“[...] All colonial powers have wrestled with decolonization after World War II, but while England and France in particular were driven step by step from their global positions, the Netherlands lost everything at once.” This fact, to lose “everything at once,” played a role also in Russia. The decolonization was sudden, unexpected, and total. The Russian frontiers were completely redrawn, and after centuries of almost uninterrupted expansion, the map of the country resembled that of sixteenth-century Russia [50].” RussiaDecolonizationUssrPerestroika Book:Putin's Wars: The Rise of Russia's New Imperialism Source: Putin's Wars: The Rise of Russia's New Imperialism