Paul
Goble
Staunton, June 26 – Moscow
commentator Andrey Malgin delivers a warning that no one should ignore: Vladimir Putin, he argues, “will use Western
values like direct democracy (referenda), freedom of speech and assembly and
all the rest for the destruction of the West and these things which are its
values” (kasparov.ru/material.php?id=576F5A5F85303).
The Kremlin leader understands
perfectly well, he says, that he will not be able to defeat the West by
economic or military means and thus must choose an indirect approach, one that
judo-style exploits the West’s strengths against it. Putin will thus promote
populist anger in Western countries with the goal of “converting any vote into
a protest.”
There can be “no doubts,” Malgin
says, “that Putin’s agents will now push for referenda wherever possible” and
on whatever subject, left, right or center, with the goal of achieving the most
“destructive” outcome possible. And to that end, he will step up his propaganda
directed at Western countries.
Anyone who objects as some have and
more will, he continues, Moscow will challenge with the question “Are you
against freedom of speech, respected ‘partners’?” To be sure, Russia Today is “not
taken seriously” by many. But it is useful for Putin because of the impact it
has on Western journalists who cite it in the name of balance, the current standard
of objectivity, and thus spread “Lubyanka fakes” to their audiences.
Sometimes, of course, this will be
exposed; but the work is “so total that individual failures will not be able to
have an essential impact on the results” the Kremlin seeks, Malgin says, adding
ominously that this is the way “the third world war” is being fought, even if
one side refuses to acknowledge that fact.
Kirill Martynov, the political editor of
Moscow’s “Novaya gazeta,” offers an explanation for why Putin is being so
successful in this effort because he appears to understand something that many
in the West do not: the way in which the Internet revolution has spread
contempt for all elites and expert opinion (novayagazeta.ru/columns/73608.html).
In recent years, he says, “there have been
many arguments about what changes the Internet promises us,” especially in the
wake of the impact of Twitter on the Arab Spring and the supposedly “liberating
potential of new media.” But, he
continues, “only now are we beginning to understand how these changes work in
fact.”
“It is possible that the main thing that
the Internet teaches people is distrust in their own elites,” he argues, noting
that “it is difficult to imagine the Trump phenomenon of the ‘incorrect’ voting
on Brexit in an era of television” alone. But the Internet in both cases has
done its destructive work.
“Now in the new media, we see experts much
closer up and in more detail than ever before,” Martynov says. “We observe
representatives of the establishment as living people who make mistakes, say
stupid things and are laughable.” As a result, “voters in the West no longer
want to subordinate themselves to the directives of ‘the empty suits.’”
And that in turn means, he concludes, that
“a revision of the social contract in the entire world awaits us.” Such a process
will entail many “risks,” including “the collapse of old political alliances
and the coming to power of populists.” Those
who are banking on this like Putin may thus win particularly if those he wants
to defeat do not recognize the challenge.
No comments:
Post a Comment