Russia's alternative internet not a 'shut-off' but survival exercise
Andrew Korybko

Editor's Note: Andrew Korybko is a Moscow-based American political analyst. The article reflects the author's opinions and not necessarily the views of CGTN.

Foreign media is misportraying Russia's recent internet test as having supposedly shut off its people's access to the internet, though that isn't what happened. The authorities were actually staging a technological survival exercise to ensure that the country could have an alternative internet when a hostile power attempted to cut them off from the system. 

The test was carried out in phases and users didn't report any problems, such as not being able to use Facebook, Wikipedia or Amazon, thus all indications suggest that it was a success.

Contrary to speculations, Russia has no intention to isolate itself from the international online community. Rather, its people and the economy in which they work are as plugged into the web as any other developed country. 

The authorities have been doing their utmost to protect them from any hybrid warfare that could throw the country into chaos by disconnecting it for an indefinite period of time. This is a very real threat since most of the internet infrastructure is outside Russian borders and beyond its control.

It would be irresponsible for any country involved in tensions with a technological superpower, such as the U.S. which incidentally hosts most of the internet infrastructure, to not engage in contingency planning for a worst-case scenario or even comparatively more benign situations, such as a series of accidents that indefinitely render transoceanic submarine communications cables inoperable. 

It's difficult to imagine the consequences if internet-connected power grids suddenly went offline without any alternative means to reboot them.

Green lights illuminate cable terminals on the Sberbank and SberCloud Christofari supercomputer during an event to mark its launch into commercial operation inside the Sberbank PJSC data processing center (DPC) at the Skolkovo Innovation Center, Moscow, Russia, December 16, 2019. /Bloomberg Photo

Green lights illuminate cable terminals on the Sberbank and SberCloud Christofari supercomputer during an event to mark its launch into commercial operation inside the Sberbank PJSC data processing center (DPC) at the Skolkovo Innovation Center, Moscow, Russia, December 16, 2019. /Bloomberg Photo

Therein lays the strategic intention behind Russia's recent internet test. The guiding concept was to prove that the country's internal internet capabilities could suffice in ensuring the continuation of critical power, communication, economic and other infrastructures in such crisis scenarios. It's every nation's responsibility to protect their people from these modern threats, and each state has the sovereign right to do so when it is necessary.

Other examples of the applicability of this exercise include the efforts to contain the spread of a global virus that infected the world's internet infrastructure. Russia, or any other country with these technological capabilities for that matter, could disconnect itself as a precautionary move. 

Another variation of this scenario could be the U.S. disconnecting a state suspected of covering up an online viral outbreak that could potentially spread worldwide if it isn't stopped soon enough.

It doesn't matter in this case if that state is really suffering such a problem or not (or at least not to the extent that is suspected) since the pretext alone could be abused for strategic reasons to result in the same outcome of cutting the targeted state from the global internet for an indefinite period of time. 

As humanity becomes more dependent on the internet, especially in the era of the Internet of Things, the weaponized shut-off of a country's online services by the U.S. could be utterly devastating and even deadly.

In fact, one can even say that the U.S.' ability to do so amounts to a super-weapon of sorts because no other country has such capabilities on a global scale. Perhaps the only thing preventing it from wantonly wielding this super-weapon at will is the possibility that the U.S. will immediately be suspected and its target could respond kinetically, including through the use of nuclear weapons if they fear that such a cyber attack is intended to precede a conventional or nuclear strike.

Therefore, it can be argued that the carrying out of such internet survival exercises is beneficial for world peace because it reduces the odds that an accidental disruption of their online connectivity per the submarine communications cables scenario could be misinterpreted as an act of war by whoever their primary rival is at the time.

With that in mind, it would be beneficial if all leading countries with the technological capabilities could follow Russia's lead and begin testing their infrastructure's resilience to this hybrid war scenario just in case.

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