Paul Goble
Staunton,
December 21 – Vladimir Putin’s press conferences should not be analyzed as
information measures like those the leaders of other countries hold. Instead, Fyodor
Krasheninnikov says, they are “part of a state cult” intended to reaffirm to
all the status quo in Russia, with its irreplaceable leader who has the answers
to all questions.
Only
the naïve or the very young without any experience could expect otherwise from
an event that the Kremlin leader has organized with regularity for 14 times, the
Yekaterinburg commentator says. Such actions
are not occasions for announcing change but rather for suggesting that there
haven’t been and won’t be any (newtimes.ru/articles/detail/175125).
Ordinary Russians who watch these performances expect
that, and Putin provides them with that reassurance. Believers go to Church and Russians watch
Putin to hear from their “spiritual leader” not something new but rather to be
strengthened in their faith reassured that neither its object nor their beliefs
need to change.
To
think it could be otherwise, he continues, is to be in the position of the foolish
atheist who, when attending a religious service, expects the priest to announce
that God does not exist and that everything the priests have said in the past
is wrong. That doesn’t happen in church
or with Putin.
“Putin in fact is
not as public a man as someone in his position ought to be,” Krasheninnikov
says. Most leaders meet with the media and interact with their supporters and
opponents all the time. But Putin prefers to “meet with the press rarely” albeit
for a long time in each case – this time around for four hours – and thus
provide his propagandists with quotations.
What Putin’s appearances do -- indeed,
it is their most important task -- is to shift the accent and focus from one
issue to another. In earlier years, Crimea was central to Russian politics;
now, Putin has downgraded that region to a status like all others, lest
Russians begin to ask whether its annexation is worth the price they are
paying.
Otherwise, Putin in these
performances is upbeat about the main directions of Russian policy even if he
is critical about some executors. This time around, Krasheninnikov says, Putin
suggested that sanctions have not affected the economy and that any shortcomings
are the work of Russophobia and the world financial crisis.
It could not be otherwise in Putin’s
mythology. After all, “Oceana has always fought with East Asia?” What could one
add to that?”
This all works to
Putin’s advantage because it keeps Russians from focusing on specific problems,
their costs and who is responsible for them.
And it reflects Putin’s decision
to avoid any real discussion with his opponents, a position he can take because
he feels “completely confident” that he is in control of the situation.
Putin’s press conferences, the
Yekaterinburg commentator says, “a modernized version of the plenums of the CPSU
Central Committee. Twice a year Putin personally and fully speaks about everything
he considers necessary.” For those who do not agree with him, there is no sense
in watching and analyzing” just as there wasn’t in Soviet times.
In the case of Putin’s seances just
like the CPSU Central Committee plenums, Krasheninnikov concludes, “the meaning
of the activity is that it occurs again and again and that something really new
happens only when this event does not occur with its current organizers for
some reason or another.”
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