Beer Baron said:
...Third, survival is the primary motivation of all states in the international system. Survival must have top priority since the autonomy of the state is a prerequisite for the achievement of all other ends. Fourth, states are rational entities in the instrumental sense of the word, that is, they think strategically about their external situation and choose the strategy that seems to maximize their basic aim of survival. ...
These assumptions are flawed. These things can't be assumed. A state is not necessarily a monolithic body, especially not Russia. Current Russian foreign polic is very much an extension of the will of Vladimir Putin.
I would not assume that Putin's primary motivation is the survival of the Russian State. The Russian state will (or aught to) outlive him, and I have no reason to believe he is motivated by the long term health of the Russian state. Nor to assume that he is a rational actor.
If you compare Putin to previous totalitarian dictators - Hitler, Stalin, Pol Pot, etc. - their empires largely fell not long after their deaths. Their decisions were not guided by the survival of the state, but rather by maintaining power in themselves for as long as possible.
I disagree. Putin is very much motivated by the long-term survival of the Russian state in its current political construction, and in his view the expansion of Western influence into Ukraine was and remains a threat to this. His decision-making, while utilizing a different set of standards, assumptions, and priorities than we may be accustomed to, is rational and consistent with this objective.
I don't know that Stalin fits your assertion - the Soviet Union lasted 38 years after his death.
Marrying together these assumptions, Mearsheimer infers that the states soon realize that the most efficient way to guarantee survival in anarchy is to maximize their relative power with the ultimate aim of becoming the strongest power — that is, a hegemon. However, not all states can maximize their relative power simultaneously and, therefore, the state system is destined to be an arena of relentless security competition as long as it remains anarchic (Mearsheimer 2001c: Chapter 2).
This is also flawed, because expanding that power base would effectively mean bumping Russia up in the league it's playing with on the international stage. It can be the biggest kid on the form-Soviet bloc (pun intended) and flex power there. But if it hegemonizes and it's suddenly competing with NATO, the EU, and the U.S. which are exponentially more powerful than it is unless it resorts to nuclear war. Either way, it's survival is threatened.
This means that a medium power like Russia expanding its power through military conquest is *not* the logical choice for long term survival when it borders a major power like the EU/NATO and that expansion threatens those powers. So either Russia is not acting logically, or is not primarily concerned with its survival.
Again, I go back to my assertion that the "Russian State" is really an extension of Putin.
The problem here is that you are conflating NATO and the EU with sovereign states - they are not, and do not operate the same way. They are organizations that seek to provide mutual security (NATO) and consistent economic and political alignment (EU). Prior to this crisis, we have seen that there are significant differences among members that manifest themselves regularly. To use an old trope, nations have no permanent allies, only permanent interests. One of the significant miscalculations on Putin's part has been to strengthen alliance bonds in these organizations. His view, predicated on national rather than alliance interests, expected far greater division among alliance members, and indeed his military move into Ukraine was likely in part intended to widen rather than narrow the gaps between Europe and the US, and between European nations.