Paul
Goble
Staunton, October 21 – A new Russian
television series, “The Sleepers,” which suggests the CIA is behind murders and
terrorist acts in Russia and elsewhere and that its actions justify, indeed
require an equally forceful response by the FSB is far more disturbing than programs
like “The Anatomy of Protest,” Kseniya Kirillova says.
In an essay for Ukraine’s Gulyai Pole, the US-based Russian
journalist and commentator says that this latest case of Russian “’agitation
via films’ is “not simply to strengthen already existing ‘rules of the game’
but to warn there are going to be new ‘games’ and in the future they will be
conducted by [new] rules” (politua.org/2017/10/21/27338/).
The premise of this series is that “Russia
is flooded with ‘sleeper’ agents of the CIA” who are operating as officials of
the foreign and energy ministries and as “’moles’” in the FSB, as teachers and
students at MGIMO, and “what is most important practically all opposition
bloggers, journalists and human rights activists.”
These agents are involved not in the
“’banal’ theft of secrets,” she continues, but rather with “constant murders,
terrorist actions, kidnappings and torturing of people, the overthrow of
regimes, and other evil actions.” The
series says the CIA “trains terrorists,” and kills people to create “’sacred
victims,’” and is limited only by the heroic actions of the FSB.
Any reports that blame the FSB for
these crimes, the series insists, is “fake news, created in the CIA to
discredit the Chekists and undermine international contracts which completely correspond
to the interests of the much-suffering motherland.” The real culprits in all
cases are the CIA “sleeper” agents, it says.
Indeed, Kirillova continues, it is
the CIA “and not the Kremlin” which uses troll factories to stir up trouble and
then blames the Kremlin for everything. As one can see, “in this series,
literally everything is turned upside down,” and that extends to bloggers and
opposition figures who are shown to be fabulously wealthy and beyond the reach
of the Russian authorities.
The FSB of course is just the
opposite too. It is full of real knights who fight for Russia “without fear or
favor and are prepared to defend at the price of their own lives to defend the ‘liberals’
who hate them from the cynical American intelligence service, the Russian
journalist writes.
The writers of the new serial – and it
is not the first of its kind although it does go further than earlier ones –
insist that “’the story is based on real events,’” thus suggesting that
Russians should view what it says not as fantasy but as lightly fictionalized
reality and thus act and support those who act on the basis accordingly.
And those who have created this
series go further: they suggest to viewers that “if you enclunter such things
in reality, don’t believe your eyes!” Everything that looks real is in fact
manufactured by the CIA to promote dissatisfaction and disloyalty. Its sleepers and not the FSB are killing
people for its purposes.
It turns out, Kirillova continues, “in
Russia where the special services track even the Internet mail of single
mothers and sales clerks inclined to opposition, the American intelligence officers
feel themselves at home: they kill, they kidnap, they blow up, they torture and
they lie.” If one “decodes” the series, then its message is truly frightening.
That is because, the commentator
concludes, the implication is that in this brave new world, the FSB can use
such things confident that it can blame them on the CIA and that it is even
justified in doing so because its opponents did these things first.
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