my, the dreams of dominating and pillaging rural villages in Siberia. Everyone I know wants to emigrate to Russia, the best food and babushkas in the world.

  • @MikeHunt-rw4gf
    @MikeHunt-rw4gf Před rokem

    Algorithm.

  • @user-sq5bw2fc4n
    @user-sq5bw2fc4n Před rokem +4

    Expansion does not stop with Ukraine. The Putin argument for military expansion/occupation only makes sense if The West and Nato are crushed and America hegemonic power is severely truncated. Putin used the same argument for Georgia, Crimea, and Ukraine. Putin can use the same argument against of Europe and the Slavic countries if Ukraine falls, since he will see it as proof of the Russian right to do so.

  • @thomasjamison2050
    @thomasjamison2050 Před rokem +1

    If first you aspire to be great, try building infrastructure instead of tanks and guns. Good advice, but the really big problem Russia has is that it is just really big. Most red states in the US could never afford to build their own highways. Same problem in Russia, just much, much bigger. Even John C. Calhoun figured this one out as he watched New England prosper and the widely spaced plantations of the south struggle and continually fail to make the south a financial success. The south was always poverty stricken and unable to even afford sufficient schools and libraries.

    • @F1fan56
      @F1fan56 Před 9 měsíci

      Canada is also very large and sparsely populated. But effective infrastructure was developed, and the result is a GDP greater than Russia's with population 1/4 the size.

  • @sbuckle1171
    @sbuckle1171 Před rokem +5

    Russian elites have long subscribed to the belief that they are “living in a providential country with a special mission in the world”. This is exactly what the US from its earliest days has thought and continues (to some degree though not quite to the same extent as in earlier decades) to think. We meddle in others affairs; they similarly do so. It is time that nations once again develop capabilities to defend against undue foreign influence.

    • @ricardo53100
      @ricardo53100 Před rokem +1

      Are you really equating the USA with Russia ? Lots of countries consider themselves special or providential but Russia is now alone in Europe that chooses to invade a neighbor for no other reason than to preserve the dictatorship of the current Russian ruler.

    • @tonyhart818
      @tonyhart818 Před rokem +4

      You are describing nearly EVERY nations ambitions, control or at least highly influence your neighbors. Korea, China, Germany... The question is: when you fail to influence or control your neighbor what is your response. Say that your neighbor is not really a country, does not deserve to be and invade with full intention of ANNEXING IT!!! I'm not pretending West is righteous -but you are obviously not a Ukrainian. Think what you might do if a neighbor country invaded, intending to absorb/annex your land.

    • @pwp8737
      @pwp8737 Před rokem +3

      the major fault of your reasoning is that America is very rich, very powerful and has a lot of allies of similar caliber; Russia has none of these attributes.

    • @sbuckle1171
      @sbuckle1171 Před rokem +1

      @@pwp8737 They don't like us as much as they tolerate us and our arrogance. I wouldn't bank on our allies marching to our drumbeat for too long.

    • @Claude_van_Kloten
      @Claude_van_Kloten Před rokem

      You’re absolutely right. The difference is in ideology. Enlightenment (Locke, Montesquieu, Jefferson) vs. Middle Ages (witchcraft, torture).

  • @p_egorov
    @p_egorov Před rokem +1

    He talks like a robot.

  • @alvin8391
    @alvin8391 Před rokem +1

    This is nonsense from a celebrated author of books on the Soviet Union. He is wrong about Russia's failures. Russia has been challenged several times by the west, though it has looked to emulate the west and to be included, until now. After much patience since the end of the USSR, the Russian Federation under Pres Vladimir Putin has been compelled by western aggressiveness to realize that its future lies in Asia and not in Europe. Following that new course, it is succeeding geopolitically, in terms of its security, and economically, in terms of its independence and development.
    By its anti-Russian sanctions, acts of vandalism, and proxy war in Ukraine, the west has done great harm to itself. Europe has cut itself off from its cheapest and most dependable source of energy and has tolerated the vandalism of its own infrastructure in an action by the USA, as reliably reported. Inflation is rampant. Russia has joined with other countries that are threatened by the west and especially by the USA to form new and vital geopolitical polarities that reshape the realpolitik of the Middle East, Africa, and Asia. Most importantly, the petrodollar as the financila prop for US military-imperialism has been been removed.
    From my view, as an American who wants an end to his country's post WW2 history of international bloodshed and destruction, the multi-polar world ushered in by the Russo/Chinese accords (are) is welcome. The martial foreign policy of my country cannot continue when financed by a US dollar that other countries will no longer need.

  • @Alex-hu5eg
    @Alex-hu5eg Před rokem +1

    Russia is like Europe's misbehaving little brother. The black sheep of the family, who drinks, fights and always gets into trouble. Sometimes he disappears for weeks, moths them suddenly appears, beat up someone in the family before going out again... but we love him anyways, cause you know. Family

  • @julio5prado
    @julio5prado Před rokem +3

    Excellent summary of a historical problem that Russia has been facing for centuries. The key component in this mentality is the fact that Russia was dominated for several centuries by the Golden Horde. The mongols defined the Russian concept of power and state, all is based in fear and brutal abuse of a population that is deprived of all individual rights.

