Trends of 2016: Soft Power, Cyberwarfare, and Russia’s New Foreign Policy

The past year has seen the return of Russia to a prime position on the global stage.

Gone are the days when Putin was content with maintaining Russia’s dominion over its' near abroad in Central Asia, the Caucasus, and the Baltics. Putin is now openly pursuing a much larger foreign policy platform.

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From its intercession in the Syrian conflict to the recent renewal of its military might in the Baltic, Russia has restored its superpower status with a vengeance. Most interesting is the new and innovative playbook Russia is using for its foreign policy agenda.

Cold War Revisited

Since the collapse of the Soviet Union Russia’s foreign policy has relied heavily upon its military might or hard power to ensure its national security and protect its interests internationally. But over the past 24 months, Russia has been engaged in creating a new and unique soft power policy to redefine its hard and soft mechanisms for foreign policy.

Soft power or the expansion of a nation's influence through persuasion and attraction rather than military or economic pressure is not a new idea. During the Cold War, America and the Soviet Union utilized soft power to promote their ideologies, norms, and values in order to win over the hearts and minds of the international community.

In the wake of the collapse of the Soviet Union, many western nations continued to utilize soft power initiatives to consolidate the spread of western liberal ideas and culture. Aiding this endeavor was a combination of the globalization of the western media companies, the American entertainment industry, the accessibility of the internet and western nation’s foreign policy initiatives.

Soft Warfare

For Russia, this extensive dispersal of western liberal influence was viewed as a potential threat. Citing events like Color Revolutions, the Maiden Protest in the Ukraine and uprisings of the Arab Spring, Russia believed America was using soft power as a weapon in a new form of hybrid warfare.

In an article for the Moscow newspaper Moskovskie Novosti prior to his re-election in 2012, Putin strongly criticized United States involvement in the Arab Spring arguing that “‘Soft power’ is a complex of tools and methods to achieve foreign policy goals without the use of force, through information and other means of influence. Unfortunately, these methods are often used to encourage and provoke extremism, separatism, nationalism, manipulation of public sentiment, and outright interference in the internal affairs of sovereign states.”

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The concept that this is a new type of hybrid warfare is incongruous. During the Cold War, the Soviet Union utilized soft power as a weapon just as well as the west, promoting ideologically based Communist revolutions in countries such as Vietnam and Afghanistan to name a few.

Nevertheless, in March 2016 Valery Gerasimov, Russian Chief of General Staff at the Academy of Military Science, spoke about how the Color Revolutions of the early 2000’s forced Russia to reconsider its Foreign Affairs Policy. Arguing that these people-powered revolutions were a form of hybrid warfare, Gerasimov stated that “responding to them using conventional troops is impossible: they can only be counteracted with the same hybrid methods.”

Old Dog With New Tricks

For Russia, this means responding in kind, which is currently in line with Russia’s pragmatic understanding of soft power and its applications. As a result, on the surface, Russia is presenting itself as magnanimous and practical world power via its media mouthpieces Russia Today and Sputnik. Russia has been supporting Russian culture around the globe through cultural organizations like Russkiy Mir and the government agency Rossotrudnichestvo, which currently has an operating budget of 95.5 million dollars.

However, covertly, through state-sponsored cyber operations, Russia’s has pursued new foreign policy initiatives designed to destabilized its enemies and support its goals in the international community. Since 2014 Russia has been accused of striking numerous countries such as the Ukraine, Germany, France and the United States with cyber-attacks.

Most recently, of course, Russia is believed to have delved into political cyber operations through the state-sponsored cyber hacking group APT28 who attacked not just the White House but also orchestrated the Clinton-DNC attack and Wikileaks release of 20, 000 emails days before the Democratic National Congress.

Is There a Risk to Western Democracies?

The risks of Russia’s new covert foreign policy are manifold. Russia has already demonstrated its willingness to interfere in a western nation's democratic processes and their success in this endeavor could be viewed as a mandate to interfere in future elections run in Western nations. This point was agreed on by security firm Crowdstrike’s Chief Technical Officer, Dmitry Alperovitch, who noted that he had met with senior government officials across Europe who were afraid that the Kremlin’s success will herald similar attacks aimed at upcoming elections in France and Germany: “They’re concerned that the precedent that’s been set is that you can do this against the US, and if so, that they’ll be walked all over by Russia.” German Chancellor Angela Merkel who is up for re-election in 2017 has also stated, “We are already, even now, having to deal with information out of Russia or with internet attacks that are of Russian origin or with news which sows false information.”

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It is not just governments that will be targeted. According to a recent Chatham House Research Paper by Keir Giles entitled Russia’s New Tools For Confronting the West, Russia has already found out that they can silence the voices of opposition to their narrative globally on social media by utilizing an online ‘troll army’. In January 2016, the use of mass bots posting automated complaints led to the banning of pro-Ukrainian accounts on twitter, thereby silencing an open and free medium that challenged Russian disinformation.

Risks for Russia

Russia’s recent wins with soft power do not guarantee it will have continued success in the international community. Soft power as a foreign policy tool is highly contingent on domestic economic strength and technological capacity. Currently, Russia is languishing economically with massive currency inflation, declining foreign investment and weak economic growth. This will undoubtedly affect its ability to finance many of these soft policy initiatives and the lack of economic funding will bring its own set of risks.

According to Australian cybersecurity researcher Daniel Clark from the University of New South Wales, one of the risks to Russia stems from training a group of people in cyber warfare. According to Clark, there can be significant long-term management problems if these individuals choose to utilize their skills outside of their designated work.

From launching cyberattacks on their domestic market to attacking overseas targets, cyber units have the ability to cause massive social unrest and destabilization in Russia itself if they turn their skills on their own country. Internationally, Russia also runs the risk of opening itself up to revenge attacks from other international cyber warfare units, who are seeking redress for the previous incursions onto high-level targets like the Whitehouse or the German Parliament. The end result would be the gradual development of a hostile cyber environment that has the potential to spread globally, generating an unsecured global cyber environment.

The risks Russia faces will, naturally, continue in 2017. But Russia has reasserted itself with a vengeance in 2016, and its place on the world stage, especially with the election of the pro-Putin Donald Trump in the US, is looking stronger than ever.

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