Pentagon Report: Kremlin Believes U.S. Wants Regime Change in Russia
The Defense Intelligence Agency report said Moscow has a "deep and abiding distrust of U.S. efforts to promote democracy around the world and what it perceives as a U.S. campaign to impose a single set of global values."
Despite Russia's largely successful military modernization since the Cold War, the report says "Moscow worries that U.S. attempts to dictate a set of acceptable international norms threatens the foundations of Kremlin power by giving license for foreign meddling in Russia's internal affairs."
"The Kremlin is convinced the United States is laying the groundwork for regime change in Russia, a conviction further reinforced by the events in Ukraine," the report says, noting that President Vladimir Putin's government has accused the United States of engineering the popular uprising that ousted Ukraine's Russia-friendly president, Viktor Yanukovich, in 2014.
Russia responded by illegally annexing Ukraine's Crimea region and supporting a separatist war in eastern Ukraine, leading to rapidly deteriorating relations with the United States and its NATO allies, which imposed sanctions on Russia in retaliation.
While the report does not forecast a new, global ideological struggle akin to the Cold War, it cautions that Moscow "intends to use its military to promote stability on its own terms."
The 116-page intelligence document offers a comprehensive assessment of Russian military power, saying the Kremlin has methodically and successfully rebuilt Russia's army, navy, and air force since the collapse of the Soviet Union.
"The Russian military today is on the rise -- not as the same Soviet force that faced the West in the Cold War, dependent on large units with heavy equipment," the report says. It describes Russia's new military "as a smaller, more mobile, balanced force rapidly becoming capable of conducting the full range of modern warfare."
The report portrays Russia’s intervention in Syria since 2015 as largely successful at "changing the entire dynamic of the conflict, bolstering [Syrian President Bashar al-Assad's] regime, and ensuring that no resolution to the conflict is possible without Moscow's agreement."
Besides boosting Assad's fortunes in his six-year civil war against Syrian rebels, the report says the Syria intervention was intended to eliminate Islamic extremist elements that originated on the former Soviet Union's territory to prevent them from returning home and threatening Russia.
As Russia continues to modernize and encounter military success, "within the next decade, an even more confident and capable Russia could emerge," the intelligence agency's director, Marine Lieutenant General Vincent Stewart, said in the report's preface.
The report was prepared before the election of President Donald Trump and reflects the Pentagon's view of the global security picture shifting after nearly two decades of heavy American focus on countering terrorism and fighting small-scale wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.
With its focus on the modernized Russian army and Russian insecurities about U.S. intentions, the report is sure to fuel debate over how to deal with Putin in Congress.
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