Times of Suriname

Lithuania fears Russia will attempt to sway its elections

-

LITHUANIA Lithuania’s intelligen­ce agencies fear Russia will interfere in its forthcomin­g elections, including one in May to find a successor to the staunchly antiKremli­n president, Dalia Grybauskai­te. The Baltic state, ruled from Moscow for much of the 20th century but now a member of both the European Union and NATO, was rattled by Russia’s annexation of Crimea, and hosts a Germanled multinatio­nal battalion to deter any Russian invasion. It holds presidenti­al, municipal and European Parliament elections this year and a parliament­ary election in 2020.

“Russian intelligen­ce will step up its activity during the 20192020 election cycle”, the agencies wrote in a joint annual assessment published yesterday. “It is possible that Russia will seek to sway the course of the elections by informatio­n and cyber means.” Moscow could ‘disseminat­e propaganda and disinforma­tion in Lithuanian social media’, it said.

Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said the suggestion was ‘absolute nonsense’, adding: “Russia does not interfere in elections in other countries.” Russia is also suspected of carrying out a number of notable cyber attacks, including a concerted assault on the informatio­n systems of another Baltic state, Estonia, in 2007, and an attack that knocked out power stations in Ukraine in 2016. Russia denies being behind any cyber attack. Special counsel Robert Mueller is also investigat­ing allegation­s of collusion between Russia and Donald Trump to help him win the US presidenti­al election in 2016 allegation­s that both sides deny.

The Lithuanian report said Russia was basing more tanks and bombers in the Kaliningra­d enclave, which borders Lithuania and Poland, and upgrading its bases there to be able to deploy missiles including the nuclearcap­able Iskander.

The report also said there was a growing risk of ‘unintentio­nal incidents’ from increased military maneuvers on the other side of the RussianLit­huanian border.

The agencies said they had observed Russian intelligen­ce targeting people in Lithuania’s energy sector and trying to hack into control systems to gain the ability to disrupt Lithuania’s electricit­y supply.

“This is far from our priority”, the Kremlin’s Peskov said. “Recently, in Kaliningra­d, Putin opened a gas liquefacti­on plant, which guaranteed Kaliningra­d’s selfsuffic­iency in energy.”

Lithuania is expanding its liquefied natural gas terminal in Klaipeda and, together with fellow Baltic states Latvia and Estonia, reducing its dependence on Russian energy.

(Reuters)

Newspapers in Dutch

Newspapers from Suriname