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Soviet Strategy: Development or Expansion?


Article # : 15986 

Section : CURRENT ISSUES
Issue Date : 7 / 1989  2,187 Words
Author : Herbert J. Ellison
Herbert J. Ellison is chairman of Russian and east European studies at the University of Washington. He was formerly secretary of the Kennan Institute for Advanced Russian Studies in Washington, D.C.

       Russian and Soviet leaders have long emphasized the Asian mission of their vast Eurasian state, and Mikhail Gorbachev's milestone speech at Vladivostok in July 1986 was part of a long tradition. It reflected a historic duality of Russian strategic thought about Siberia and the Far Eastern region that has repeatedly emphasized two missions: the task of settlement and development, including development of productive economic relations with other states of the region; and the use of a unique geopolitical influence and power in Asia.
       
        For a long time--certainly through the 19 years of the Brezhnev era--the second mission has been the most heavily stressed, both in word and deed. Gorbachev emphasizes the tasks of internal development and the economic dimension of foreign relations. Thus far, however, there is little significant reduction of the power role and its instruments, which he inherited.
       
        At the beginning of the twentieth century, the two purposes competed very actively in the policy of the Russian government. The brilliant statesman Sergey Witte stressed the economic task, especially the Great Trans-Siberian Railroad project that would build commercial links with Asia and facilitate settlement and development of the vast new territories. This was consistent with the program of general economic reform he had conducted since the 1890s, which laid the foundations for Russia's rapid economic modernization in the last generation before World War I. His contemporary Vyacheslav von Plehve supported expansion of Russian power in Korea and Manchuria, leading the country into a futile and costly struggle with Japan that brought on the Russo-Japanese War and the 1905 Revolution, the "dress rehearsal" for ... (1963 of 13781 Characters)
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