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Shades of color

Harnessing protest potential: Russian strategic culture and the colored revolutions

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ABSTRACT

The perceived threat posed to Russia from so-called colored revolutions–popular uprisings attributed by Moscow to malign sponsorship by external forces–has become a central theme in Russian security discourse. This article analyses how colored revolutions came to be characterized as a specific threat to national security and how they continue to shape Russian thinking about the changing character of conflict. It explores Russian perceptions of the threat from colored revolutions, using the concept of strategic culture as a framework to analyze these perceptions through an analysis of the Russian military theoretical literature and strategic documents. The article establishes that concerns about non-military means of destabilization reflect continuities in Russian strategic assumptions about adversaries and how they seek to achieve their national objectives. It also reveals the perpetuation of specific narratives about the country’s vulnerability to foreign interference.

This article is part of the following collections:
Bernard Brodie Prize

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.

Notes on contributor

Tracey German is a Reader in the Defence Studies Department at King’s College, London. Her research focuses on Russian foreign and security policies, focusing on Russia’s use of force in the post-Soviet space and Russian views of the changing character of conflict, as well as conflict and security in the Caucasus and Caspian regions.

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