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The Russian Ukraine War’s Impact on The Emergence of Multipolar World Order |
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PP: 1-4 |
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doi:10.18576/wrpsj/080101
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Author(s) |
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Lara AbdelRazik,
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Abstract |
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The United States emerged as the sole super power country after the cold war and the dissolution of the Soviet Union 1991, and its dominance was particularly significant in Europe, and Middle East countries where America first ideology controlled most of their decisions. However, the United States dominance and the fact of having a sole power country to control the world is no longer as effective as it was before the Russian Ukraine war.
Russia became a threat to the unipolar system, and it encouraged the emergence of a new multipolar system after the war alarmed United States that China, and Russia are emerging, and the liberal system is eroding. The hegemony of Russia on the undo-pacific region, the exploitation of African countries natural resources, as well as the establishment of military bases, and the increase of Russian military forces tunnels are all considered a threat to the effectiveness of the liberal system. The west finds it hard to comprehend Russia’s geopolitical thinking, but what they can do is basically related to the use of power, and that’s a proof that liberalism exists only as a theory.
This paper argues the impact of the Russian Ukraine war on the shifts in the international order as a consequence of the rising power of Russia and China through the lens of liberalism and realism perspetives.
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