Paul Goble
Staunton,
December 22 – At his press conference, Vladimir Putin got one thing right that
he has never done before: he said three times that Russians and Ukrainians are
separate nations, something Andrey Illarionov says is “the first result” of
Ukrainian autocephaly and the most important ideological message of the session
(kasparov.ru/material.php?id=5C1E6B79B610F).
But if he got that right, Syrlybay
Aybusinov, a fact checker for the Open Media Foundation, says, Putin made at
least 23 factual mistakes, some of which were sufficiently obvious and serious
that the Kremlin had to introduce corrections in its published transcript (openmedia.io/exclusive/skolko-raz-vladimir-putin-oshibsya-na-press-konferencii/).
Both the errors themselves and the
Kremlin’s all-too-transparent effort to cover them up call into question Putin’s
pose as the all-wise and all-knowing leader that he and his supporters
invariably claim him to be. They also
suggest he is slipping with age as he rarely made that many mistakes in earlier
press conferences.
Many of these mistakes were about far
from unimportant issues: Putin misstated the size of Russia’s economic growth
over the last decade and the impact of sanctions; he gave the wrong figures for
Russia’s natural gas reserves; and he said Russia produces 80 percent of the medicines
it needs, a vast exaggeration.
When discussing private military
companies, Putin treated them as legal when in fact in Russia they are
not. He gave incorrect figures about the
Sea of Azov and the Crimean bridge built to the occupied Ukrainian peninsula. And perhaps most outrageously, he claimed
that the Ukrainian Orthodox Church of the Moscow Patriarchate was “completely
independent.” Exactly the reverse is true.
Unlike most world leaders, Putin has
seldom been subject to intense fact checking.
Aybusinov is to be praised to taking up this task. Unfortunately, he may find as fact checkers
do in the United States that his national leader has only the most distant
links to reality and facts about it.
Indeed, one involuntarily recalls the
pamphlet the great Swedish explorer Sven Hedin published almost a century ago
about another fantast in Russia, Ferdinand Ossendowski, whose enormous popular
works about the Russian civil war in the Far East were a pastiche of fact and
invention.
Hedin called his brief book, Ossendowski and the Truth: Two Strangers. One fears that any similar book compiled now
will be far longer – and much more important.
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