Paul
Goble
Staunton, November 12 – It is “a serious
exaggeration” to suggest ethnic Russians living in the Baltic countries are a threat
to the national security of Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania or that Moscow’s
propaganda machine can make them into one, according to MGIMO Professor Valery
Solovey.
In a wide-ranging interview with
Taavi Minnik of Tallinn’s “Postimees” newspaper, the Moscow media expert says
that the notion that they are is at a minimum “exaggerated” and that it is kept
alive to serve the political purposes of various political leaders and
countries (rus.postimees.ee/3395127/valerij-solovej-bolshinstvo-ljudej-ne-imeet-svoego-mnenija).
Because of their experience in
Soviet times, Russians watch an enormous amount of television and even rely on
it for news because in their view “seeing is believing,” although younger
Russians while watching almost as much TV as their elders are more skeptical
about its messages, Solovey says.
But “the influence of Russian
television would be significantly less if there had been Russian-language
television channels” in Estonia and Latvia after 1991, he argues. They would
have been far better off with them because it is television in Russian in
general rather than Moscow television in particular which is influential.
However, Solovey continues, he “would
not speak about the all-powerful quality of Russian propaganda in the
post-Soviet space” as many do. “Russians
especially of the older generation may identify themselves with Russia, be glad
of its successes and achievements, and be angry at Estonians, Latvians and
Lithuanians.”
At the same time, Solovey argues, these
very same people “are not ready to reject life in these countries or move to
Russia and act in the interests of Russia.” That is even more true of young
Russians. “they are integrated in Europe … and the possibility of freely moving
about through Europe, to get an education and do business there.”
Estonia and Latvia would thus be
wise to offer its Russian speakers a Russian-language television channel,
because they would watch it rather than Moscow television, according to
Solovey, because they increasingly are part of and interested in the communities
of people among whom they live.
(Another visitor to Estonia says
this in a more lapidary way. He observes that the ethnic Russians in Narva don’t
want a Russian Estonia; they want “an Estonian Russia,” something that isn’t
now possible (nr2.com.ua/News/Lithuania_and_Baltics/Ukrainskiy-zhurnalist-V-estonskoy-Narve-polno-vatnikov-Eto-prosto-zhest--110688.html).)
With
regard to propaganda, Solovey says, “theoretically propaganda” can achieve a
great deal, “but for this it requires a great deal of time, the correct
strategy and a great deal of money.” Unfortunately, for those who want to use it,
“these three conditions never correspond.” Moreover, propaganda has
limitations: people are seldom ready to trust propaganda if it is about things
they have direct experience with.
Put
simply, one can convince Russians that “Americans are the source of all evil
because Russians don’t know Americans very well, but it is much more difficult,
indeed, almost impossible, to convince them that Ukrainians are because they
know Ukrainians well.”
In
democratic societies, there is another limitation: those who are targeted with
propaganda can always turn to other sources of information to check what they
have heard, Solovey says. And in all societies, there is the factor of boredom:
Russians are already “not interested” in Ukraine, and “film from Syria is
viewed as a Hollywood action flick.”
Solovey
points out that “the majority of people” – some 70-80 percent – “do not have
their own opinion” and thus are quite prepared to accept much propaganda about
things not in their immediate experience or about which they do not think they
can do anything about. These people
accept because they are conformists.
There
is only a small stratum, perhaps five percent, of people who are not affected
by propaganda – sociopaths and extremely intelligent people. They are the
non-conformists and typically the moving force of change. Indeed, typically they are behind
revolutionary change, although Solovey says there is something everyone should
remember about that.
“It
is impossible to predict revolutions,” he says. After they happen, analysts can
see causes, but no one has figured out a way to predict when or even if a
revolution will break out. Everyone can
see that Russia is in crisis, but no one can say how that crisis will end, the
MGIMO analyst continues.
Asked about Putin’s ratings in
Russia, Solovey suggest that “the simplest means of sociological manipulation
is the correct formulation of the question asked.” When Russians are asked whom do you trust and
Putin is on the list, the conformist majority knows exactly what answer it is
supposed to give and does.
This does not mean that Putin does
not enjoy serious support, but it is not the 90 percent Moscow reports and
claims, Solovey says. He suggests that a similar process is at work as far as
Russian support for restoring monuments to Dzherzhinsky and Stalin: “Human
memory is selective both personal and group.”
There is no reason to doubt that
many Russians may have a better view of Stalin now than they did or that they
support restoring a monument to Dzherzhinsky. But if such people are asked whether
they would like to live under either, the answer would be no. “Attitudes toward symbols is one thing; the real behavior of people and their
preferences for themselves are something else.”
Solovey
says that one of his acquaintances jokes that “many Russians would like Stalin
but only for their neighbor, not for themselves.”
Similar
selective memory and conformism is at work in Russians’ attitudes about the
disintegration of the USSR and Boris Yeltsin. If you ask them now, Solovey
says, you can’t find anyone who says he or she is in favor of either; but of
course, at the time, a large number of those saying that now said something
different earlier.
Sometime
in the future, the MGIMO scholar says, Russians will be asked “’Who supported
Putin?” And the answer will be silence.”
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