dead1 wrote:
emperorblackdoom wrote:
I really have no idea what you are talking about here dead1, but I'll say placing Russia in the same category as truly emerging powers like India and China is silly.
Russia is an emerging power. Their conventional military, economy and political power were completely destroyed after the Soviet Union collapsed.
Yes, I'm quite aware of that: Russia is definitely better off now than it was then in terms of power. But Russia's current sources of power: natural gas and nuclear weapons, are illusory. Gazprom has put all of its cards in downstream investment in order to corner the European gas market, problem is, its neglect of upstream development has already caused production to plateau. Now being friendly to foreign investments would help a lot with that problem, but Russia tends to view energy as a zero-sum game. A natural gas power play seems increasingly dangerous given huge prospective shale gas reserves in places like the USA and Poland (not to mention offshore gas reserves being discovered in the North Sea), and even worse than that, Russia has failed to diversify its economy in case of something like a shale gas boom.
Nuclear weapons are nice to have in terms of power, sure, but Russia's weapons systems are largely out of date as compared to the USA, and some nuclear theorists have even questioned whether Russia's nuclear weapons systems are strong enough to sustain the idea of MAD.
Beyond these "strengths", you have a population still undergoing a demographic crisis, still at risk of Islamism spreading from the rebellious North Caucasus to Tatarstan, and still generally recovering from the 2008 economic meltdown, not to mention the recent instability Mr Putin's government has had to deal with.
The future in terms of power projection looks much, much brighter for China and India.