Cremlin “beson” The US wants regime change in Russia

Kremlin leaders believe the United States wants the change of the regime in Russia ʹ a concern that fuels mounting tensions between the two enemies of the Cold War, a report of American defence intelligence said. According to this report, Moscow has “deep distrust of US efforts to promote democracy in [...]
Kremlin leaders believe the United States wants the change of the regime in Russia ʹ a concern that fuels mounting tensions between the two enemies of the Cold War, a report of American defence intelligence said.
According to this report, Moscow has “deep distrust of US efforts to promote democracy worldwide”, while perceives it as the US “fusts to impose a global value system”.
Despite Russia's successful military modernisation since the Cold War, Moscow worries that US efforts to detect an acceptable set of international standards threaten the foundations of the Kremlin's power”, the US Defence Intelligence Agency report says.
“Kremlin is convinced that the US is opening the foundations for changing the regime in Russia, a conviction further strengthened by events in Ukraine”, the report says, noting that Russian President Vladimir Putin's government has accused the US of inciting the popular uprising in Ukraine. In 2014, this uprising has led to the collapse of Ukraine's pro-Russian president, Viktor Yanuovich.
Russia has responded with the illegal complaint of the Ukrainian Crime Peninsula and with the support of a separatist movement east of Ukraine, what has led to Decreasing US Relations and its NATO allies.
The report does not envision any new ideological global war, similar to the Cold War, but warns that Moscow “aims to exploit its military to promote stability, according to its terms”.
The 116-page document offers a comprehensive assessment of Russia's military power, saying the Kremlin has successfully rebuilt the army, navy and air force since the collapse of the Soviet Union.
Report presents Russia's intervention in Syria Since 2015 as a success in “changing all the dynamics of conflict, strengthening the regime of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, and ensuring that no solution to the conflict is possible without the reconciliation of Moscow”.
In addition to strengthening Assad, the report says Russian intervention in Syria aims to eliminate extremist Islamic elements, originating in the territory of the former Soviet Union.
“As Russia continues to be modernised militarily, within the next decade a safer and more capable Russia could appear”, said intelligence agency director Vincent Stewart, in the introduction of the report.
The report is prepared before Donald Trump's election president of the United States.












