Moscow: Russian President Vladimir Putin has approved a revised version of Russia's national security strategy that envisages symmetrical and asymmetrical measures in response to foreign states' unfriendly actions that threaten the sovereignty and territorial integrity of Russia.
Putin signed a decree approving the strategy on Friday, according to the Kremlin website. The 44-page document was published Saturday on a government website and outlined Russia's national interests and priorities. It stated that actions of some countries are aimed at instigating disintegration processes in the Commonwealth of Independent States in order to destroy Russia's ties with its traditional allies," and claimed that "a number of states call Russia a threat and even a military adversary.
Russia remains committed to using political and diplomatic means to resolve international and national conflicts, the document read. At the same time, Moscow considers it legitimate to take symmetrical and asymmetric measures to thwart and prevent unfriendly actions" by foreign states that "threaten the sovereignty and territorial integrity of the Russian Federation.
Russia's relations with the U.S. and its allies have been at post-Cold War lows over Moscow's 2014 annexation of Ukraine's Crimean Peninsula, accusations of Russian interference in U.S. elections, hacking attacks and other events. Earlier this week Putin described as a provocation a June 23 incident in the Black Sea in which Russia said one of its warships fired warning shots and a warplane dropped bombs in the path of Britain's HMS Defender to force it from an area near Crimea that Moscow claims as its territorial waters.