During
the Cold War, two Great Powers faced each other in a military standoff.
When
it all ended, one power now called Russia lost control of vast swathes of
territory.
Adding
insult to injury, much of that land was absorbed by its former Western rivals,
NATO and the European Union.
In
the years after the Soviet collapse, Russian society descended into chaos and
poverty.
Its
leaders stood by, impotently, as former allies in the Balkans and the Middle
East were bombed and toppled.
This
is, essentially, how Russia sees the past 25 years of history a quarter of a
century of national humiliation and decline that Vladimir Putin, Russia's
President, has determined to halt, if not reverse.
"From
the very beginning, the United States played the winner, and did so for too
long," says General Evgeny Buzhinsky, a retired military officer now with
the PIR Center, a leading Russian security think tank.
"If
Russia says it is not happy with NATO expansion, or we are not happy with
missile defence, that is true. But when the West says we have our plans, we
will just carry on, that is not the way Russia can be talked to," he told
CNN.
It's
the sometimes brutal assertion of Russian interests that led, for example, to
the crisis in Ukraine in 2014.
Faced
with the prospect of yet another former Soviet state turning West, Russia moved
to protect its strategic naval base in Crimea, annexing the entire Black Sea
peninsula.
In
Syria, Russia saw a last toehold of Kremlin influence threatened in the Middle
East and ruthlessly moved to ensure its long-time government ally did not fall.
Even
recent hack attacks on US political institutions, blamed by US officials on
Moscow, can be seen through the prism of a Russia determined to make its
influence felt once again.
Analysts
say the individual flashpoints are part of a broader Russian struggle to
redefine its global role.
"There
was the feeling that since the collapse of the Soviet Union the West had the
opportunity and capacity to reshape the whole world according to ideas which
the West believed were correct and right," says Fyodor Lukyanov, editor of
Russia in Global Affairs, a foreign policy journal.
"What
we see now are attempts in the West to believe this arrangement, the post Cold
War arrangement, can be restored or prolonged. Unfortunately not.
Unfortunately, it is over," he told CNN.
Already
Moscow is under tough US and EU sanctions over Ukraine. It could face more over
its alleged hacking activities.
In
Syria, the stakes are even higher, as Russia bolsters its forces amid renewed
talk of possible US military intervention.
Yet
Russia has so far shown an unwillingness to back down.
"This
is a strong signal to the West," said General Buzhinsky.
"If
you want confrontation, there will be confrontation on all fronts," he
added.
Russian
actions abroad are often characterized as sinister attempts to undermine the
West.
But
in Russia, they are widely seen as a justifiable response to a quarter of a
century of Western dominance.
Like
it or not, the post-Cold War relationship is being redefined.
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