The Changing Nature of Modern Warfare
The Changing Nature of Modern Warfare
The Changing Nature of Modern Warfare
By Rod Thornton
While Western militaries recognise the logic and necessity
of irregular warfare in their military operations, the
manifold aspects of irregular fighting have yet to be
mastered fully. Information warfare, for example, appears to
be a tool more capably employed by Russia, to the
detriment of NATO. Rod Thornton explains how and why
Russia has won in Crimea by affording subversive
information campaigns primacy in its military operations.
Acknowledging the twofold constraints of international law
and co-ordination that face Western governments seeking to
play the same game, Thornton nonetheless expounds how
the West might better pursue asymmetry in the security
realm.
For several years now, the phenomenon of irregular warfare
(principally of the counter- insurgency variety) has been the main
focus of major Western militaries and their doctrine centres. In
Washington and its allies for these revolutions was that Putin
and Russia would be the next in line. Indeed, in the Kremlin
there is the conviction that the West intends to bring about
regime change in Russia.10 Such thinking may appear dark, yet it
is perfectly understandable if one accepts that there is a belief in
the Kremlin, and in Russia more generally, that international
politics is essentially a Darwinian or Hobbesian competition. 11
It was with this competition in mind that, following the war with
Georgia, Putin set in train a series of reforms within those state
structures that could contribute to a strengthening of Russian
power on the international stage including the
military.12 Furthermore, Putin was able to ensure that the reforms
would mesh and complement each other across the range of
structures involved due to the power vertical system that
operates in Russia.13 In this, Putin maintains a highly centralised,
top-down system of control where he directly manages the
government14 assisted by a loyal support group,15 known as
the collective Putin.16 This consists of a close cohort of advisers
and members of the Russian elite who have benefited mainly
financially from having Putin in power. His authority is further
enhanced by the grip he has gained over the Russian media, its
output being almost universally in his favour. 17
Hybrid Warfare
Having been instructed to reform, from 2010 the Russian military
began to debate what would be the best way forward. With the
colour revolutions in mind, the Russian Ministry of Defence
analysed (in print and at conferences18) how the West had
seemingly gone about nurturing regime change by using
Integration
Drawing lessons from different Allied operations as part of the
reform process,30 Putins military then embarked on an attempt to
reverse-engineer a Russian version of the hybrid-warfare
measures that the Kremlin saw as being used against the
country. As Kristin Ven Bruusgaard observes, Despite heavily
criticising such Western practices, Russia clearly adopted and
refined these elements in its own planning for modern military
operations.31 The end result has been a completely new doctrinal
approach. Russian operations now reflect the integrated use of
military force and political, economic, informational and other
non-military measures.32 As the head of the Russian military,
General Valery Gerasimov, put it, the very rules of war have
changed.33
Information Warfare
Compatriot Russians
The Russian information output is designed to influence minds.
However, the subjects must be reasonably receptive in the first
place. Moscow is fortunate in this respect in that the nowindependent states that were once part of the Soviet Union
contain a significant number of ethnic Russians, as well as
Russian speakers. These Russian minorities in places such as
Ukraine, the Baltic States, Moldova and Georgia are the principal
focus of Moscows current information-warfare campaign.
Russian law labels these individuals as Compatriots Living
Abroad,52 and they are seen as requiring the protection of Mother
Russia. While Moscow may have altruistic motives for providing
such protection, the presence of these minorities does also
provide a convenient excuse for Russia to interfere in the internal
affairs of these states, an interference in which Putin is all too
ready to engage.
The first goal of the information-warfare campaigns is to instil in
these compatriot Russians what has been called a soft loyalty
to Russia through an emphasis on cultural, linguistic and
ideological links. The plan is that this may evolve into a more
formal relationship in future, if or when needed. 53 The second
goal is to instil fear among these target groups that their host
government will one day turn on them. Messages are sent out
that leverage historical memory. Particular emphasis is put on
the nature of the Nazi tyranny suffered during the occupation of
countries including Ukraine and the Baltic States during the
Great Patriotic War and on the fact that the Red Army came to
the rescue of those under this tyranny. Moscows message today
is that the current governments in these countries also have their
Nazi elements, and so it may be better for compatriot Russians
to seek protection and think about a future joint destiny with
Russia.54 Having succumbed to such influences, it is intended
that compatriot Russians then become channels of
communication themselves. As the multipliers of desired
information, attitudes and behaviour, they should set about
convincing their non-Russian neighbours to adopt the same
thinking.55 The primary goal is for local populations in the
targeted countries, be they Russian-speaking or not, to protest
against the governing authorities, and for Moscow to be able to
use any subsequent clampdown by these authorities as an
excuse for setting up local vigilante squads to provide
protection. These squads may, of course, contain Russian
special forces in civilian clothes or unmarked uniforms or they
may not; the situation may be blurred. The end-game comes
when those influenced by the information campaign seek a
humanitarian intervention by Russian troops or ultimate safety
by joining Russia itself. Ideally, though, in Kremlin thinking, this
would be achieved via the ballot box through the clever
manipulation of local politics.56 Russia thus obtains a new piece
Soviet states are being lined up for the same treatment. Today,
Russian media dominate in the Russian-speaking communities
of Moldova, Belarus, Georgia, the Baltic states and also the
former USSR republics of Central Asia.62 It is the Baltics, though,
that represent a special target. Estonia and Latvia have large
Russian minorities and Lithuania is vulnerable because it
separates Russian forces in the Kaliningrad exclave from Belarus
and the rest of Russia.63 Russias information-warfare
campaign vis-- vis these Baltic States is very slick, with Peter
Pomerantsev observing that in Estonia, for instance, huge parts
of [the] population live ina separate reality created by the
Russian media.64
Contactless War
Russias information campaigns are thus supposed to remove,
as far as possible, displays of hard military power from modern
warfare, with war becoming something fought at arms length
without the need to engage with an adversarys forces. 65 This
contactless war has many advantages.66 Obviously, in terms of
costs both financial and human it is beneficial. However,
contactless war is also crucial, from a Russian perspective, in
blurring the lines sufficiently to prevent intervention by Western
powers on behalf of the states targeted. In this way, Russia can
negate the significant advantage held by the US and its NATO
allies in terms of their conventional military forces, mostly in the
technological realm. If Moscow can achieve its aims without any
contact, then there can be no justification for Western
intervention. True to the concept of asymmetric warfare, Russian
military theorists want to turn what is a US strength (its firepower
Notes