俄罗斯新安全战略强调用强硬手段对付不友好国家
2021-06-02
来源:网络安全应急技术国家工程实验室
莫斯科消息:俄罗斯克里姆林宫一名高级官员在周一发表的讲话中表示,俄罗斯国家安全战略的最新修订版称,俄罗斯可能会使用强硬手段应对外国的不友好行为。
俄罗斯总统安全委员会秘书尼古拉·帕特鲁舍夫表示,该国家安全战略文件预计莫斯科可能会采取“对称和非对称的措施来阻止或避免威胁俄罗斯联邦主权和领土完整的不友好行动”。
俄罗斯的政府日报《Rossiyskaya Gazeta》周一发表的一篇采访表示,这些“主要是特殊的经济措施,但必要时也会采取某些强制手段。”
尼古拉·帕特鲁舍夫(Patrushev) 表示,与 2015 年 12 月发布的前一版战略相比,修订版还强调信息安全是重中之重。
由于莫斯科 2014 年将乌克兰克里米亚半岛并入俄罗斯的领土、美国指责俄罗斯干涉选举、俄罗斯黑客攻击和其他刺激因素,俄罗斯与美国及其盟国的关系一直处于冷战后的低点。
最新修订后的俄罗斯国家安全战略是在俄罗斯总统弗拉基米尔普京准备与美国总统乔拜登于 2021年6 月 16 日在日内瓦举行的峰会之际发布的。
尼古拉·帕特鲁舍夫(Patrushev) 上周与拜登的国家安全顾问杰克沙利文进行了会谈,讨论两国首脑峰会的筹备工作,并指出他们的谈话“具有建设性和成效”。他补充说,莫斯科和华盛顿可以为“某些问题制定出相互可接受的解决方案”,但没有详细说明。
A soldier holds a machine gun as he patrols the Russian northern military base on Kotelny island, beyond the Artic Circle, on April 3, 2019. (Maxime Popov/AFP via Getty Images)
MOSCOW — A revised version of Russia's national security strategy says it may use forceful methods to respond to unfriendly actions by foreign countries, a top Kremlin official said in remarks published Monday,
Nikolai Patrushev, the secretary of the presidential Security Council, said that the document foresees that Moscow could take “symmetric and asymmetric measures to thwart or avert unfriendly actions that threaten the sovereignty and territorial integrity of the Russian Federation.”
An interview published Monday by the government daily Rossiyskaya Gazeta said those “primarily will be special economic measures, but also coercive forceful methods if necessary.”
Patrushev said that in comparison with the previous version of the strategy, published in December 2015, the revised version also emphasized information security as one of the top priorities.
Russia's relations with the U.S. and its allies have been at post-Cold War lows over Moscow's 2014 annexation of Ukraine's Crimean Peninsula, accusations of Russian interference in elections, hacking attacks and other irritants.
The revised national security strategy comes as Russian President Vladimir Putin prepares for a summit with U.S. President Joe Biden set for June 16 in Geneva.
Patrushev, who last week had talks with Jake Sullivan, Biden's national security adviser, to discuss preparations for the summit, noted that their conversation was “constructive and productive.” He added that Moscow and Washington could work out “mutually acceptable solutions for certain issues,” but didn't elaborate.

