Paul
Goble
Staunton, December 11 – As evidence
mounts that Vladimir Putin used a variety of covert means to promote the
election of Donald Trump as president of the United States, it is critically
important to remember that that outcome is only part of the Kremlin leader’s
agenda, one that calls for so weakening Western countries that they can’t stand
up to him.
Many people assume that Putin wants
to hide the role the Russian security services played in promoting Trump, but
that is wrong. Since at least the times of the Cheka’s “Trust” operation in the
early 1920s, Moscow repeatedly has sought not only to gain by its machinations
but also planned to gain by their exposure at a time and place of the Kremlin’s
choosing.
Such a time is now because Putin
never viewed Trump’s election as an end in itself but rather as part of a
broader effort to subvert public confidence in elections and free societies by
suggesting that in the new information environment, outside powers like Russia
can interfere with impunity.
Indeed, from Putin’s perspective,
the best possible outcome is that Trump does take office but with an increasing
number of Americans convinced that at least in part the Republican’s victory
was the result of Russian actions. If a large enough group of Americans do
become convinced of that, then confidence in democratic procedures will
decline.
But even more than that, the American
system – like other Western countries where Russian covert activities are
ongoing – will be divided and weakened if not fatally then at least for a time;
and that outcome will give Putin the chance to continue his policy of promoting
chaos and disorder, the only environments in which his objectively weak country
can win out.
There are no easy answers as to what
Americans and others concerned with democracy and freedom should do, especially
since the more people talk about Russian meddling, the greater Putin’s victory
is likely to be. But there are at least three lessons from the past that may
prove useful.
First, it is critically important to
understand just what Putin, a not-so-former KGB officer, is about and why he
plans for “failures” as well as successes in his covert operations. Most Western intelligence services plan only
for success as they define it, but Russian intel always plans for failures.
That means that those tracking what
Putin’s agents have done need to be very careful to document everything they
have done and are doing, to do so with a minimum of hyperbole and a maximum of
legal precision, documenting everything in ways that do not permit denial by
the fair-minded much as the WADA has done with Moscow’s athletic doping policy.
Second, the West must avoid becoming
like Russia in response to Putin’s actions. Listing Russian news outlets as
foreign agents, as some are proposing, is exactly what the Kremlin leader
wants: if the West does it, in Putin’s calculations, then Russia can; and the
fundamental differences between his Russia and Western democracies are reduced
in the eyes of many.
Democratic countries, including the United
States, are stronger than Russia not because they have more weapons or larger
economies but because their basic values ultimately win out over those who seek
to enslave people. It is always tempting
to go for a quick fix, but the best response to such threats is to avoid
falling into the trap those making them have laid.
And third, it is absolutely
essential that Americans and other Western nations recognize that what Putin is
doing is an existential threat to the West.
All too many in the US and Europe have foolishly convinced themselves
that after the end of communism, the disintegration of the USSR, and the
decline of the Russian economy that Moscow cannot play that role.
But that assumption is also false:
weaker powers often pose threats to stronger ones at least for a time not only
because they feel unconstrained by the rules of the game the stronger ones have
sought to put in place but because the stronger and democratic ones don’t want
to believe until very late in the game what they are up against.
The history of the last century
should have been enough to disabuse people of their misconceptions on these
points. Unfortunately, what is going on now shows that many have a lot to learn
and that Putin and his agents are counting on that to pursue victories they do
not deserve and must not be allowed to claim.
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