Paul
Goble
Staunton, August 13 – The Soviet
government benefited from the fact that many African, Asian and Latin American
leaders received educations in the USSR, and the Putin regime hopes to build on
that past not only by attracting more students from these countries but by
opening Russian-run universities and cultural centers in these countries.
Like other major countries,
commentator Andrey Ivanov says in an article on the “Svobodnaya pressa” portal
today, the Russian Federation is devoting ever-increasing attention to the use
of “soft power” to extend its influence abroad especially among intellectuals.
But he says, Russia has a special need to do so – its own defense. (svpressa.ru/society/article/95107/).
Ivanov cites with obvious approval
the words of Sergey Chernyakhovsky of the Russian State Humanities
University, who pointed out that Lenin had said Soviet Russia was saved because
Bolshevism had “taken from the Entente” the soldiers that those could had used
to defeat the Central Powers could have deployed to kill off the Soviet state.
Today, Chernyakhovsky argued, Russia
faces a similar and equally complex situation: “If the intellectuals of the
world will see in Russia their ally, then no unfriendly actions of president
will be able to be fully achieved.”
Understanding that, he continued,
will also help Russia gain influence in the West. He notes the growing
alienation of many in the West from the Western project, an alienation driven
by many of the same things that have helped alienate and then power Islamic
fundamentalists elsewhere.
“It is worth noting,” he said, “that
until the end of the 1960s, the attitude of Western intellectuals to our
country was positive.” It didn’t go negative because they found out about
repressions. They’d always known or guessed about them. Rather it went negative when Russians
themselves decided not to build a new world but to copy the West.
Then, Chernyakhovsky said, the costs of
Stalinism ceased to be something Western intellectuals could easily dismiss.
Russia
needs to offer an alternative vision of the world, one that doesn’t offend but
rather attract people in the Muslim world who view the Western economic and
cultural project as highly offensive – indeed, many Muslims have become
fundamentalists because of their exposure to it – and to people in Europe who
want to defend traditional values.
“The greatest disappointment in the world
happens when we say that we will be just like everyone else,” he said. What
people want is a sense of distinctiveness and a willingness to defend national
traditions as one can see with Marina Le Pen in France and others elsewhere on
the continent.
“If Russia can be the leader” of those
countries who want to defend their “classical culture,” Chernyakhovsky argued, “then
this will generate a response in the world comparable to the response it earlier
experienced at the time of the birth of the mass labor movement on the planet.”
Saying
all this does not mean, he hastened to add, that Russia should “focus on
spirituality alone and refrain from the development of technology, the army and
the fleet. But undoubtedly, the central issue” for Russia now and in the future
“is its influence on the minds” of others.
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