Ukraine’s Effort to Interfere in Russia’s Election Backfires

Stephen Bryen | Weapons and Strategy Substack | March 18, 2024

Taiwanese people line up to vote outside a polling station in Taipei, Jan. 13, 2024. VOA

Ukraine’s attempt to interfere in Russia’s Presidential election has backfired. Putin’s internal support is stronger than ever. The geniuses in NATO and in US intelligence simply failed to understand Russia or the Russian election system.

I was a Presidential election observer in two countries: Uzbekistan and Taiwan. They are as different as night and day. The contrast is important now that Russia has completed its presidential election.

Taiwan is a vigorous democracy.  Moreover, so far as I could determine, Taiwan’s election process is scrupulously honest.  There are three major political parties and plenty of debate.  I spoke to candidates at the national and local level around the country, visited polling places (many of them in schools), and attended party rallies. I listened to explanations from the major candidates expounding on their policies and agenda.

Unlike Taiwan, Uzbekistan is not really a democratic country, but it does hold elections. The form of the voting process is first class. Like Taiwan, many of the polling stations are in schools. Votes are honestly counted. But the problem is, unlike Taiwan, there is only one real candidate. The real candidate runs against a token opponent, and everyone understands how it works.

In fact, I attended a luncheon after the election where the “results” were announced. The opposition candidate, who received only a tiny vote, apologized for running in the election, saying he only did it so there was a second candidate for President.

While in Taiwan I could visit with the candidates, in Uzbekistan that was not permitted.

So what is the point of running an election if the outcome is foreordained? Is it to fool the outside world? Is it to somehow tell the people of the country that there is some sort of democratic process?

The issue was on my mind in Uzbekistan. I met many people, including young and dynamic reporters, one of whom was very popular. She ran a radio call-in talk show where people raised various issues and other callers would comment, as would she. These programs dealt with social issues, not political in the usual sense. “My boyfriend walked out on me. My rent is too high. My car broke down because of bad roads.”

She was very positive about the election. It was hard for me to understand.

When I visited a polling place in central Tashkent, a pleasant elementary school sited on a small park, everything seemed normal. People showed up, got their ballot, voted, and the voting was secret and protected. There were local election observers and the process looked fair and clean. I spent probably half an hour watching the process. I met the election workers, who were very happy to have visitors from “outside.” Then I went outside to head back to my hotel. As I walked through the park, an elegant older woman appeared, waving her arms. She wanted to talk to an election observer. Happily, I had a translator with me.

In clear language she told me not to be confused about the meaning of the election. It was not about picking the best man. Uzbeks already knew who the best man was and they would vote for him. The election, she said, was about demonstrating backing for the best man, and about voting for stability. “We want a leader here in Uzbekistan like Putin in Russia.” she said. “We need a strong leader. In this country we have terrorist threats and we want that stopped. We want to build our country and make it a showcase for the world. Democracy here is not like in the United States. Democracy here is to show our respect and support for our leader.”

I don’t know if she was a government plant, that was possible. But even if she was, her message was undeniably clear. (Afterwards, I thought her pitch was too clever for government-run propaganda.)

The American and European press is full of nasty characterizations of the Russian election, calling it a sham and a fraud, and spewing out the usual arguments about the suppression of the Russian opposition and the “resistance” to the vote in Russia.

There is no doubt that the opposition in Russia is suppressed. Russians don’t have political freedom as such.

Russian elections, like the Uzbek ones, serve a different purpose than to have candidates actually compete and offer different approaches to leadership.

Obviously the Russian elections were not democratic in the normal meaning of the term. The elections have a democratic form. In all there were four candidates (outdoing their Uzbek counterparts). None of the others received more than 4.31% .

The real vote was about Putin and his leadership.

Millions of Russians voted. The Ukrainians were so concerned about the election that Ukraine mounted a suicidal invasion force to try and stop voting in the Russian areas bordering on Ukraine, especially the Belgorod city and region. Over the three days of the Ukrainian operation, Ukraine killed 11 civilians using drones and rockets and injured another 82, including nine critically. One election official counted among the dead, as did a thirteen year old girl (her father was seriously injured when their car was hit by a drone strike).

