International Conflict in Syria and Ukraine

Authors

  • Maisun Moosa Muhammad Abbas Education Directorate of Baghdad / Karkh the Third, Iraq

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.55568/amd.v12i45.197-238

Keywords:

International Conflict, Syria, America, dominant power, Russia

Abstract

The major countries are characterized by reading all the circumstances surrounding them, whether regional or global, and take into account all the issues of Political Geography and geopolitics, which gives them to develop a correct perception in the adoption of long-term strategic plans and deep details. Especially as these plans relate to temporary interests and a strategic nature. All these things are excluded from small countries that do not depend on any kind of planning, for many reasons, the most important of which is the lack of leadership that contributes to the development of the concepts of the state with its correct dimensions, and its continued dependence on the major countries. As a great and dominant power on the international scene, America is trying to preserve the status which that ensures its domination of the world and the removal of competitors, especially Russia.

The conflict in Syria and Ukraine will shape the polar policies of the world, Russia is trying to be one of the poles of the world, and that the conflict in Syria is closely linked to the conflict in Ukraine, and that the two files combine is a US-European conflict on the one hand and Russian on the other, There is limited attraction in Syria and dissonance in Ukraine, with demographic and geographic differences and to the extent of Russian, American and European interests. American interest is a great concern in Syria and Ukraine; It will not allow Russia to achieve full success and victory in these two sites. Fragmentation of combat groups in Ukraine and exhaustion of Syrians in all vital areas.

Author Biography

Maisun Moosa Muhammad Abbas, Education Directorate of Baghdad / Karkh the Third, Iraq

PhD in Political Geography/ Lecturer

Published

2023-03-31