Paul Goble
Staunton,
March 26 – Russian sociologist Igor Eidman has posted the second in a promised
series of articles exposing the falsehoods contained in Kremlin propaganda. In
the first, he discussed the contradictory messages Moscow sends to marginal groups
in the West to win them over (windowoneurasia2.blogspot.com/2019/03/putin-winning-support-from-far-right-as.html).
In the second, posted online today,
he examines the myths the Kremlin uses to try to win over the majorities in
Western countries by suggesting that Putin and Russia are the victims of
Western aggression, that the Kremlin and the Russian people are totally united,
and that resistance to them is both futile and wrong (blog.newsru.com/article/26mar2019/myth2).
Eidman
examines five key myths the Kremlin propaganda promotes among the core
majorities of Western countries:
According
to the first myth, the sociologist says, “President Putin (and his regime) are
legitimate and supported by the people of Russia. One must reach agreements
with him as with any other leader of a civilized state.”
But
all elements of that assertion are false, Eidman says. “Putin is not a
legitimate president but a dictator who usurped power.” His elections, like all
others in Russia, have been falsified. The top leadership of the country “consists
of corrupt secret policemen, sell out bureaucrats and Mafiosi oligarchs.”
Moreover,
he continues, “this is a band of criminals which constantly violates both the
domestic laws of the country and international agreements. They look on foreign
partners as suckers who must be deceived” and any agreement with them as something
that can be dispensed with whenever it suits Moscow’s purposes.
According
to the second Kremlin myth, “the Putin regime is Russia. It is impossible to ignore the interests of
such a big country and that means it is necessary to cooperate with Putin.” That too is false because “the interests of
the Kremlin and the interests of Russia are antithetical.”
“The
present-day regime is leading [Russia] toward a catastrophe. The sooner it
falls, the better it will be for the country. To reach agreement with it means
to help it survive and thus not only to ignore the interests of the residents
of Russia but openly harm them. If
Western countries want to help [Russia], they must harshly isolate the criminal
group in power.”
According
to the third myth, Eidman continues, Russia is treated badly, even offensively
by the West. It isn’t shown the honor it
deserves or shown the deference due a great power. (This myth, the sociologist says, is designed
to make Westerners feel guilty before the Putin regime. Not surprisingly, it is
especially popular in Germany.)
Again,
the reality is exactly the reverse of what the Kremlin claims. It is Moscow
that offends others by ignoring the international rules of the game and seeking
too rebuilt an empire without freedom for its own people. It is wrong to talk about phobias and
complexes when one is really talking about a naked power grab by a criminal
group masquerading as a state.
According
to the fourth myth, “economic cooperation with Russia is very important for the
economies of Western country. One must reach agreement with Putin in order not
to lose suitable partner” for trade and economic development. The reality gives
the lie to such outrageous claims.
“Russia
is not in even the first ten foreign trade partners of the leading Western countries.
The chief direction of Russian business activity in the West is not trade and
legal cooperation but the export of many billions of dollars of shadow capital
which are used among other things to buy off local elites, the media, and the
expert community.”
“This
money,” Eidman says, “is a delayed action bomb under Western democracy.”
And
according to the fifth myth, one that the sociologist says has become
especially widely promoted in recent months, “Russia has powerful advanced arms
and a military. Peace must be made with it or things will become much worse.”
Again, the reality is just the opposite of the claim.
“Behind
the cartoons about rockets intended to frighten Western politicians is concealed
the impoverished situation of the Russian military-industrial complex, science
and technology. All military ‘know how’ which the Kremlin possesses was created
already in Soviet times.” Few other countries want to purchase its arms – unless
they have no choice – and Russian rockets have been failing for much of the last
decade.
The
new arms race that the Kremlin has unleashed, Eidman says, “is dangerous above all
for itself. Russia has no economic, financial or scientific and technical
resources to compete on an equal basis with NATO.” If it pursues this course
for very long, it may end as the Soviet Union did when it tried and failed to
keep up with the West.
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