Ukraine launched hundreds of drones fired at targets inside Russia, some aimed at Moscow and others at St. Petersburg, mainly at power plants and some airfields including Domodedovo in Moscow. Domodedovo, located south of Moscow, is the second busiest airport in Russia after Moscow’s main international terminal, Sheremetyevo.

The Ukrainians assembled a strike force that included around 1,500 Russian speakers in a special unit, a large number of foreign fighters, plenty of tanks and armored personnel carriers (including Bradley Infantry Fighting Vehicles), and shock troops from elite Ukrainian units. Over four days they consistently failed to capture any territory or even a small village. It was so bad that Ukraine’s head of military intelligence, Kyrylo Budanov told Vlodomyr Zelensky, Ukraine’s president, that the planning of their operation was compromised by a traitor, or so he believed.

Budanov possibly planned the operation with Victoria Nuland, and this could have been the “surprise” she mentioned when she hurriedly visited Kiev at the end of January. She resigned or was fired on March 7th.

On March 18 the Russians targeted a meeting of senior Ukrainian security and defense commanders.  At the time of this writing, very little is known other than the Russians believe that many were wounded or killed.  It was part of Russia’s response to the Ukrainian invasion of Russian territory.

The Ukrainian operation was aimed at weakening support for Putin and disrupting the election in Russia.  Why bother if the election outcome was predetermined?  Why sacrifice countless lives?

We do not know why the Ukrainian leaders and their backers in NATO thought that an invasion would work and somehow the Russian elections would be discredited. This was altogether a fantasy.

The Russian election was not affected in any significant measurable way.  Putin won with 87.28% of the vote.  The turnout for the election was 74% of eligible voters. Altogether, more than 75 million Russians voted.  The Russian press said the result was “historic.”

The Russian vote was an endorsement of Putin and for the “Special Military Operation” in Ukraine.  Had his support fallen below 70% he could have had a problem, but it never surfaced.

Zelensky and his NATO backers again got it wrong when it came to regime change in Russia.  If anything, the attempts to overthrow Putin and trash the Russian elections backfired and strengthened the Russian leader.

March 19, 2024 | 13 Comments »

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13 Comments / 13 Comments

  1. @Laura
    It isn’t baseless, but well based, and if it weren’t true, I would indeed be interested. My only interest in the whole of eastern Europe is of its history, which has never been kind to our people. This being the case, I do not pretend that the history is such that it might suit an American proxy fight as you seem to prefer.

    I am only interested in the facts which began this conflict. This is why I read so much on the subject. The conflict, rather than being plucked out of Putin’s imagination was in fact a product of American belligerency in a region which the US had no strategic reason to be staging coups or raising NATO armies, and yet they did just this.

    As to this being simply Russian baseless claims, I would request that you read more from the period, as the increased onslaught against the Dombas was well discussed at the time, but Neocons (not indicating you with this reference) like to pretend otherwise despite the facts.
    Ukraine: Shelling Residential Areas Puts Civilians at Risk

  2. Not that it matters to you, but these are baseless claims by Russia.

    So why was there a NATO trained, NATO armed, and NATO funded force of over 100K troops who were actively slaughtering ethnic Russians on Russia’s borders, among whom there were many Russians.

  3. Laura

    I’m sure Russia’s election was totally legitimate.

    Well, with all due respect, if you actually believe that Biden won the 2020 election hiding in the basement, I would expect that you would believe that any election anywhere was totally legitimate.

    It still astonishes me to believe that intelligent people would believe what they are told while ignoring the evidence which is clearly been demonstrated, both during the election, after the election and in the years since the election.

  4. @Laura

    No one invaded Russia, Russia is the invading force.

    So why was there a NATO trained, NATO armed, and NATO funded force of over 100K troops who were actively slaughtering ethnic Russians on Russia’s borders, among whom there were many Russians. The US would not tolerate such a thing taking place in Mexico, which if anything is a far more democratic regime than the totalitarian Ukraine.

