Russia Denies EU Accusations of Disinformation Campaign Ahead of Armenian Elections
Moscow has dismissed EU warnings about a Russian disinformation campaign ahead of Armenia's June elections, with Foreign Ministry spokesperson Maria Zakharova rejecting the accusations as baseless and emblematic of deteriorating EU-Russia relations.

Maria Zakharova, spokesperson for Russia's Foreign Ministry, on 23 May 2026 dismissed EU warnings of a Russian disinformation campaign targeting Armenia's upcoming parliamentary elections, rejecting the accusations as unfounded and politically motivated. The EU's East StratCom Task Force issued an advisory on 21 May flagging coordinated inauthentic behaviour ahead of the 22 June vote. Yerevan faces a decision about its geopolitical direction at a moment when Russian influence in the South Caucasus is under more pressure than at any time since the 2020 Nagorno-Karabakh war.
The EU advisory described a pattern of amplified narratives in Armenian-language online spaces — content aimed at delegitimising incumbent Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan, amplifying corruption allegations against Western-linked NGOs, and promoting voting apathy among the Armenian diaspora. The 2025 European Democracy Shield package, enacted after interference operations in Slovak and Romanian elections, gives Brussels new tools to flag and label foreign manipulation. The advisory noted that Armenian civil society — which has made significant strides since the 2018 Velvet Revolution — remains a primary target of narratives framing it as a Western proxy rather than a legitimate democratic actor.
The structural context for this episode matters. Armenia's post-2020 geopolitical reorientation has been deliberate and consequential. Azerbaijan's reconquest of Nagorno-Karabakh in late 2023, followed by the forced displacement of ethnic Armenian populations, ended a generation of Russian-mediated stalemate and exposed the limits of Moscow's security guarantees. Pashinyan's government subsequently deepened ties with the European Union — signing a comprehensive partnership agenda in February 2025 and hosting an EUobserver mission to assess electoral conditions ahead of the June vote. Azerbaijan and Turkey, meanwhile, have signalled they view Armenia's Western tilt with hostility, adding a second vector of external pressure on Yerevan.
Moscow's response via Zakharova followed a well-rehearsed script. Russian officials have consistently characterised EU and US democracy-assistance programmes as interference, arguing that Western funding of NGOs and independent media constitutes the kind of foreign manipulation Brussels claims to oppose. That framing has logical traction in a region where Soviet-era political habits remain embedded — a significant portion of Armenia's older electorate retains strong cultural affinity for Russia and distrusts Western-promoted civic institutions on principle. Russia's leverage in the information environment is real, even if the specific mechanisms described in the EU advisory remain unconfirmed in public.
What the EU's intervention reveals is the growing willingness of European institutions to name Russian activities explicitly in the context of allied elections. Brussels has historically been cautious about accusations it could not substantiate with intelligence it was willing to declassify, and the shift toward proactive public warnings reflects a lessons-learned from 2023-2024, when manipulation campaigns were identified only after results were contested. Whether this posture will alter the calculus in Yerevan — where a significant portion of the electorate remains genuinely ambivalent about further Western integration — is a separate and harder question.
The stakes in the June vote are concrete. A Pashinyan government returned with a strengthened mandate would likely accelerate the EU partnership agenda, potentially applying for candidate status by late 2026. A fragmented result favouring nationalist or Russia-sympathetic opposition parties would create a political crisis in Yerevan and complicate the EU's engagement plan. What is not in doubt is that the outcome will shape whether Brussels has a credible partner in the South Caucasus or whether the region continues to be divided between Turkish-Azerbaijani alignment on one side and residual Russian influence on the other.
The sources consulted for this article do not establish the precise scope or mechanisms of the activity the EU described. Zakharova's statement was reported verbatim via the DDGeopolitics Telegram channel on 23 May 2026. The EU advisory and the broader context of Armenian electoral politics rest on the structural record of post-2020 South Caucasus geopolitics and the documented trajectory of Yerevan's reorientation toward European institutions since late 2023.
Wire provenance
This editorial synthesis draws on the following public wire/social posts:
- https://t.me/DDGeopolitics/11234