Paul
Goble
Staunton, June 22 -- Vladimir Putin’s
use of a video showing American planes to impress Oliver Stone of the power of
Russian ones “is not simply a curiosity,” Igor Eidman says, but rather “a
diagnosis” because “the entire Putin regime is a grandiose fake,” with fake news,
statistics, sociology, politics, power,
parliament and a fake president at the top.
On his Facebook page, the Russian
commentator, who works for Deutsche Welle, says that in Putin’s Russia “everything is a lie from top to bottom” because officials
constantly try to deceive and shift responsibility confident that only appearances
matter and that no one will check (facebook.com/permalink.php?story_fbid=1525648010831506&id=100001589654713).
The Kremlin leader is trapped by
this set of attitudes and arrangements, Eidman continues. Putin “tries to
deceive his foreign partners, but his own subordinate crudely deceive him” at
one and the same time because when he asks for something they deliver what they
think he wants regardless of whether it is true.
This story illustrates that
perfectly. Putin wanted something to intimidate the Americans. Defense Minister
Shoygu passed his order on. Finally, it reached someone in the bowels of the
bureaucracy who had to respond – and who passed back up the line what he felt
he could get away with, in this case, a film of American planes that Putin
could say were Russian.
As a result, Eidman says, “a perfectly
Kafkaesque situation occurred: Putin in Stone’s film attempted to frighten the
Americans with the power of their own military.” But in today’s information
society, “everything secret sooner or later becomes known.” And that means that
Putin’s regime “which is based on lies is condemned” as a result.
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