Anton Gerashchenko@Gerashchenko_en
❗️Soon, virtually any holder of a Russian passport abroad could become a pretext for Russian military intervention.
The EU should sharply restrict entry for Russian citizens. This is no longer about comfort or "openness" - it is a matter of security.
The formula should be simple: minimal entry by default, maximum checks, and exceptions only for genuinely justified humanitarian and family cases. This is not "Russophobia," but basic self-defense.
The Russian government has officially submitted draft law No. 1181659-8 to the State Duma, allowing the extraterritorial use of the Russian Armed Forces by presidential decision to "protect" Russians detained, held, or prosecuted abroad under decisions of foreign or international courts whose jurisdiction Moscow does not recognize.
This is groundwork for a pretext. Russia’s draft law should not be read as concern for "its people" but as an attempt to pre-legitimize the use of force abroad.
The Kremlin is systematically building a legal construct:
◾️ first - rejecting the jurisdiction of foreign and international courts (December 2025);
◾️ then - banning the extradition of those who fought for Russia (March 2026);
◾️ now - a separate provision allowing the use of the military to "protect" detained Russians abroad.
Among the most notable current cases are Butyagin (now in Poland) and Torden (in Finland).
For the Kremlin, almost anyone could become a future "rescue" target (they may also draw inspiration from the Maduro precedent), especially if their case is useful for propaganda.
The core objective is to frame virtually anything as an "attack on Russia." If a Russian citizen is detained by a European state for any reason - war crimes, occupation-related activities, sabotage, or cooperation with proxy networks - the Kremlin seeks to portray this not as law enforcement, but as the "persecution of Russian citizens."
This is the key mechanism: to turn a criminal arrest into a political incident, and a political incident into grounds for escalation.
The danger is that the material for such cases already exists in Europe.
Russian nationals linked to Wagner, proxy structures, sabotage activities, recruitment, and covert operations are already present across Europe. Some are already involved in investigations and court cases. Others may be used in future provocations.
This means the Kremlin does not even need to wait for an accidental incident - potential figures who can later be framed as "victims of persecution" already exist.
The scheme is simple and dangerous: first - a provocation, sabotage, or other subversive act; then - the arrest of the operative in Europe; followed by a media campaign about a "hunt for Russians"; and finally - invoking the new legal provision as grounds for "protection."
This is how not a diplomatic dispute, but a controlled pretext for special operations, abductions, coercive pressure, or broader escalation is created.
The conclusion is stark: this draft law is not about protecting citizens - it is about instrumentalizing them.
The Kremlin wants any arrest of a Russian abroad - whether an archaeologist, militant, saboteur, recruiter, mercenary, or simply a Russian citizen dissatisfied with European laws - to be repackaged, when needed, into a casus belli.