Trouble is, the attack never happened. It was just a teenager’s tall tale, police quickly concluded.
German officials say the controversy -- known as the “Lisa
Affair” -- was ginned up by President Vladimir Putin’s propaganda
machine to undermine Merkel in the run up to last month’s regional
elections, which resulted in stinging losses for her party. The worry
now in Berlin, Brussels and beyond is that with Britain poised for a
historic referendum on European Union membership and national votes in
France and Germany next year, Putin will intensify efforts to divide the
28-member bloc.
“Russia is starting to weaponize electoral processes in
Europe,” said Joerg Forbrig, senior program director of the German
Marshall Fund of the U.S. in Berlin. “The Lisa Affair was a real
eye-opener.”
Kremlin Reach
The mobilization in Germany shows a reach by the Kremlin into the political workings of Europe’s largest economy that goes far beyond the frequent policy hazings meted out by its English-language media arms, RT television and the Sputnik news service.
Putin’s longtime foreign minister, Sergei Lavrov, broke with
diplomatic convention in late January to accuse Germany of a cover-up
in the Lisa Affair. That outraged Merkel’s government, prompted Lavrov’s
counterpart to issue a rare personal rebuke and led the chancellery to
order the BND spy agency to probe the Kremlin’s role in the scandal, the
officials in Berlin said.
Germany already has a special unit tasked with countering
Russian disinformation and it works on the assumption that Putin’s goal
is to topple EU-friendly governments and replace them with pro-Russia
parties, regardless of where they fall on the political spectrum,
according to the officials.
Funding Le Pen
In France, this support is financial. Marine Le Pen’s
far-right National Front has received funding from a Russian lender and
is seeking 25 million euros from others to bankroll its 2017
presidential campaign.
Le
Pen, Putin’s most prominent political supporter in western Europe, is
currently polling second and though her party failed to win a single
region in December elections, it received 6.8 million votes, the most
ever.
That shows the continent is moving toward a political
realignment more favorable to the Kremlin, according to Konstantin
Malofeev, a Russian multimillionaire whose former employees played major
roles in Ukraine’s rebellion and who now advocates for closer ties with
Europe’s far right.
“This is the start of the end of the system,” Malofeev said in Moscow.
Brexit, Nexit
The next major arena for Russian meddling is the U.K., which
will hold a referendum in June on whether to stay in the EU. And with
the vote too close to call, the Russian embassy in London took the
unusual step of questioning the competence of its host nation’s elected
leader.
After Prime Minister David Cameron defended membership in
the bloc by noting it allowed Britain to lead Europe’s response to
Putin’s aggression in Ukraine, the embassy shot back via Twitter, saying
dragging Russia into the Brexit debate suggested Cameron “cannot win
the argument on its merits.”
A major Brexit cheerleader is Sputnik, which warned recently that Britain would suffer mass
sex attacks like the ones in Cologne that preceded the Lisa Affair
if it doesn’t leave the EU, citing Nigel Farage, a Putin admirer who
heads the U.K. Independence Party.The Kremlin mouthpiece took a similar tack in the Netherlands, where voters rejected an EU treaty with Ukraine. Sputnik hailed the defeat as a step toward “ Nexit,” in a story based on one interview with a regional Dutch reporter.
Soviet Berlin
Putin’s “active propaganda campaign” prompted Britain,
Denmark, Lithuania and Estonia to urge the EU to take more robust
countermeasures, resulting in the creation of the East StratCom Task
Force, which views the Lisa operation as punishment for Merkel’s success
in uniting Europe on sanctions, a diplomat close to the group said.
The Kremlin and the Foreign Ministry have said that Russia’s only
interest in the affair is in protecting the rights of ethnic Russians
abroad. A lawyer for Lisa’s family didn’t respond to requests for
comment.
By all accounts, Lisa, whose family is from the former
Soviet quarter of Berlin, disappeared Jan. 11 and resurfaced 30 hours
later. The Kremlin’s main broadcaster, Channel One, which is viewed by
many of Germany’s 4 million Russian speakers, said she told her parents
she’d been abducted and raped on her way to school by three foreigners.
But investigators later determined she’d spent the night with a male
friend because of problems at school.
By that time, the political damage to Merkel had been done.The ‘Spark’
“All it took was a spark for things to spill over,” said
Heinrich Groth, the chairman of a lobby group for Russian Germans who
helped organize the January protests that were attended by about 30,000
people.
Groth said that he’s already been approached about joining
forces with Pegida, an anti-immigrant movement that has drawn thousands
to its rallies since it emerged last year, and that his views are
similar to those of the anti-euro Alternative for Germany, or AfD. The
arrival of more than 1 million refugees and the attacks in Cologne and
other cities on New Year’s Eve have helped push Merkel’s approval rating
to its lowest level in more than four years.
An official in Merkel’s Christian Democratic Union said almost all of the ruling coalition’s Russian-German voters have defected to AfD, which also appears to be getting funds from Russia, according to Alina Polyakova at the Dinu Patriciu Eurasia Center at the Atlantic Council in Washington. AfD, while still relatively small, posted its best showing yet in three state elections last month.
AfD spokesman Christian Lueth said by e-mail that his party “adheres strictly” to Germany’s political-financing law and takes no money from abroad.
But such assurances do little to assuage suspicions of Putin’s intentions among the country’s leadership.
Juergen Hardt, foreign policy spokesman in the Bundestag for
the CDU/CSU alliance, said Putin may try to cloak his activities, but
it’s clear he’d rather see a fractured Europe than a united one -- and
the road to this goal runs through Berlin.
“The underlying logic is that when you discredit Chancellor Merkel and Germany, you also weaken Europe,” Hardt said.
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