Russia is continuing efforts to influence democratic processes in neighbouring countries. After its unsuccessful attempt to shape the outcome of recent parliamentary elections in Moldova, attention has reportedly shifted to the upcoming elections in Armenia, with activity beginning well in advance.
According to analysts, Russian-linked information campaigns were active throughout the winter, promoting narratives critical of Armenia’s current leadership and questioning the country’s growing cooperation with the European Union. With the 7 June parliamentary elections approaching, these efforts have intensified, with what observers describe as a coordinated foreign information manipulation and interference (FIMI) campaign.
Lessons from Moldova
Just as in Moldova, the Kremlin is using its FIMI machine to threaten, deceive and influence the Armenian population, interfering in a sovereign state’s democratic process. It does so through a number of well-known techniques and tactics:
The ‘EU Interference” allegations
This “election interference” narrative is unfolding against a backdrop of shifting geopolitical conditions that have made the Kremlin’s position uncomfortable and may have provided additional motivation for Moscow to step up its information manipulation against the EU in Armenia.
This might explain the Russian Foreign Ministry’s repeated efforts to reinforce the narrative to the alleged ‘EU interference in Armenia’. While the EU and Armenia have started long-term cooperation on countering hybrid threats in the framework of their Political and Security Dialogue, Russia opportunistically dismisses and distorts the EU-Armenia partnership through official channels(opens in a new tab), supported by coordinated amplification and multilingual cross-platform posting from aligned(opens in a new tab) channels(opens in a new tab) such as Rybar(opens in a new tab) and the(opens in a new tab) Pravda(opens in a new tab) network(opens in a new tab), along with some other actors in the region close to the Kremlin propaganda efforts.
Russia’s response to democracy
On 4 March 2026 and again on 1 April, in response to Armenia and EU cooperation to counter hybrid threats, Russian Foreign Ministry Spokesperson Maria Zakharova offered(opens in a new tab) to send a Russian “rapid response task force” to Armenia, claiming(opens in a new tab) that Russia – “contrary to the EU” – has the necessary expertise(opens in a new tab) in electoral procedures to assist the country. And indeed, Russia has significant electoral expertise when it comes to poison political opponents, close independent media, intimidate civil society organisations, shut down social media platforms, manipulate information, and ban international election observation missions. Finally, in what sounded like a warning, she reminded Armenia is member of the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS), and not a member of the EU.
Armenians alone should choose their country’s future and not put before a choice framed by Moscow. They deserve to make their choice based on organic information, free from manipulation, intimidation and fear.

Politics Editor