The Russia Scare: Fake News and Genuine Threat

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The Russia Scare assesses the scope, character and extent of Russian interference in the affairs of liberal democratic states.

This book examines the ‘Russia scare’ in a dynamic manner, stressing the interaction between threat perception, responses and subsequent policies. What forms did this threat take, what were the instruments used, how effective were the deployed tools and who were the allies with whom Russia worked in these endeavours? Above all, what impact did interference have on target societies? The book explores why Russia engaged in such activities, what the probable chain of command was (if any) and the role of the Russian leadership in all of this, as well as investigating the response of Western societies and governments. The author sifts the real from the imagined, which can only be achieved by establishing the larger historical context. He scrutinises the fundamental question: was Russia before the invasion of Ukraine in 2022 really engaged in a sustained ‘hybrid warfare’ campaign to sow discord and undermine Western democracies? If so, what were the strategic purposes underlying such an activity? Various hypotheses are analysed, notably that Russian post-Cold War activity is nothing exceptional in the context of great power confrontation; that all great powers are engaged in one way or another in such actions, and thus contextualisation is important; and that Russia’s subversive activity was often exaggerated, even misrepresented. Responses potentially amplified the elements of subversion represented by the original threat. Threats exist, but responses always need to be calibrated so as not to inflict self-harm on the integrity of liberal democracy itself.

This book will be of great interest to students, scholars and academics of international relations, comparative politics, security and defence studies, global governance and Russian politics, as well as politicians, political advisers, NGOs, diplomats and journalists.

Author(s): Richard Sakwa
Series: Innovations in International Affairs
Publisher: Routledge
Year: 2022

Language: English
Pages: 220
City: London

Cover
Half Title
Series Page
Title Page
Copyright Page
Dedication
Table of Contents
Introduction
Chapter 1 Historical Legacies and Context
Worries and Wormholes
Russian Phobias or Russophobia
The International Context
Populism and Russian Soft Power
Notes
Chapter 2 Was Putin Out to Subvert the West?
The Russia Scare and Cold War II
Cultural Conflict and Geopolitics
Active Measures and Soft Power
Offshore Corruption
Power Politics
Autocracy Promotion and Double Standards
Notes
Chapter 3 The Russians Are Coming 1: Meddling in America
Russiagate
Maria Butina and Her Friends
The Case of Dimitri Simes
Cold War II and the Silencing of Dissent
Notes
Chapter 4 The Russians Are Coming 2: Britain, Brexit and Beyond
Brexit Blues
Strange Connections
The Skripal Mystery
The Russia Report: Findings
The Russia Report: Reception
Notes
Chapter 5 The Russians Are Coming 3: Europe and Beyond
Continental Cases
Back to the Wall
Notes
Chapter 6 Cyber Conflict and Management
Cyberattacks and Hybrid Warfare
Managing Cyber Relations
Notes
Chapter 7 Information Warfare and Disinformation Struggles
The Global Disinformation War
The Counter-disinformation Complex
Blowback: Neo-journalism and the Russia Scare
Notes
Chapter 8 Explanations and Interpretations
Cold War II and Interference
Post-diplomacy and Values in International Politics
Deception and Self-Deception
The People Speak
Notes
Chapter 9 Conclusion
Notes
Bibliography
Index