აქ იმედების თემაა?

მაშინ ზბიგის სტატიიდან დავდებ ნაწყვეტს რომელიც რუსეთს და საქართველოს ეხება:
შიმპანზეს საგარეო პოლიტიკას აანალიზებს პოსტსაბჭოთა სივრცეში და ძალიან ნუ შეტოპეო აფრთხილებს თან.
პოლიტიკური პლურალიზმის შენარჩუნება პოსტსაბჭოთა სივრცეში უნდა იყოს აშშ რუსეთის პარტნიორობის საფუძველიო.
Hence, the administration decided to "reset" the United States' relationship with Russia.
But that slogan is confusing, and it is not yet clear that Washington's wishful thinking
about Moscow's shared interests on such matters as Iran is fully justified. Nonetheless,
the United States must think strategically about its long-term relationship with Russia
and pursue a two-track policy: it has to cooperate with Russia whenever doing so is
mutually beneficial, but in a way that is also responsive to historical reality. The age of
closed empires is over, and Russia, for the sake of its own future, will eventually have
to accept this.
Seeking to expand cooperation with Russia does not mean condoning Russia's
subordination of Georgia (through which the vital Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan pipeline passes,
providing Europe with access to Central Asian energy) or its intimidation of Ukraine (an
industrial and agricultural heartland of the former Soviet Union). Either move would be a
giant step backward. Each would intensify Russia's imperial nostalgia and central
Europe's security fears, not to mention increase the possibility of armed conflicts. Yet so
far, the Obama administration has been quite reluctant to provide even purely defensive
arms to Georgia (in contrast to Russia's provision of offensive weaponry to Venezuela),
nor has it been sufficiently active in encouraging the EU to be more responsive to
Ukraine's European aspirations. Fortunately, Vice President Biden's fall 2009 visit to
Poland, Romania, and the Czech Republic did reaffirm the United States' long-term
interest in political pluralism within the former Soviet space and in a cooperative
relationship with a truly postimperial Russia. And it should always be borne in mind that
the survival of the former makes the latter more likely.