This year's Primakov Readings Forum, held in Moscow—an annual gathering of global experts in international relations and the world economy—leaned hard into anti-colonial rhetoric and delivered the same tired pitch for a "just multipolar world." This mantra has been the Kremlin boilerplate for years now. And to be sure, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov and the rest of the panel didn't disappoint. They performed their greatest hits: BRICS as the vanguard, the Global South rising up, old exploitative systems crumbling, and a shiny new world order waiting in the wings.
But Moscow's stated positions regularly run into the pragmatic realities of regional dynamics and historical layers that can't be brushed aside. For many countries in Asia, Africa, and Latin America, decolonisation rhetoric remains a bargaining chip in dealings with former colonial powers—they're prepared to use it only as long as it delivers tangible returns.
But former Soviet republics in Russia's orbit view their history with Moscow through a different lens. They see Russia's past policies as colonial in nature and its regional role sits uncomfortably with their collective memory.
Over the past three decades, Russia has radically reassessed its international standing several times over. And each time, the driving force behind these shifts has been less about ideological doctrine and more about the pursuit of status—the kind that would let it sit at the table with the world's major powers as an equal.
In the early 2000s, the strategy centred on integration into Western institutions and clubs. Investment attractiveness was a priority, as was cultivating trust with key European leaders. The thinking was this: Russia could be part of the Western world while holding onto its own distinct identity. But by the mid-2000s, that model began to show cracks. A key turning point was NATO's involvement in Libya in 2011, resulting in the overthrow of its longtime leader Muammar Gaddafi and the domestic political upheaval that followed. It was then that Moscow made a decisive pivot.
Russia's new approach no longer tried to fit into the existing system. Instead, it aimed to build a sphere of influence in the post-Soviet space—through integration projects, by casting itself as the West's value-based antagonist, and through careful—albeit not always consistent—rapprochement with China.