A Middle Eastern “Rubik’s Cube”: Solution Problems
... arising in all its magnitude. It is obvious that in these conditions the international community must coordinate its efforts to keep the regional situation under control. But, as the development of the Syrian crisis has shown, the great powers involved in Middle Eastern affairs, speak different languages. Why this disunity? The answer is evident if we delve into the essence of the problem: the world order that is coming to replace the Cold War is being built chaotically, as a set of constructive and nonconstructive ambiguities. The West took (largely justly) the end of the bloc confrontation after the collapse of the Soviet Union and the profound political changes in Eastern Europe ...