  • @wuzexi1383
    @wuzexi1383 Před rokem +10

    Well the exactly the same thing can be said to US and NATO with about 4 times the magnitude.

    • @markusw.2690
      @markusw.2690 Před rokem +4

      Ähm, no.

    • @agorbogytr13
      @agorbogytr13 Před rokem +3

      @@markusw.2690 Yes

    • @42willys4
      @42willys4 Před rokem +3

      Actually it can’t. NATO is a voluntary defensive alliance nations want to be in.

    • @cv990a4
      @cv990a4 Před rokem +3

      People have all kinds of bizarre ideas about NATO - for instance, that NATO was responsible for Iraq. Nope. There were NATO countries in Iraq, but it was not a NATO operation.
      Also, every country that's joined NATO did so voluntarily - indeed, pretty much all of them begged to be part of it.

    • @ninaotan7811
      @ninaotan7811 Před rokem

      Wu, could you name the wars that NATO waged or participated as an organisation?

  • @JonathanSterlingUSA
    @JonathanSterlingUSA Před rokem +3

    Since 1990, in fact Russia has receded a lot. Some people are disingenuous, with their gullible followers.

    • @trzbebop6755
      @trzbebop6755 Před rokem +3

      It was the Soviet Union that receded, not Russia.

    • @ninaotan7811
      @ninaotan7811 Před rokem

      @@trzbebop6755 not everyone appeared to be educated enough to grasp this basic fact.

    • @watching99134
      @watching99134 Před rokem

      @@trzbebop6755 I think Tsarist Russia included some of the Baltics.

  • @fredwild190
    @fredwild190 Před rokem +9

    Of course it's a choice, but the choice is always expansion, at a neighbor's cost. The facts speak for themselves. Russia is an aggressive, imperialist, brutal power and has been for centuries.

    • @Claude_van_Kloten
      @Claude_van_Kloten Před rokem +4

      The thing is: all Western countries were. Remember colonialism. Germany. Napoleon. Sooner or later Russia will change. We all did.

    • @aleksandarnedeljkovic8104
      @aleksandarnedeljkovic8104 Před rokem

      @@Claude_van_Kloten I don't think Russia will follow that path . They think of themselves differentley . There was unipolar moment after cold war , Russia accepted its role then. But here we now

    • @foodscrazy9229
      @foodscrazy9229 Před rokem

      @@Claude_van_Kloten where you changed , now also west colonising the world , this time they eyeing for Slavs and you must know what happen to woodpecker when he hit his beak on banana tree, there's no return and USA is very likely to have that moment in their history

  • @morm608
    @morm608 Před rokem +1

    1:20 western unity a.k.a US dominance on west europe.

  • @a0flj0
    @a0flj0 Před rokem

    This guy doesn't understand history. As odd at it may seem, history is made by people. Not individuals, but all people taken together. It's not the choice of leaders that shapes policy. Leaders make choices that they know will be supported by the people they lead. Russia has started out as a small expansionist duchy on the outskirts of Kievan Rus, ridding itself of Mongol rule. For centuries, to this day, after that, the only thing they did was expand over weaker neighbors, through force, either forcefully assimilating or exterminating the people's they conquered. That's what they continue doing today. It's not what Putin does, it's the only thing that the people of Russia have known for centuries, and therefore the only thing they'll approve of their leaders. Anyone trying to introduce democratic government and respect for other cultures to Russia will be perceived as weak, toppled and replaced with another dictator - by the people, or at least with the support of the majority of the people.
    Mind you, speaking about history, every single other European empire was just the same, before they collapsed. Hitler's Germany was no different, in its time, than Russia. It took a catastrophically traumatic event, leaving surviving Germans to question their entire history, accompanied by a massive reeducation effort from the Western allies, to turn Germany into a democracy. France went through several bloody revolutions to become a democratic state, and at least somewhat rid itself of the corruption of its imperial age. Great Britain just recently proved it's still unable to break with its imperial past - Brexit. Russia is no different. It will need a similarly traumatic event, accompanied by a similarly massive reeducation effort as Germany received, before it will be able to break with its imperial tradition. What Russian leaders decide to do or not to do will not be able to change this.

  • @maxkalahur
    @maxkalahur Před rokem

    Blablabla

  • @BurkeCN74
    @BurkeCN74 Před rokem

    Russia has historically had some bad ass engineers and physicists. I hope they all left..I'd love to see an American made Sukhoi.

  • @sophiemariekung5086
    @sophiemariekung5086 Před rokem +2

    Stephen Kotkin is a case in point about a historian who only knows the past but unable to use that knowledge to prepare for the future because Kotkin doesn't have the knowledge of the 21st century world politics.

    • @JonROlsen
      @JonROlsen Před rokem

      He's been programed by Princeton to tow the party line.

  • @jamesmurphy9426
    @jamesmurphy9426 Před rokem +2

    Yeah Russia should surrender the Black Sea what could go wrong

  • @morm608
    @morm608 Před rokem

    4:00 war will tell if russia cannot be a great power, not kotkin the historian-propagandist.