Russia accuses US of preparing revolution in Moldova
Russia on Tuesday accused the United States of
preparing a "revolution" in the ex-Soviet state of Moldova ahead of a
November election, blaming Washington for similar interference in Belarus and
Kyrgyzstan.
"Now we are seeing clearly that the Americans
are preparing a 'revolution' scenario in Moldova", where pro-Moscow
President Igor Dodon is seeking re-election in the November ballot, the head of
Russia's Foreign Intelligence Service (SVR) Sergei Naryshkin said in a
statement.
Russia has been repeatedly accused of seeking to
disrupt the 2016 US elections that brought Donald Trump to power. The US said
Monday six members of Russian military intelligence agency had been charged
over global cyber attacks, including an attempt to disrupt the 2017 French
elections.
In a rare public statement, Naryshkin, who heads the
service that inherited the foreign espionage work of the KGB, accused the US of
"crude" attempts to influence the post-election situation in recent
weeks in post-Soviet states "friendly to Moscow" like Belarus and
Kyrgyzstan.
In Belarus, President Alexander Lukashenko has been
under intense pressure from street protests since August elections he claimed
to have won but the opposition says were rigged.
And in Kyrgyzstan, pro-Moscow president Sooronbay
Jeenbekov stepped down last week following street protests that erupted in the
wake of disputed parliamentary polls.
Despite its small size, politics in Moldova have
long been hugely sensitive, with the country divided between those favouring
closer ties with the EU, in particular its neighbour NATO member Romania, and
those who cling to Soviet-era relations with Moscow.
Naryshkin alleged that Washington believed that
Dodon was on course to win the polls and was inciting the Moldova opposition to
take to the streets after the vote to denounce its validity and demand a
re-run.
He alleged that fake news was being placed in local
media and US officials were persuading Moldovan security forces to change sides
in the event of protests.
"Such a concept as the sovereignty of a foreign
state clearly fades into the background," he was quoted as saying.
Dodon won the presidency in 2016 after beating a
pro-European rival and will be seeking a new four-year mandate in the November
1 polls.



