{"id":3094,"date":"2025-02-21T19:32:21","date_gmt":"2025-02-21T20:32:21","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/developeternal.com\/?p=3094"},"modified":"2025-02-21T21:26:26","modified_gmt":"2025-02-21T21:26:26","slug":"the-grand-bargain-can-russia-and-the-us-rewrite-history","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"http:\/\/developeternal.com\/index.php\/2025\/02\/21\/the-grand-bargain-can-russia-and-the-us-rewrite-history\/","title":{"rendered":"The Grand Bargain: Can Russia and the US rewrite history?"},"content":{"rendered":"
There\u2019s an irony of fate as the old rivals again look for common ground<\/strong><\/p>\n For years, Russian-American relations seemed to be in an irreversible coma. Diplomacy was dead, overtaken by hostility, sanctions, and a growing risk of military confrontation. Many insisted that nothing could break this trajectory \u2014 Moscow and the Washington were locked into an unchangeable course of conflict.<\/p>\n Yet today, the pace of change is astonishing. The recent high-level meeting between Russian and American officials in Riyadh, followed by Donald Trump\u2019s latest statements, suggests that nothing in geopolitics is predetermined.<\/p>\n This turn of events brings to mind an iconic scene from Terminator 2, in which Sarah Connor carves \u201cNo fate\u201d<\/em> into a wooden table. Her son, John, expands on the thought: \u201cThere is no fate except the one we make for ourselves.\u201d<\/em> The message is clear \u2014 our future is shaped by choices, not by destiny.<\/p>\n For years, analysts and politicians in both Russia and the West insisted that the US-Russia standoff was inevitable. Some American strategists viewed Russia as an irredeemable adversary, while Russia\u2019s \u201cturbo-patriots\u201d<\/em> warned that any engagement with Washington would be a trap. The more extreme voices on both sides even suggested that the confrontation could only end in nuclear catastrophe.<\/p>\n But the events unfolding now suggest otherwise. If there is no fate but what we make, then the choices before Moscow and Washington today are of historic significance.<\/p>\n The Riyadh talks have already begun to dismantle long-standing assumptions about the supposed unity of the \u201ccollective West.\u201d<\/em> For years, Russian policymakers believed that global politics were controlled by a single, centralized \u201cAnglo-American\u201d<\/em> power structure, operating seamlessly from Washington to Brussels. The reality, as the Trump era has repeatedly demonstrated, is far more fragmented.<\/p>\nThe Illusion of a Monolithic West<\/h2>\n