A subversive attack or subversive warfare is a strategy used to destroy or overthrow an established authority from within, rather than through direct military force. Instead of using tanks or missiles, subversion uses a country’s own people, institutions, and social divisions against itself.
Core Objectives
The primary goal is to erode the political, social, or economic stability of a nation until it either collapses or becomes so weak that it can be easily controlled or replaced by a regime favorable to the attacker.
Key Tactics
Psychological Warfare & Disinformation: Spreading fake news, rumors, or biased narratives to create fear, confusion, and deep distrust in the government and public institutions.
Infiltration: Placing agents or sympathizers in influential sectors—such as the media, education, or government—to subtly shift public opinion and policy over time.
Agitation: Encouraging and funding social unrest, protests, or strikes to make the country appear ungovernable.
Economic Sabotage: Undermining a nation’s currency, trade, or critical infrastructure to create hardship and public desperation.
Cyber Warfare: Disrupting digital systems to leak sensitive data or interfere with essential services like power grids or voting systems.
The Four Stages of Subversion
Based on historical models (like Yuri Bezmenov’s), this process typically follows four phases:
Demoralization: A long-term process (15–20 years) of changing a population's values so they can no longer distinguish truth from lies.
Destabilization: Weakening the economy, defense, and foreign relations over a few years.
Crisis: A short period of chaos (like a riot or economic crash) that brings the nation to its knees.
Normalization: The attacker establishes a "new normal" under their influence, often under the guise of "restoring order."
In short: Conventional war tries to break a nation; subversive war makes a nation break itself.

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