Russia’s
Foreign Ministry has been drawing up plans to try to weaken its Western
adversaries, including the United States, and leverage the Ukraine war
to forge a global order free from what it sees as American dominance,
according to a secret Foreign Ministry document.
In
a classified addendum to Russia’s official — and public — “Foreign
Policy Concept of the Russian Federation,” the ministry calls for an
“offensive information campaign” and other measures spanning “the
military-political, economic and trade and informational psychological
spheres” against a “coalition of unfriendly countries” led by the United
States.
“We need to continue adjusting our approach to relations with unfriendly states,” states the 2023 document,
which was provided to The Washington Post by a European intelligence
service. “It’s important to create a mechanism for finding the
vulnerable points of their external and internal policies with the aim
of developing practical steps to weaken Russia’s opponents.”
The
document for the first time provides official confirmation and
codification of what many in the Moscow elite say has become a hybrid
war against the West. Russia is seeking to subvert Western support for
Ukraine and disrupt the domestic politics of the United States and
European countries, through propaganda campaigns supporting isolationist
and extremist policies, according to Kremlin documents previously reported on by The Post. It is also seeking to refashion geopolitics, drawing closer to China, Iran and North Korea in an attempt to shift the current balance of power.
Using
much tougher and blunter language than the public foreign policy
document, the secret addendum, dated April 11, 2023, claims that the
United States is leading a coalition of “unfriendly countries” aimed at
weakening Russia because Moscow is “a threat to Western global
hegemony.” The document says the outcome of Russia’s war in Ukraine will
“to a great degree determine the outlines of the future world order,” a
clear indication that Moscow sees the result of its invasion as
inextricably bound with its ability — and that of other authoritarian
nations — to impose its will globally.
The Foreign Policy Concept of the Russian Federation, which
was published March 31, 2023, and approved by Russian President
Vladimir Putin, deploys bland diplomatic language to call for “the
democratization of international relations,” “sovereign equality” and
the strengthening of Russia’s position on the global stage. Though the
Foreign Policy Concept also charges that the United States and “its
satellites” have used the Ukraine conflict to escalate “a
many-years-long anti-Russia policy,” it also states that “Russia does
not consider itself an enemy of the West … and has no ill intentions
toward it.”
Russia
hopes the West will “realize the lack of any future in its
confrontational policy and hegemonistic ambitions, and will accept the
complicated realities of the multipolar world,” the public document
states.
The
Russian Foreign Ministry said in a statement that it did not comment
“on the existence or nonexistence of internal ministry documents” and on
the progress of work on them. “As we have stated several times on
different levels, we can confirm the mood is to decisively combat the
aggressive steps taken by the collective West as part of the hybrid war
launched against Russia,” the ministry added.
Russia’s recent veto against
extending U.N. monitoring of sanctions against North Korea over its
nuclear weapons and ballistic missiles program, effectively ending 14
years of cooperation, was “a clear sign” that the work contemplated in
the classified addendum is already underway, said a leading Russian
academic with close ties to senior Russian diplomats. The academic spoke
on the condition of anonymity to discuss sensitive deliberations in
Moscow.
“Russia
can create difficulties for the U.S. in many different regions of the
world,” the academic said. “This is about the Middle East, northeast
Asia, the African continent and even Latin America.”
The
creation of the Foreign Policy Concept and the classified addendum
followed a call to Russian academics for policy suggestions. One
proposal submitted in February 2023 to the Foreign Ministry by the
deputy head of Moscow’s Institute for the Commonwealth of Independent
States, which maintains close ties to Russia’s security apparatus, laid
out Russia’s options more bluntly still.
The
academic, Vladimir Zharikhin, called for Russia to “continue to
facilitate the coming to power of isolationist right-wing forces in
America,” “enable the destabilization of Latin American countries and
the rise to power of extremist forces on the far left and far right
there,” as well as facilitate “the restoration of European countries’
sovereignty by supporting parties dissatisfied with economic pressure
from the U.S.”
Other
points in the policy proposal, which was also provided to The Post,
suggested that Moscow stoke conflict between the United States and China
over Taiwan to bring Russia and China closer together, as well as “to
escalate the situation in the Middle East around Israel, Iran and Syria
to distract the U.S. with the problems of this region.”
Zharikhin declined to discuss his proposal.
Western
officials have warned that Russia has been escalating its propaganda
and influence campaigns over the past two years as it seeks to undermine
support for Ukraine. As part of that, it has sought to create a new
global divide, with Russian propaganda efforts against the West
resonating in many countries in the Middle East, Africa, Latin America
and Asia.
“I
think the U.S. was convinced that the rest of the world — North and
South — would support the U.S. in the conflict with Russia and it turned
out that this was not true,” Zharikhin told The Post in an earlier
interview. “This demonstrates the single polar world is over, and the
U.S. doesn’t want to come to terms with this.”
For
Mikhail Khodorkovsky — the longtime Putin critic who was once Russia’s
richest man until a clash with the Kremlin landed him 10 years in prison
— it is not surprising that Russia is seeking to do everything it can
to undermine the United States. “For Putin, it is absolutely natural
that he should try to create the maximum number of problems for the
U.S.,” he said. “The task is to take the U.S. out of the game, and then
destroy NATO. This doesn’t mean dissolving it, but to create the feeling
among people that NATO isn’t defending them.”
The
long congressional standoff on providing more weapons to Ukraine was
only making it easier for Russia to challenge Washington’s global power,
he said.
“The
Americans consider that insofar as they are not directly participating
in the war [in Ukraine], then any loss is not their loss,” Khodorkovsky
said. “This is an absolute misunderstanding.”
A
defeat for Ukraine, he said, “means that many will stop fearing
challenging the U.S.” and the costs for the United States will only
increase.