Paul Goble
Staunton, May 14 – Vladimir Putin
has created “a new model” of rule, one in which “propaganda ceases to be
propaganda in the normal sense of the word” and becomes instead “a means of generating
an alternative reality,” a revolutionary development in statecraft which
exceeds anything Stalin or Hitler achieved, according to Igor Yakovenko.
The Soviet and Nazi dictators,
Yakovenko said in “Yezhednevny zhurnal” yesterday, promoted a big lie and backed it with the
overwhelming power of the state but did not face the challenge that their
audiences would have immediate access to alternative information sources that
could call their claims into question (ej.ru/?a=note&id=25110).
As a result, he continued, Putin has
created an entirely different reality for his audience, convert its members
“into little Goebels” who become “the active subjects” of its maintenance and
spread, and increasingly move to isolate Russia from the rest of the world in
the manner of North Korea in order to maintain himself and his regime.
And Yakovenko said that this
transformation of propaganda in what is a post-modern direction constitutes the
political equivalent of “the Copernican revolution,” one that involves such a
fundamental change in the nature of politics that anyone seeking to understand
the Putin regime must apply an entirely new set of criteria.
Putin’s approach involves
“propaganda of the post-modern era, in which there is not even internal logic
... in which [its internal contradictions are] successfully compensated by the
unprecedented massiveness of the propaganda,” he says. As a result, “those who
see the absurdity of the official picture of the world are driven into a moral
and information ghetto.”
Given the possibility that Russians
can get information relatively easily which undermines the “propaganda myth”
the Kremlin is creating, Putin has had to promote the idea of a world divided
between “the sacred, in this case, the peaceful pro-Russian activists, and the
profane, that is armed to the tooth fascists of ‘the Right Sector.’”
And that black and white division to
be sustainable at all has to be extended back into the Russian Federation
itself, Yakovenko argued, with the majority being told and being convinced, if
polls are to be believed, that they must accept what the Kremlin says
regardless of the facts and that they must view those who express disagreement
as enemies.
But such a division is not
sustainable if there is relative openness in the media. “In closed countries, like North Korea,
propaganda [of this kind] always wins.
[And] therefore the Putin regime in the name of itself-preservation is
condemned to follow the North Korean vector,” the Moscow commentator says.
However, he concludes, “how long the
regime can move in this direction without destroying the country is today the
main question of Russia.”
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