
Kern Craig
PhD, University of Mississippi. MBA, Fairleigh Dickinson University. BS, California State University.
less
Related Authors
Andreas Umland
National University of "Kyiv-Mohyla Academy"
Naim Kapucu
University of Central Florida
Armando Marques-Guedes
UNL - New University of Lisbon
George Lawson
The Australian National University
Mauro Grondona
University of Genova
Nicola Lupo
LUISS Guido Carli
Juraj Marušiak
Slovak Academy of Sciences
Ziya Öniş
Koç University
Gilberto Bercovici
Universidade de São Paulo
Javier de Carlos Izquierdo
Universidad Complutense de Madrid
Uploads
Papers by Kern Craig
Part I is the basis for a course on Arctic affairs. An earlier version of this section was prepared for the annual meeting of the Florida Political Science Association in Lakeland, FL, on April 2, 2016.
Part II is the basis for a course on Antarctic affairs. An earlier version of this section was prepared for the annual meeting of the Florida Political Science Association in Orlando, FL, on April 1, 2017.
Researching and writing this book has taken more than two years. The reference list in the Arctic section contains over 130 sources and the reference list in the Antarctic section contains over 180. There are maps in each section along with numerous hyperlinks.
This book is packed with interesting facts. It has been carefully organized to avoid confusion. Some of the conclusions reached are already controversial. Others are not yet controversial since they are original. But all are defensible in terms of logic and in terms of the evidence presented.
Should the United States end its economic sanctions on Russia, stop its military aid to Ukraine, and promote a ceasefire along a new border?
Abstract
The Cold War ended in 1991 with the collapse of the Soviet Union. NATO then expanded eastward growing from sixteen members in 1999 to thirty in 2020. Its fourteen new members were former republics, satellites, or allies of the old USSR. The new Russian Federation resisted NATO expansion in parts of Moldova (Transdniestria), Georgia (South Ossetia and Abkhazia), and Ukraine (Crimea, Donetsk, and Luhansk). As a result, the United States imposed economic sanctions on Russia and supplied military aid to Moldova, Georgia, and Ukraine. The US also installed missile bases in Romania and Poland with most Western military aid entering Ukraine through Poland. Could this be the start of World War III with fighting next between Russia and Poland then between China and Taiwan, North and South Korea, and/or Iran and Israel?
Keywords
NATO expansion, Ukraine, Russia, United States, economic sanctions, military aid, World War III
The growth of China and its appetite for resources in Siberia and the Arctic Ocean pose a threat to the territorial integrity of Russia. Is it therefore in the national interest of Russia to form an alliance with its Arctic neighbors, the United States and Canada, to protect its southern border and northern coastline? And is it in the national interest of the United States and Canada to support rather than sanction Russia given the rising geostrategic power of China? To answer these and related questions, this paper examines the various economic, environmental, and military aspects of a United States-Russia-Canada Agreement (USRCA).