Political troublemaking in shadows the ‘cause’
Russian nationalists help fund battles in Europe against Western influence
MELNIK, Czech Republic — Working at his computer, as he does most weekends, on an anti-Western diatribe for a Czech website, Ladislav Kasuka was not sure what to make of the messages that began popping up on his Facebook page, offering him money to organize street protests.
“Do you need help?” read the first message, written in Russian, from a person he did not know. This was followed, in a mix of Russian and garbled Czech, by gushing encouragement for street demonstrations and increasingly specific offers of cash.
An initial payment of $368 was offered for Kasuka, a penniless Czech Stalinist, to buy flags and other paraphernalia for a protest rally in Prague, the Czech capital, against the NATO alliance and the pro-Western government in Ukraine. Later, he was offered $558 to buy a video camera, film the action and post the video online. Other small sums were also proposed.
“It was all a bit unusual, so I was surprised,” Kasuka recalled in a recent interview at a shopping mall north of Prague where he works on security
and maintenance.
He decided the cash “was for a good cause” — halting the spread of NATO and capitalist Western ways into the formerly communist lands of Eastern Europe — so he accepted.
The strange relationship that followed, consisting of passionate social media exchanges about politics and a total of 1,500 euros in cash transfers, was one of many forged across Eastern and Central Europe in summer 2014. They were part of a frenetic, though often clumsy, influence campaign financed from Moscow and directed by Alexander Usovsky, a Belarus-born writer, Russiannationalist agitator and ideological hired gun in a shadowy battle for hearts and minds between Russia and the West.
Compared with Russia’s supposed meddling in the recent presidential elections in France and the United States, the activities of Kasuka and those like him are of little consequence. He belongs firmly to the fringe of Czech politics, and has never aspired to any higher office than local councilor in Melnik, the town north of Prague where he lives with his girlfriend in a graffiti-smeared housing block.
Kasuka’s collaboration with Usovsky first came to light in a cache of emails, Facebook messages and other data pilfered by Ukrainian hackers from Usovsky’s computer. It provides a rare ground-level view of a particularly murky aspect of Russia’s influence strategy: freelance activists who promote its agenda abroad, but get their backing from Russian tycoons and others close to the Kremlin, not the Russian state itself.
Usovsky’s focus was on marginal political players in the Czech Republic, Hungary, Poland and Slovakia, and his efforts mostly fell flat. The protests organized by Kasuka and others attracted only handfuls of people. Pro-Russian websites that Usovsky helped to set up all fizzled. A Polish politician he was in touch with, Mateusz Piskorski, was arrested last year on suspicion of spying for Russia.
None of that seemed to deter Usovsky, who was still pitching wild plans and detailed budgets to potential backers in Moscow early this year.
His communications offer a revealing glimpse into Russian thinking, ambitions and frustrations. His dealings with the office of Konstantin Malofeev, a nationalist billionaire who was hit with sanctions by the United States over his alleged support for proRussian rebels in eastern Ukraine, are especially notable.
After Usovsky managed to orchestrate only a few tiny demonstrations in Prague, Warsaw and other cities, an assistant to Malofeev demanded in October 2014 that Usovsky produce “a clear, concrete and realistic plan for the coming to power of proRussian forces.”
Malofeev declined to be interviewed, and his spokeswoman, Nadezhda Novoselova, said the billionaire and his staff had nothing to do with Usovsky.
Reports that Russia used cyberattacks and disinformation to meddle in the U.S. election have persuaded many that Moscow runs a sophisticated influence machine. But interviews with several of Usovsky’s collaborators, and the contents of his hacked computer, suggest that it was at times a more shambolic affair, hampered by money squabbles, intramural rivalries and absurdly distorted views of how politics works outside Russia.
Jakub Janda, deputy director of European Values, a Westernfinanced research group in Prague that has tracked Russian influence campaigns, said that Usovsky seemed so far out of touch with reality that he might even be “a decoy” meant to make people say, “Look, this whole Russia threat thing is just not serious.”
Others, though, see Usovsky as evidence of Russia’s mastery of plausible deniability and its willingness to bet on opportunists, no matter how slim their chances of success.
Usovsky “is a good case study in Russian methods,” said Daniel Milo, a former official of the Slovakian Interior Ministry who is now an expert on extremism at Globsec, a research group in Bratislava, the Slovak capital. “He is a small cog in a big industry,” Milo said. “There may be dozens more.”
Usovsky declined to be interviewed for this article without being paid. But in response to emailed questions, he confirmed that his computer had been hacked, and he did not dispute the authenticity of the leaked messages.
A resident of Vitebsk, near the Russian border with Belarus, Usovsky started his operation in 2014, riding a wave of nationalist fervor in Moscow after the annexation of Crimea and the widespread belief among Russia’s political and business elite that united European backing for sanctions against Russia could be quickly dissolved.
He set up a network of websites in various languages to promote Slavic unity, rented an office in Bratislava and established a sham foundation nominally dedicated to promoting culture.
Asked by email how much money he had received from sponsors in Moscow, Usovsky initially denied receiving any. Then, when he was sent a copy of a message he had written in October 2014 detailing 100,000 euros he received to finance the “preparatory stage” of his work in Eastern Europe, he stopped responding to inquiries.
Other messages taken from his computer by hackers suggest that the money came from Malofeev. Usovsky’s assistant badgered Malofeev’s assistant for hundreds of thousands more euros in late 2014 and 2015, to finance pro-Russian candidates in Polish elections.
Though he never even came close to bringing any pro-Russian groups to power, Usovsky was able to identify partners in Eastern and Central Europe ready to accept his help.
He also showed a grasp of the internet’s power to amplify fringe voices and make thinly attended demonstrations seem like major dramas. He worked closely with state-controlled Russian news outlets to ensure that the activities of his Czech, Slovak and Polish collaborators received extensive coverage.