By Elisabeth Hellenbroich
As part of the intense debate on the “divergence” of perception on the basic cultural values, Izvestia published April 21, 2016 the essay by Sergej Karaganov “New ideological struggle?”. Karaganov is a cofounder of the Valdai Club and Dean of the School of World Economics and International Relations (National Research University). His theses are complementary to the ones proposed by Foreign Minister Lavrov in his essay in “Russia in Global affairs” March 2016 (see http://www.frontiere.eu/russia-and-the-west-divergence-in-value-systems/). Karaganov examines the reasons for the different perception about “value systems” both in Russia and in the West. A difference which has particularly evolved since the outbreak of the Ukraine crisis. His thesis is that at the end of the Cold War there was the illusion, that the era of ideologies and ideological struggle was over and that the world was moving towards a “single system of values based on Western liberal democracy and capitalism.” (A typical example was Fukuyamas “End of History” thesis). Europe and America fascinated the world with their freedom and winning political system. Perception about the final victory of Western values was backed up by America’s massive military supremacy but most importantly by Western countries affluence, something that everyone desired to have, including Soviet and Russian people. The desire was sustained by a widely spread view that wealth and prosperity were a result of democracy. Western realities prevailed in international relations as well. But new realities came into being in the 2000s: “The West wanted to impose its political positions and values even with use of military force (in Afghanistan, Iran and Libya) and lost.” Its support for the Arab spring, further destabilized the Middle East and made democracy less attractive. During the 2008/ 2009 crisis the “Washington consensus” broke. As result, Europe and the US began to drift away from the values they had always offered to the world, at least the Christian world, and started imposing values that were unacceptable for the majority of countries: multiculturalism, excessive tolerance, and unusual sexual and family relations. Karaganov notes that “the overall impression is that elites in the old West are losing their unconditional dominance in the economy, politics, military power and ideology and turning into an increasingly weak minority.”Among the main reasons why today there is such a divergence in the Russian and Western value system, Karaganov pointedly states that:
1. The West saw itself as victor and started to pursue what could be called a “Weimar policy in velvet gloves” pushing Russia off the political, security and economic stage. “NATO’s expansion was symbol of that policy. But EU enlargement also didn’t benefit Russia as it was not accompanied as it had been promised and expected by efforts to create a common and equal human and economic space from Lisbon to Vladivostock.” As a result, Western geopolitical expansion “weakened pro-European feelings in the political class in Russia”, and the logic that eventually prevailed was that the West was using “Russia’s weakness to take away its centuries-old gains and make it even weaker.” Followed by a defense–reflex on the Russian side. [caption id="attachment_6844" align="alignnone" width="503"]Wiesbaden, 11.May 2016
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