Paul
Goble
Staunton, March 1 – Vladimir Putin
is again teaching Russia to live by lies, 40 years after Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn
warned Russians of the dangers to themselves and others of doing so, a
Ukrainian philosopher argues in an article that leading Russian publications
like “Nezavisimaya gazeta,” Polit.ru and Snob.ru have refused to publish.
On his own blog, Sergii Datsiuk points
out that “the lie in Russia is a means of avoiding necessary changes ... it is
an attempt to shift responsibility for one’s own mistakes to others in order to
whitewash the authorities ... it is dangerous for Russia itself because it
generates hatred with no way out ... [and] it is dangerous for the entire world
because it divides Russia and the rest of the world (blogs.pravda.com.ua/authors/datsuk/53116eef447b1/).
The fact that
Ukrainians like Russians and want to live in peace but Russians dislike
Ukrainians and are aggressive toward them, something confirmed by the actions
of their respective governments and by various polls, he says, is not a natural
or inevitable situation but the result of “Russia’s information war against
Ukraine.”
According to Datsiuk, “to force
Russians to hate the Ukrainian people without the use of lies in Russia would
have been impossible. And [consequently] Russia began to lie and to conduct a
war.” That war consists of several components: trade, information, history, and
technology.
Lying behind Russia’s information
war against Ukraine, he continues, is “the unwillingness of Russians in the
Russian elite to recognize the right of Ukrainians to self-determination and
independence.” But its results would not have been so terrible had there not
been compradore elements within Ukraine like Yanukovich and the Berkut.
But everyone must remember that it
is not just former president Yanukovich and his group who bear responsibility
for the spilling of Ukrainian blood. Also responsible are Vladimir Putin,
Dmitry Medvedev, Sergey Lavrov, Dmitry Kiselyev, Vladimir Zhirinovsky, Sergey
Glazyev and Dmitry Rogozin.
“There are the enemies of Ukraine,”
Datsiuk says, “whose actions led to human victims,” and we can and must recognize
them as such. But they had the
assistance of others in the Russian cultural elite in spreading hatred of
Ukraine and Ukrainians, people llike Mikhail Zadornov, Ivan Okhlobystin, Sergey
Lukyanenko, and Iosif Kobzon.
What is happening in Crimea now is “the
direct continuation of the information war of Russia against Ukraine, a ‘war of
nerves’ which seeks to provoke Ukraine into making a harsh responsible so that
Russia can unleash a full-scale war.” If before the existence of this
information war was a matter for regret, now it has become “mortally dangerous.”
Ukraine may be the target of this
war, Datsiuk says, but Russia is its victim as well. “Ukraine is not Russia.”
And even in the worst times of Yanukovich’s rule, “the lie in Ukraine came from
two sources – Russian television channels ... and pro-regime ones.” Truth defeated them in Ukraine, but in
Russia, the lie swallowed up everything.
One cannot “kill Russia’s lie
against Ukraine without killing the lie in Russia itself,” Datsiuk says.
The Putin regime has updated and
modernized the system Solzhenitsyn decried. By claiming it is concerned about
the defense of the state and the Russian people, the Kremlin hides its own
crimes by spreading lies about other countries and peoples, in this case,
Ukraine and Ukrainians.
That means, Datsiuk says, that “the lie
of the Russian authorities about themselves become less obvious” because it is obscured by the
lies Moscow is telling about everyone else.
As a result,”Russia is becoming the generating of hatred in the world.”
Many countries have resisted this, including the Baltic states, Georgia and now
Ukraine.
“However, hatred in Russia continues to
be generated. The hatred which cannot be transferred to another remains in
Russia, builds up and explodes it from within.
The lie and hatred will destroy Russia if this doesn’t stop.” But can that
happen? Solzhenitsyn’s advice that individuals stop lying clearly isn’t enough.
Public intellectuals must speak out.
Datsiuk says that “Russia needs its own
Maidan where there is no hatred” and where truth can triumph and its people can
think “collectively about their future. “’To Live Not By Lies’ today means not
so much to avoid the individual lie but the collective one, the agitationand
propaganda communicated by the Russian authorities through television news.”
The Internet isn’t enough;
television news is required. But “today there is almost no quality TV news in
Russia.” Instead there is “agitation and
propaganda” which promote “a positive image of Russia and its regime,” says
Russia is surrounded by enemies, and argues that “the Russian empire is heaven
on earth.”
That reflects the rise of the lie to a
new level: the Russian elite is lying to its own people. “This is the Big Lie about the possibility of
an Empire. This is a lie of the Russian
elite to itself in the first instance” because that elite “cannot but know that
the future does not belong to empires or even isolated states but to
trans-national organizations.
But “the Big Lie continues in Russia and
destroys all ideas of the future in which there is no place for the
Empire. The vacuum of ideas about the
future supports and decorates the Big Lie.”
The only way out is to tell the truth and in the first instance to say
and recognize that “there won’t be an empire.” Russia and Russians need to “seek something else.”
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