“The Russian World” .. Putin endorses a new doctrine for Moscow’s foreign policy

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This term refers to a perception used by Russian conservatives, to justify intervention abroad in support of Russian speakers.

Highlight what it says

• document "humanitarian policy" The 31-page book, which was published more than 6 months following the start of the military offensive on Ukrainestates that "Russia should protect, safeguard and advance the traditions and ideals of the Russian world".

• While the document was presented as one of the soft power strategies, it aims at the same time to perpetuate political and religious ideas that some hardliners used to justify Moscow’s control over parts of Ukraine and support the pro-Russian separatist entities in the east of the country, at the core of the state’s official foreign policy.

• It was stated in the document that "The Russian Federation supports its citizens living abroad to obtain their rights, ensure the protection of their interests and preserve their Russian cultural identity".

• The document said that Russia’s relations with its citizens abroad allow it to"Strengthening its image on the international stage as a democratic country striving to create a multipolar world".

• The new policy states that Russia Increasing cooperation with Slavic countries, China and India, as well as strengthening their relations with The Middle East Latin America and Africa.

• further indicates that over Moscow "Strengthening its relations with Abkhazia and Ossetia, two regions of Georgia whose independence was recognized by Moscow following its war once morest Georgia in 2008, as well as the two breakaway regions of eastern Ukraine that unilaterally declared their independence under the name of the Donetsk People’s Republic and the Luhansk People’s Republic.

Russians abroad

For years, it has been Putin to highlight what he describes as"The tragic fate of regarding 25 million people of Russian origin who found themselves living outside Russia in newly independent countries"When the Soviet Union collapsed in 1991, an event he described as a geopolitical disaster.

Moscow continued to view the countries of the former Soviet Union, from the Baltics to Central Asia, as its legitimate sphere of influence, an idea that many of those states as well as the West have fiercely resisted.

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This term refers to a perception used by Russian conservatives, to justify intervention abroad in support of Russian speakers.

Highlight what it says

• The 31-page “Humanitarian Policy” document, which was published more than 6 months following the start of the military offensive on Ukrainestates that “Russia should protect the traditions and ideals of the Russian world, ensure their integrity and advance them.”

• While the document was presented as one of the soft power strategies, it aims at the same time to perpetuate political and religious ideas that some hardliners used to justify Moscow’s control over parts of Ukraine and support the pro-Russian separatist entities in the east of the country, at the core of the state’s official foreign policy.

• The document states that “the Russian Federation provides support to its citizens living abroad to obtain their rights, ensure the protection of their interests and preserve their Russian cultural identity.”

• The document said that Russia’s relations with its citizens abroad allow it to “reinforce its image on the international stage as a democratic country that strives to create a multipolar world.”

• The new policy states that Russia Increasing cooperation with Slavic countries, China and India, as well as strengthening their relations with The Middle East Latin America and Africa.

• It also points out that Moscow should “strengthen its relations with Abkhazia and Ossetia, two regions of Georgia whose independence was recognized by Moscow following its war once morest Georgia in 2008, in addition to the two separatist regions of eastern Ukraine that unilaterally declared their independence under the name of the Donetsk People’s Republic and the Lugansk People’s Republic.”

Russians abroad

For years, it has been Putin On highlighting what he describes as the “tragic fate of the approximately 25 million people of Russian descent who found themselves living outside Russia in newly independent states” when the Soviet Union collapsed in 1991, an event he describes as a geopolitical catastrophe.

Moscow continued to view the countries of the former Soviet Union, from the Baltics to Central Asia, as its legitimate sphere of influence, an idea that many of those states as well as the West have fiercely resisted.

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