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2.65 MB

Extraction Summary

10
People
12
Organizations
11
Locations
3
Events
4
Relationships
4
Quotes

Document Information

Type: Report / policy paper (excerpt from house oversight committee production)
File Size: 2.65 MB
Summary

This document is page 42 of a report titled 'BREAKING DOWN DEMOCRACY' (Bates stamped HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_019276). It details Russian geopolitical strategies to influence European politics by cultivating ties with both far-right and far-left parties in countries like Hungary, Slovakia, and Bulgaria. It specifically mentions a $10.8 billion Russian loan to Hungary for a nuclear plant, alleged funding of environmental protests in Bulgaria to protect Russian gas interests, and Putin's 'nonideological' alliance building with regimes like Iran, Syria, and Venezuela. Note: While requested as an 'Epstein-related document,' this text discusses international relations and does not mention Jeffrey Epstein or Ghislaine Maxwell.

People (10)

Name Role Context
Gábor Vona Chairman of Jobbik
Embraced Eurasianism; speculated Hungary could bridge Europe and Asia.
Viktor Orbán Prime Minister of Hungary (Fidesz leader)
Cautious in public statements but identified Russia as a model for future political development.
Vladimir Putin President of Russia
Mentioned regarding Russia's alliances formed on a nonideological basis.
Marian Kotleba Leader of People's Party—Our Slovakia
Supported Yanukovych's rejection of EU agreement.
Viktor Yanukovych Former President of Ukraine
Fell from power in Feb 2014 after rejecting EU agreement.
Robert Fico Prime Minister of Slovakia
Expressed lack of enthusiasm for EU sanctions on Russia.
Boyko Borisov Prime Minister of Bulgaria
Compelled by protests to cancel Chevron contracts in 2012.
Nigel Farage Former leader of UKIP
Praised Putin for leadership qualities.
Nick Griffin Head of British National Party
Praised Putin for leadership qualities.
Alex Salmond Politician, Scottish National Party
Praised Putin for leadership qualities.

Organizations (12)

Name Type Context
Jobbik
Hungarian far-right party, alleged Russian ally.
Fidesz
Ruling party in Hungary, business partner to Russia.
European Parliament
Investigative body mentioned.
Kremlin
Russian government, financier of loans and alleged campaigns.
People's Party—Our Slovakia
Far-right party in Slovakia.
Chevron
Energy company, contracts cancelled in Bulgaria.
Ataka
Bulgarian far-right party, pro-Russia.
Syriza
Leftist party in Greece.
UKIP
United Kingdom Independence Party.
British National Party
Far-right UK party.
Scottish National Party
Scottish political party.
House Oversight Committee
Origin of document production (via Bates stamp).

Timeline (3 events)

2012
Street protests compelled Bulgaria to cancel Chevron contracts.
Bulgaria
Boyko Borisov Chevron Protesters
2015
Russia provided Hungary with a $10.8 billion loan for Paks nuclear plant.
Hungary
February 2014
Fall of Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych.
Ukraine

Locations (11)

Location Context
Primary subject of geopolitical influence.
Recipient of Russian loans and political influence.
Location of nuclear power plant in Hungary.
Target of Russian political ties.
Mentioned in context of Yanukovych and invasion.
Site of 2012 protests against shale oil.
Viewed as declining power by authoritarians; adversarial relationship with Russia.
Russian ally.
Russian ally.
Russian ally.
Russian ally.

Relationships (4)

Vladimir Putin Political Alliance Viktor Orbán
Orbán identified Russia as a model for global political development.
Vladimir Putin Admiration Nigel Farage
Farage praised Putin for his leadership qualities.
Russia Alleged Financing Jobbik
Allegations that the Kremlin was helping to finance Jobbik.
Russia Business Partnership Fidesz
Described as a business partner in the ruling Fidesz party.