    Furthermore, Ukraine couldn’t organize or provide enough support for their war effort to defeat a bunch of local in 2014 and 2015 when they were soundly defeated, twice in six months. This is why the US poured billions of dollars (no exaggeration) into Ukraine following the Maidan coup, to form an army capable of taking on Russia. The US would not tolerate Russia doing such a thing in Mexico or Canada, and they would be right to respond aggressively if Russia did so.

    The issue, however, is not of Russia’s war with Ukraine, but of pushing Russia towards becoming a more powerful partner (much more accurate term) with Iran. This was America’s doing, and I doubt very much that it was not actually intentional.

  5. I agree with this.

    @Laura Actually, it’s the Gazans, themselves, and for that matter all the so called “Palestinians” who are illegitimate. They are Hamas and Hamas is them. They deserve to be expelled or failing that treated like the Huighurs in China, which the PLO hypocritically said they approve of just as the CCP government hypocritically disapproves of any action taken against Fakestinian terrorists in the name of “human rights.”

    As for why should we care if Russia’s elections are legitimate. Actually, I didn’t until Russia invaded Ukraine and threatened its other neighbors, including NATO allies. If Russia stayed within its own borders, I wouldn’t care who its leader is. But the problem is that authoritarian dictators are not isolationists. When did I ever advocate invading Russia? NEVER. No one invaded Russia, Russia is the invading force.

  6. @Laura Actually, it’s the Gazans, themselves, and for that matter all the so called “Palestinians” who are illegitimate. They are Hamas and Hamas is them. They deserve to be expelled or failing that treated like the Huighurs in China, which the PLO hypocritically said they approve of just as the CCP government hypocritically disapproves of any action taken against Fakestinian terrorists in the name of “human rights.”

    And why should we care if Russia’s election is illegitimate? It’s certainly as legitimate as the Ukraine’s. There are very few democracies in the world. There are almost 200 countries in the world and they are mostly despotisms to one degree or another. Should we invade all of them? Should we invade ourselves? 😀

    Russia is only a threat to us because we keep pushing it into a corner.

    Iran and it’s Jihadist proxies and allies, chief among them Hamas and Hezbollah are a threat to us because it’s who and what they are to be a threat to us. Their raison d’etre is to wipe out Israel and then slaughter or subjugate everybody else. They are the biggest threat in the world and we should keep pushing Russia into alliance with them?

    Russia is a nuclear power. Is that crazy or what?

  7. I’m sure Russia’s election was totally legitimate. Leave it to Putin and his sycophants to project Russia’s behavior onto Ukraine. Putin frequently interferes in Europe’s elections; Moldova, Slovakia etc. In any case, even if 85% of Russians actually do support Putin, which is highly doubtful, Gazans support hamas. That doesn’t make hamas legitimate.

  8. How many thousands of Ukrainian civilians has Russia killed. And Russia started the war.
    “Over the three days of the Ukrainian operation, Ukraine killed 11 civilians using drones and rockets and injured another 82, including nine critically. One election official counted among the dead, as did a thirteen year old girl (her father was seriously injured when their car was hit by a drone strike).”

  9. Where’s the concern for civilians, Mr. Biden?

    “Over the three days of the Ukrainian operation, Ukraine killed 11 civilians using drones and rockets and injured another 82, including nine critically. One election official counted among the dead, as did a thirteen year old girl (her father was seriously injured when their car was hit by a drone strike).”

  10. Ukraine killed 11 civilians using drones and rockets and injured another 82, including nine critically. One election official counted among the dead, as did a thirteen year old girl (her father was seriously injured when their car was hit by a drone strike).

    Ukraine launched hundreds of drones fired at targets inside Russia, some aimed at Moscow and others at St. Petersburg, mainly at power plants and some airfields including Domodedovo in Moscow. Domodedovo, located south of Moscow, is the second busiest airport in Russia after Moscow’s main international terminal, Sheremetyevo.

    And how many non-combatants died in those attacks? Biden doesn’t care.