Strategic Futures Series - Russia
Putinism, Ukraine, Energy, Sanctions, China Dependence, Demography, Nuclear Coercion, and the Limits of Imperial Power
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3 Meses Gratis
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Narrado por:
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Virtual Voice
Este título utiliza narración de voz virtual
Russia is not going away.
It remains a nuclear-armed power with vast territory, deep resource reserves, intelligence capabilities, and a long tradition of strategic coercion. But the war in Ukraine has exposed something more important than Russian aggression alone: the limits of a power model built on imperial ambition, energy dependence, repression, and fear.
Russia’s Strategic Future offers a clear-eyed assessment of what kind of power Russia can remain in the years ahead.
Edward H. Whitmore examines the forces shaping Russia’s next strategic chapter: Putinism, the war in Ukraine, sanctions, energy revenue, China dependence, demographic decline, military capacity, nuclear coercion, internal repression, and the fragile question of succession.
This is not a conventional history of Russia. It is not a moral essay or a policy memo. It is a sober geopolitical foresight book for readers who want to understand Russia as it is: dangerous, constrained, adaptive, and increasingly dependent on forces it does not fully control.
Inside this book, you will discover:
Why Russia remains dangerous even when weakened
How the invasion of Ukraine reshaped Russia’s strategic position
Why energy revenue is both a weapon and a vulnerability
How sanctions and technology restrictions affect long-term Russian power
Why dependence on China may become Russia’s defining strategic trap
How demography, brain drain, and repression weaken future national capacity
What nuclear coercion reveals about Russian strength and insecurity
Four plausible scenarios for Russia over the next 5, 10, and 15 years
Written in the voice of a strategic intelligence analyst, Russia’s Strategic Future is for readers of geopolitics, foreign affairs, intelligence, defense, global risk, energy security, and international strategy.
Russia may be weaker than it claims. But a weakened Russia is not a harmless Russia.
The real question is not whether Russia will remain powerful.
The question is what kind of power it can still afford to be.