Paul
Goble
Staunton, November 12 – The adoption
of an official state ideology, something that would violate the Russian
constitution, would transform Russia from an authoritarian to a totalitarian
state, Igor Eidman, the author of the new book, The Putin System. Where the New Russian Empire is Heading.
In a commentary for Deutsche Welle –
his book so far has appeared only in German – the sociologist argues that
recent statements by various Russian parliamentarians suggest that “the Kremlin
is seriously testing the waters making its de facto state ideology de jure as
well (dw.com/ru/комментарий-государственная-идеология-в-россии-путь-к-тоталитаризму/a-36344352).
The adoption of a law defining
Moscow’s “ideology … would allow the Kremlin to intensify its propagandistic
pressure on the population and give it unlimited opportunities for persecuting
those who do not agree with it,” just as was the case in Soviet times and
against the return of which the 1993 Constitution said Russia could not have a
formal state ideology again.
The reason that Putin is moving in
this direction is that at present, “the Kremlin cannot guarantee economic
growth, legal defense or confidence in the future.” And so it is pushing the
country into “opposition with the West” and military adventures. In short, the
population lacks rational reasons for backing the Kremlin and so must be given
emotional ones.
To that end, Moscow is “creating new
and reanimating old ideological myths which appeal to the collective
unconscious” of the Russian people. At the center of this are three concept: “’we’
… the single ‘Russian nation,” “’they’ foreign and domestic enemies” and “the leader,”
Putin who can “help ‘us’ defend against ‘them.’”
The foreign enemies are the US, the EU
and Ukraine, and already “three quarters of Russians believe that the Western
countries want to weaken and denigrate Russia.” Domestically, the “’they’”
consists of “various minorities, existing outside ‘the moral majority’ and ‘subject
to Western influence.’”
The election of Donald Trump may temporarily
lead the Kremlin to reduce its treatment of the US as an enemy while increasing
attention to other foreign “enemies” like the European Union, Eidman says. The current Russian regime’s ideology “cannot
exist without” enemies at home and abroad.
The Russian sociologist says that “the
main reason for the success of this ideological propaganda is in its primitive but
effective replacement of one concept by another, “’The Putin regime’ is replaced
by the words ‘Russians’ and ‘we.’” Those
who oppose it are “declared opponents of Russia and its residents.”
“As a result,” Eidman continues, “the
enemies of the ruling bureaucracy and its selfish interests are presented to
the population as being their own.”
The new state propaganda includes
the idea of “’the Russian world’ which in fact justified Moscow’s pretensions
on the territories where ethnic Russians live.”
It is rooted in “Orthodox fundamentalism and also Eurasian and
geopolitical myths about the permanent opposition of Russia and the West,” and
especially the Anglo-Saxons among the latter.
In support of this ideological
construct, Eidman says, Moscow has elevated a number of historical personages
into “a new pantheon.” It includes “harsh rulers like Prince Vladimir, Ivan the
Terrible and Joseph Stalin.” Many
Russians see these people as “bloody tyrants” but excuse them because “they supposedly
brought something of value to the country.”
In short, Eidman says, “with the help
of mythmaking, the authorities are seeking to impose on society a system of
values in which everything which serves the state and in essence ‘the national
leader’ and his entourage is good and moral” and that the society should give
its “unqualified support to any powers that be, even the harshest and most
unjust.”
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