Key Quotes (4)

"Under Putin, Russia has formed its alliances on a strictly nonideological basis."
Source
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Quote #1
"The Hungarian parliament conducted an investigation into allegations that the Kremlin was helping to finance Jobbik."
Source
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Quote #2
"Russia in 2015 provided Hungary with a $10.8 billion loan to expand the Paks nuclear power plant... without competition."
Source
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Quote #3
"The interests that draw these governments together are a common hostility to democratic norms."
Source
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Quote #4

Full Extracted Text

Complete text extracted from the document (5,256 characters)

BREAKING DOWN DEMOCRACY: Goals, Strategies, and Methods of Modern Authoritarians
In some countries, Russia has made progress among both far-right nationalists and more traditional conservative parties. In Hungary, for example, Moscow has a reliable ally in Jobbik and a business partner in the ruling Fidesz party, which has been critical of the EU's economic sanctions.⁴ The Hungarian parliament conducted an investigation into allegations that the Kremlin was helping to finance Jobbik. There were also charges that a Jobbik member of the European Parliament was a Russian agent. Gábor Vona, the chairman of Jobbik, has embraced the idea of Eurasianism and speculated that Hungary could serve as a "bridge" between Europe and Asia.
At the intergovernmental level, Russia in 2015 provided Hungary with a $10.8 billion loan to expand the Paks nuclear power plant, a facility that supplies 40 percent of the country's electricity. The project was to have been put out for open bidding until Hungarian officials abruptly decided to accept the proposal from Russia's state nuclear energy firm—financed by the Kremlin's loan—without competition.⁵ Some believe that the Paks deal is meant to encourage the Fidesz government to continue its support for an EU policy that would be more sympathetic toward Russian interests.⁶ While the Fidesz leader, Prime Minister Viktor Orbán, has been cautious in public statements about Putin and Russia, he did identify Russia as one of several countries with illiberal or authoritarian governments that would provide the models for global political development in the future, as opposed to supposedly declining powers like the United States and the EU's founding members.⁷
The Russian government has also developed friendly ties to parties in Slovakia. Marian Kotleba, leader of the far-right People's Party—Our Slovakia, supported Ukrainian president Viktor Yanukovych in his decision to reject an association agreement with the EU and pursue closer ties with Russia instead—a decision that ultimately led to Yanukovych's fall from power in February 2014. Slovakia's left-leaning populist prime minister, Robert Fico, has publicly expressed his lack of enthusiasm for the EU sanctions imposed on Russia following the invasion of Ukraine.⁸
In other countries, there is evidence that Moscow has bankrolled environmentalist protests against the development of local hydrocarbon resources, which would reduce European dependence on Russian oil and natural gas. In 2012, street protests compelled Bulgaria's prime minister, Boyko Borisov, to cancel contracts with Chevron to explore shale-oil sites in the country. Those who suspect the Kremlin's involvement in the demonstrations point to a €20 million media campaign that was handled by companies with Russian ties, as well as enthusiastic support from Ataka, a far-right political party that is aggressively pro-Russia.⁹
Russia and the right
During the Cold War, the Soviet Union could count on the uncritical support of a network of left-wing parties and personalities in the democratic world. Some were formally communist; others were independent leftists or part of what was called the peace camp, which argued that the West, especially the United States, shared responsibility with the Soviets for the world's political tensions, and therefore chose a path of political neutrality. In the Cold War's later years, a growing collection of business interests encouraged détente between the Soviet Union and the United States due to the economic opportunities it would offer.
Under Putin, Russia has formed its alliances on a strictly nonideological basis. Russia has built close diplomatic ties with Venezuela, governed by a socialist movement; Iran, an authoritarian system under the rule of Shiite Muslim clerics; Syria, a dictatorship with nominally Arab nationalist views; and China, a formally communist regime devoted to state-led capitalism. The interests that draw these governments together are a common hostility to democratic norms, a need for allies to block criticism and sanctions at international bodies, a fear of "color revolutions" and the potential consequences of democracy-promotion projects backed by foreign donors, and an adversarial relationship with the United States.
In its dealings with European political parties or movements, Russia adheres to a similar policy of ideological indifference, focusing instead on those with an interest in disrupting Europe's political establishment and weakening its unity. Thus Putin has courted leftist parties like Syriza, which leads the current government of Greece and opposes austerity measures imposed by the EU. Nigel Farage, former leader of the anti-EU United Kingdom Independence Party (UKIP), and Nick Griffin, head of the far-right British National Party, have both praised Putin for his leadership qualities; but so has Alex Salmond of the Scottish National Party, which seeks Scottish independence within the EU and supports social democratic policies.
For the most part, however, Russia's allies in democratic countries are found on the political right. A Swedish journalist who examined votes in the European Parliament reported that right-leaning Euroskeptic
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