International Relations between the United States, Russia and China in the 21st

Authors

  • Dr. Bouchra Benderraji College of Humanities and Social Sciences University batna 1 Algeria Author

Keywords:

international conflict, Bipolarity, unipolar, International Relations multipolar world

Abstract

The rift that occurred between the allies of World War II was not caused by the disappearance of the common danger (Nazi) Rather, it is a matter of principles and motives that go back mainly to different ideological references that preceded the war and did not stop during it. Then it became more prominent after the war, dividing the world into two main competing blocs The West, led by the United States of America, and the East, led by the Soviet Union, shared the world the Communist camp led by Russia has been an active pole in international relations for over four decades against the capitalist pole However. this power and international stature declined since the eighties to disappear with the beginning of the nineties. Leaving the space for the emergence of the features of a new international order based on the domination of the only capitalist pole led by the United States. But with the end of the nineties, Russia returned to the international arena to represent the difficult number It cannot be overlooked in drawing international relations, but another new force appeared Namely, China, which suggests the emergence of a new multipolar world order, and each pole has its own motives and goals. In the light of this conflict, regional and international crises have emerged as one Syria and Ukraine; The world poles had original positions that formed a new cold war.

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Published

2022-05-01

How to Cite

Benderraji, B. (2022). International Relations between the United States, Russia and China in the 21st. Journal of Afro-Asian Studies, 4(13), 22. https://afroasian-studies.de/index.php/jass/article/view/126