
Hybrid warfare is not a one-sided game -- a lesson Moscow is learning the hard way.
Hybrid warfare is not a one-sided game -- a lesson Moscow is learning the hard way.
Moscow has limited options to influence powers such as the United States, France and Germany. But political manipulation, electoral meddling, cyberattacks and information warfare can pack a punch.
Senior Eurasia Analyst Eugene Chausovsky discusses Russia's hybrid warfare strategy and its impact on the Moscow-West standoff.
The states at the fringes of the Continental core are ripe for manipulation as Moscow looks to prevent the expansion of -- and sow discord within -- the European Union and NATO.
Russia's Western-leaning neighbors are the states most vulnerable to its unique mix of conventional and unconventional tactics — a lesson Ukraine, Georgia and Moldova have had to learn the hard way.
As the costs of conventional conflict have risen, so, too, has hybrid warfare's prominence as a tool in international relations -- something no one knows better than Moscow.
As the Russia-West standoff heats up, the concept of hybrid warfare has emerged as a particularly relevant topic on the global stage.