Riga (AFP) - NATO allies
are scrambling to protect vulnerable Baltic partners from the threat of
hybrid warfare, a Russian tactic that officials and experts say is
based on deception rather than formal declaration of war.
Russian President Vladimir
Putin's use of anonymous "little green men" to slice Crimea away from
Ukraine last year sent alarm bells ringing throughout the three small
Baltic NATO and EU members.
They endured decades of Soviet occupation after the Red Army rolled
in during World War II. While a full-scale invasion is improbable now,
hybrid meddling and destabilisation tactics designed to test NATO's
commitment to collective defence are not.Putin's brand of hybrid warfare also relies on "misinformation, bribery, economic pressure", which are designed to "undermine the nation", according to Latvian Defence Minister Raimonds Vejonis.
Lithuanian President Dalia Grybauskaite did not mince her words when she said: "The first stage of confrontation is taking place -- I mean informational war, propaganda and cyber attacks. So we are already under attack."
- Trojan Horse -
According to James Sherr of Britain's Chatham House think-tank, hybrid warfare is "designed to cripple a state before that state even realises the conflict has begun.
"It's a model of warfare designed to slip under NATO's threshold of perception and reaction."
NATO Deputy Secretary General Alexander Vershbow has called it a modern example of the ancient Trojan Horse tactic.
NATO is "looking at how we prepare for, deter, and –- if required –-
defend against hybrid threats," the former US ambassador to Moscow said
recently at a security conference in the Latvian capital Riga.Not to be caught off guard amid an increased Russian military presence in the Baltic, alliance members have mounted a series of troop rotations into the region.
The United States also deployed a
cargo ship full of heavy armour there this month, including helicopters
and tanks for exercises dubbed Atlantic Resolve.
NATO will boost defences on
Europe's eastern flank with a spearhead force of 5,000 troops and
command centres in six formerly communist members of the alliance: the
Baltic states and Bulgaria, Poland and Romania.
Lithuania revived its pre-WWII Riflemen's Union to help deter the threat of both conventional and hybrid warfare.
The citizens' militia boasts
over 8,000 members in the nation of three million people, a number
almost on par with its 8,000 military personnel and 4,500 reservists.
- 'Media weaponisation' -
With roughly a quarter of the
populations of Estonia and Latvia being ethnic Russian, some argue that
Moscow's huge TV, radio and Internet presence is part of a hybrid battle
for Baltic hearts and minds.
Putin justified his Crimea takeover by insisting that Moscow was
coming to the defence of ethnic Russians in the territory, sparking
concern here that Russia could deploy a similar policy.According to Riga journalist Olga Dragileva, a hybrid media war aimed at sowing "dissatisfaction and illusions" among ethnic-Russian Latvians is in full swing in the eurozone member, which is still recovering from a crippling 2008-9 recession sparked by the global financial crisis.
It amounts to "the weaponisation of social media", according to Janis Karklins, director of NATO's Strategic Communications Centre of Excellence.
Based in Riga, the centre works to analyse the official Russian political narrative and suggest responses.
Karklins warns the solution does not lie in creating counter-propaganda: "The old recipes are not effective any longer."He proposes instead "to develop skills of media information literacy and critical thinking in our education system to make it harder for adversaries to disorient the population."
EU leaders are expected to agree at a summit this week to set up a special media unit to counter what the bloc sees as a skilful Russian propaganda campaign during the Ukraine crisis.
- Hybrid response -
Many here believe neighbouring
Estonia had a foretaste of hybrid war in 2007 when the nation of 1.3
million suffered a blistering cyber attack against official state and
bank websites.
The assault was widely blamed on Russian hackers, although the Kremlin denied involvement.
As in hybrid warfare, aggressors
in cyberwarfare are often hard to identify and hence may not fear
immediate and targeted retaliation -- a key plank of conventional
warfare.
Tallinn, home to NATO's cyber
defence centre, is also demanding Moscow release Eston Kohver, an
Estonian police officer it claims was snatched at gunpoint by Russian
operatives last September from inside Estonia.
Moscow insists Kohver was engaged in a clandestine operation in Russia and has charged him with espionage.
To counter similar murky
scenarios, Vershbow says the alliance must develop hybrid responses able
to "deploy the right forces to the right place at the right time".
4 comments:
beware of Chatham House ....think Tavistock and Bilderberger
The above piece is all garbage.. it is the US and Zionists that do that.. but Russia in self defense against NATO has every right also to quiet work.
I would not doubt one bit that the US is some how involved in all this. Our Government is doing everything in their power to get us into another war.
The people of the United States need to wake up to what our Government has been doing with all these wars that they have gotten us into and realize that they make money on these wars and it is the American people that get stuck with the bill, not only in monetary value but in lost lives too.
FIRST OFF THEY ARE NOT OUR GOVERNMENT, BUT NAZIS.....THEY DON'T HAVE THEIR CORPORATE CHARTER AND THEY ARE CERTAINLY NOT OUR REPUBLIC....SO HOW IS IT THESE NAZIS ARE BEING ALLOWED TO CONTINUE WHAT THEY ARE DOING.....??
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