Nina L. Khrushcheva
La paradoja de Boston
MOSCÚ – ¿Quién tiene la culpa de que estallaran bombas en la maratón de Boston? ¿Rusia es responsable de intentar durante 250 años incorpora…
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MOSCÚ – ¿Quién tiene la culpa de que estallaran bombas en la maratón de Boston? ¿Rusia es responsable de intentar durante 250 años incorpora…
PARÍS – Hay en Europa occidental un fenómeno sorprendente y cada vez más visible: partidos de extrema derecha que abandonan sus ideologías t…
MOSCÚ – En 1970, el disidente soviético, Andrei Amalrik, señaló en su libro, Will the Soviet Union Survive until 1984?, que “todos los regím…
MOSCÚ – Vladimir Putin lo ha conseguido por fin. Rusia lleva siglos pugnando por lograr el aprecio de Occidente y la aprobación de los franc…
PARÍS – ¿Por qué el presidente ruso, Vladímir Putin, apela a medidas cada vez más represivas contra sus oponentes? Después de todo, el régim…
MOSCÚ – En 1966, la visión de Charles de Gaulle de una Europa "que se extienda desde el Atlántico hasta los Urales" era provocativa. Hoy en …
MOSCOW – The decision by BP and the Russian shareholders of TNK-BP to sell their stakes to Russia’s state owned Rosneft crowns a very succes…
KIEV – Las elecciones parlamentarias de Ucrania el 28 de octubre no será ni libres ni justas. A ocho improductivos años de la Revolución Nar…
MOSCÚ – Agosto suele ser un mes desafortunado en Rusia, particularmente en la Rusia del presidente Vladimir Putin. Se han hundido submarinos…
WASHINGTON, DC – El caluroso respaldo de Rusia al presidente sirio Bashar al Assad ha sido como un baldazo de agua fría para la comunidad in…
“A riddle wrapped in a mystery inside an enigma” – so Winston Churchill once described Russia. Subsequent efforts at understanding that huge and complex country have not made it much more transparent. But Project Syndicate’s special monthly column on Russian affairs offers readers a clear-eyed view.
Edited by the Russian historian and political commentator Nina Khrushcheva, A Window on Russia brings to readers of this series the people and ideas that are shaping today’s petro-powered Russian resurgence. Written mainly by eminent Russians, these commentaries present Russia “from the inside,” offering rare perspectives on the country’s problems – and its promise.
Commentators include the former Russian prime ministers Yegor Gaidar, Sergei Kiriyenko and Yevgeny Primakov; former deputy Prime Ministers Boris Nemtsov and Sergei Shakhrai; former Finance Minister Yevgeny Yassin; former Foreign Minister Andrei Kozyrev; former President of the USSR Mikhail Gorbachev; diplomatic strategists and political analysts Sergei Karaganov and Vyacheslav Nikonov; writers such as Vladimir Voinovich, Tatyana Tolstaya, and Roy Medvedev, and outside experts such as Swedish economist and former Yeltsin advisor Anders Åslund.
A Window on Russia explains how Russians see the world and their place in it. It examines some of the thornier issues of Russia’s painful post-communist transition: the tuberculosis and AIDS crises, the confused relations – part paternal, part imperial – with former Soviet states, and Russia’s evolving relations with Europe and NATO.
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