By Andrew Stuttaford
Wednesday, December 10, 2025
The administration’s new National Security Strategy is not
designed to be a comprehensive document, and so, whether due to a focus on its
core messages or, maybe, an unwillingness (for which it is possible to think of
good reasons) to state openly what it has in mind, there is nothing written
directly about the topic of the increasingly aggressive actions taken in Europe
by Moscow (sometimes backed by Beijing) in the “gray zone.”
I have described what this shadowy area — an echo, in some ways,
of Trotsky’s old phrase about a state of affairs that was “neither war nor
peace”— in a number of earlier posts.
Writing about this phenomenon in July last year, I borrowed a definition from Clementine G. Starling, the deputy director of the Forward
Defense program and a resident fellow at the Transatlantic Security Initiative:
The gray zone describes a set of
activities that occur between peace (or cooperation) and war (or armed
conflict). A multitude of activities fall into this murky in-between — from
nefarious economic activities, influence operations, and cyberattacks to mercenary
operations, assassinations, and disinformation campaigns. Generally, gray-zone
activities are considered gradualist campaigns by state and non-state actors
that combine non-military and quasi-military tools and fall below the threshold
of armed conflict. They aim to thwart, destabilize, weaken, or attack an
adversary, and they are often tailored toward the vulnerabilities of the target
state. While gray-zone activities are nothing new, the onset of new
technologies has provided states with more tools to operate and avoid clear
categorization, attribution, and detection — all of which complicates the
United States’ and its allies’ ability to respond.
I added this:
Two key reasons why waging a war
in the gray zone is so effective for the aggressor are contained in the last
part of that last sentence. The first is the question of proof, and the second,
which applies even if there is proof of who was responsible, is how to respond.
NATO is not (nor should it) go to war over an arson attack or even an
assassination of, say, a business executive [a plot had been in the news]. But
how does it hit back?
And so to this from Sam Jones, writing in in
the Financial Times:
In July 2024, DHL parcels
exploded in logistics centres in the UK, Poland and Germany. Each of them was
powerful enough to have brought down a cargo plane had they detonated onboard.
Security services would eventually trace the plot back to a group of Russian-directed
saboteurs who had a further 6kg of explosive material in their possession. That
was enough to give them the capability for what security officials told the
Financial Times was the next stage of the plan: to attack flights to the US,
and cause more disruption to the airline industry than any act of terror since
the World Trade Center attacks.
We got lucky then, but it is worth pondering what would
have been the consequence of actions that might have become a series of
Sarajevos in the sky, albeit ones missing a Princip to be arrested on the spot.
As Jones reports, the pace of such plots has been picking
up:
Intelligence chiefs and police
forces have foiled plots to derail crowded trains, burn down shopping centres,
discharge a dam and poison water supplies. And these are just the ones we know
about.
There is speculation that this is more than just a
tactical response — an exercise in counter-pressure — to Western support for
Kyiv.
Jones:
Some intelligence points to
longer-term planning. Although large numbers of Russian spies have been kicked
out of Europe in recent years, the Kremlin’s agencies have tried to
reinfiltrate European states with trained professionals, even as they bombard the
continent with scattergun attacks by proxies and criminals. The head of one
major European intelligence agency says his officers were now observing Russian
agents surveying road bridges, he presumes with the intention to mine them.
Railways all over the continent, he notes, are similarly being aggressively
mapped for weak spots. His agency and others are also tracking the attempts of
Russia to insert highly trained sleeper-saboteurs into European states.
Attacks carried out by recruits from a kind of a
terrorist “gig economy” who may not even know that they are working for Moscow
do not leave much of a trail for prosecutors or counterintelligence to follow,
making it difficult to weigh a counter-response.
Unsurprisingly, a large amount of what is going on
appears to borrow much from old Soviet techniques, and the FT’s Jones
quotes Daniela Richterova, co-director of the King’s Centre for the Study of
Intelligence in London. She believes that the current escalation aligns with a
middle “prewar” phase stipulated in files discovered in the archives of the
StB, the Soviet-era Czechoslovak secret police. The low-level attacks expand in
a fashion designed to deliver an intimidating message about Moscow’s
willingness to inflict harm. But they are also a form of reconnaissance:
Russian military intelligence
doctrine leans heavily on the idea of razvedka boyem — reconnaissance through
battle — in which information is found out about an enemy’s weaknesses by
constantly probing and testing for them. And when you find a weakness, you
continue to push. “Reinforce success” is an idea drummed into students at
Russian military intelligence academies.
Lenin put it another way in a different context, but the
principle is the same:
Probe with bayonets. If you
encounter mush, proceed; if you encounter steel, withdraw.
And here too drones are changing the nature of
war or, in this case, its (possible) preamble.
To believe this would all come automatically to a stop
with the conclusion of a peace deal with or over Ukraine is naïve. This is why
any such deal should allow room for Ukraine’s allies to continue to strengthen
and replenish its defenses even as they boost their own. President Trump is
right to insist that European NATO members should increase their defense
spending to 5 percent of GDP. Poland is nearly there, and the Baltic states are
heading rapidly in that direction. Other countries are, if more slowly, moving
along the same path, and should continue to do so even if hostilities are
paused (which is probably the best that can be hoped for) in Ukraine.
The key to understanding Putin, I was told by a Latvian official back
in 2014, was to think of him as a petulant and badly behaved teenager who likes
to provoke, prod, and see what he can get away with.
That has not changed — and it will not change.
No comments:
Post a Comment