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April 28, 2022
In the World

Equipping Future Experts

After 30-Plus Years at Wittenberg, Political Scientist YU Bin Looks Back and Ahead Through His Unique Global Lens

Spring 2022 will mark Professor YU Bin鈥檚 last semester before he enters retirement following more than three decades of teaching political science at Wittenberg. While he looks forward to retirement, the world, he knows, is being turned upside down with the Russian invasion of Ukraine in late February.

These days, Dr. Yu Bin, who holds a doctorate in political science from Stanford University focusing on Soviet/Russian foreign and defense policies, finds himself engaged in many Russia-related online forums around the world. Media inquiries for his sought-after expertise are also ongoing, including from , , , , Wall Street Journal, as well as many foreign sources in , , , , China, Poland, UK, etc.

The current public attention on Russia is in sharp contrast to much of the post-Cold War decades 鈥渨hen Russia was ,鈥 noted Yu. Russian studies also declined considerably in the United States after the Soviet fall as U.S. government funding dwindled. 

鈥淔oreign studies in the U.S. earned the nickname of 鈥榚nemy studies,鈥欌 he said. 鈥淎s a result, U.S. public attention to foreign affairs tends to oscillate between too little and too much.鈥

Russia, however, has always been Yu鈥檚 focus in both his teaching and research at Wittenberg. Author and co-author of six books, 150 professional pieces, and numerous media articles, Yu has been firmly in the real world as a to the Pacific Forum in Honolulu (with strong ties to the U.S. Pacific Command) on Russia, China, and Central Asia. Every quarter since 1999, Yu has provided an assessment (about 4,000 words) of the two large powers and their relations with the United States.

鈥淚 never thought that I鈥檇 write such a column for so long,鈥 Yu said. 鈥淲hile documenting in great detail the rise and fall of great powers in the post-Cold War decades, I also noticed that both (Boris) Yeltsin and his successor (Vladimir) Putin started as pro-West, but ended up as strong nationalistic rulers. This indicates the enormous difficulties, and the West鈥檚 naivet茅, regarding the difficult social transformation of the post-Soviet space. Russia鈥檚 current war in Ukraine is, therefore, not a surprise to me.鈥

Even before the Russian invasion, Yu saw the writing on the wall as the world was increasingly being torn by the between the Eurasian land powers (Russia and China) and the U.S.-led, and mostly maritime, alliances. Perhaps more than any other assessment of superpower relations, this current issue reflects Yu鈥檚 pessimism with the title: 鈥溾

鈥淚n the 2nd half of 2021, intensifying strategic maneuvering by both sides and arms race (hypersonic missiles, nuclear submarines, etc.) led to the precarious and somewhat reversed 鈥榟unt for the Red October鈥 in the 21st century when the USS Connecticut, perhaps the most sophisticated and most expensive nuclear attack submarine in the world, was seriously damaged in the highly sensitive South China Sea,鈥 he said. 鈥淏y the end of 2021 when Russia officially presented to NATO draft documents 鈥 comprehensive security guarantees, including the principles of equal security and no further eastward expansion by NATO 鈥 I predicted that the future would be 鈥渃older鈥 than the previous Cold War (1947-91).鈥

Russia鈥檚 war in Ukraine, for all of its destruction, throws Yu back 54 years to 1968 when the Soviets invaded Czechoslovakia. Shortly after that, he was drafted into the Chinese infantry ready to engage the mighty Soviet-motorized divisions from the north. This was also the beginning of his journey to eventually become an 鈥渁ccidental professor鈥 (Wittenberg Magazine, Fall 2007). The tense Soviet-China rivalry not only started his interest in Russia, but also let YU Bin 鈥渁ccidentally鈥 pick up the English language in the summer of 1971 when Nixon鈥檚 National Security Advisor Henry Kissinger secretly traveled to Beijing. And the rest was history.

Yu never thought he would eventually study at Stanford with those great theorists, such as Gabriel Almond and Alexander George. Stanford was also a place where many outstanding Soviet/Russia scholars were accessible, including David Holloway (Soviet military), Alexander Dalin (Russian history), Condoleezza Rice (Soviet foreign policy), John Stephan (Soviet Far East), Martin Malia (Berkeley, Russian history), etc. It was the 鈥済ood old days鈥 when Soviet leaders such as (Mikhail) Gorbachev twice visited the Stanford campus as part of his official U.S. tours.

鈥淭he Cold War, with all of its ideological and military confrontation between the two superpowers, ended as a quite stable and predictable 鈥榣鈥 international system as both sides created and followed a series of former and informal rules of the game (arms control, verification, etc.). In that sense, the world is now in uncharted waters,鈥 Yu remarked.

鈥淭he turbulent world also means more dynamics in my last class (POLI-350 US Foreign Policy),鈥 he continued. 鈥淲eeks before the outbreak of the Ukraine war, students were reading historical background and various theories regarding U.S. foreign policy, including relations with Russia. Many chose Ukraine-related issues as topics of their research papers. This is what I have done for decades, and I am trying to equip my students with both historical knowledge and analytical skills for the complex world and for the rest of their life.鈥

Beyond Wittenberg, the world is getting chaotic and unpredictable. Yu鈥檚 retirement, too, will be busy as he continues to engage in multiple research projects, publishing, and conferencing with multiple institutions. And to put a twist on the famous Douglas MacArthur鈥檚 statement, YU Bin says 鈥減erhaps this old scholar won鈥檛 even fade away.鈥

If interested in reading his recent publication on Russia in Global Affairs, which is the leading journal on foreign affairs in Russia, both Russian and English versions are available at the following links:

  • Russian:
  • English: 
  • Chinese:
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