Paul
Goble
Staunton, May 26 – Moscow insists
that Russian speakers are part of a Russian world that by definition must be
under its control, and not surprisingly some former Soviet republics, including
most recently Ukraine, have adopted policies intended to reduce or eliminate
the use of Russian by their citizens, Vadim Shtepa says.
But such policies, however much one
can understand the impulses behind them, are counterproductive. On the one
hand, they lend support to the mistaken Muscovite notion that languages are the
property of any country or government. And on the other, they offend rather
than attract those in these countries who use Russian (region.expert/russian-latin/).
A far better and more effective approach,
the editor of Region.Expert argues is
to treat Russian as the Latin of the former Soviet empire, a language ever
fewer people use because the empire is dying and one Moscow has no right to
claim just as the Great Britain or the United States has no right to claim
English as somehow uniquely its own.
And on the other, the West needs to
recognize that it can use Russian as a weapon against the Muscovite empire by
creating a new television broadcast service in Russian to challenge the notions
that Russian belongs to Moscow and that Russian-speakers in Russia and abroad
are inevitably Putin supporters.
The Russian language, he writes, “can
be used against the empire. The clearest example is that many Ukrainian
soldiers who have fought against Russian aggression are themselves Russian
speakers. [In addition,] Belorusian Nobelist Svetlana Aleksiyevich also writes
in Russian, but it is impossible to consider her works as ‘pro-Kremlin.’”
“It’s possible,” Shtepa continues, “that
one of the causes of the relative success of Kremlin propaganda is that Western
countries have not created an alternative, a global and popular Russian-language
television channel which could advocate democratic values” and “destroy the
false stereotype that ‘all Russians are Putinists.’”
“Language is above all a means of
communication and ideologically neutral. For Ukraine, it would be much wiser
not to struggle with Russian but to create alongside Ukrainian ones,
Russian-language pro-European programs. And then,” the Russian regionalist says,
“Kremlin propaganda would be powerless.”
Almost 70 years ago, the West did
create such a Russian-language service, Radio Liberty, which was based
precisely on the knowledge and conviction that not all Russians were Stalinist.
It played an important role in breaking the Soviet monopoly of information; and
many Russian-speakers were encouraged to think their country could be other
than what the Kremlin said.
As someone who is proud to have
served at RFE/RL twice, the author of these lines is very proud of that
fact. But I believe that Shtepa is on to
something because of a conjunction of technological and political changes that
have reduced although hardly eliminated the importance of current RFE/RL
broadcasts.
First, all too many people in the West
have unfortunately concluded that since Russia is no longer communist, it is
not a problem. In many ways, under Vladimir Putin, Russia is more of a problem
than it was in the last decades of Soviet rule; but few want to admit that or
act on its implications at least for the long haul.
Second, some involved with Western
broadcasting have wanted to shift to what could be called a strategy of “journalism
over everything else.” High-quality
journalism is of course a threat to regimes like Putin’s which are based on
lies and half-truths, but it is not enough. There needs to be a clear and
forceful message about why democracy is right and dictatorship wrong.
Third, RFE/RL during the Cold War
broadcast via shortwave from abroad. That meant it could broadcast freely and
without regard to the ideological convictions of the Kremlin which could jam
but not affect editorial policy. Since 1991, reflecting new opportunities and a
shift in listener tastes, it has broadcast on FM stations within the Russian
Federation.
The signal of its broadcasts is much
easier to hear than it was, but that has come at a price: the host government,
in this case the Russian, is in a position to impose many of its values on the
station’s broadcasts, directly by closing such broadcasting from within its own
borders and indirectly by threatening to do so.
All too often, it appears, some
involved in Western broadcasting fall into the dangerous trap laid by the
Kremlin of avoiding certain topics or certain treatments so that they can
continue to broadcast on others, putting them on a dangerous and slippery slope
in which they restrict themselves lest the Putin regime restrict them.
Fourth, RFE/RL’s Internet presence,
which is produced and disseminated from abroad, is not only impressive but
highlights what can be done when journalists committed not only to news but to
democracy and freedom are able to do their work freely. Day after day, RFE/RL
Internet producers produce stories that challenge the Kremlin dictatorship.
But the Internet, as widespread as
its use now is even in Russia, is not a solution. That is because most Russians
like most people elsewhere use the Internet less as an alternative source of
news than for entertainment. Consequently, however powerful the Internet
offerings of RFE/RL are, they can’t compete on an equal basis with the new
player on the block, television.
And fifth, television is in fact the
key. Putin is re-imposing Stalinism on
Russia not by constructing a new GULAG, although he is quite prepared to arrest
and even kill people to sustain his repressive and kleptocratic regime, but by
using television to mold peoples’ minds, confident that no one is challenging
him on that all-important front.
But Putin could be proved
wrong: there is an available
alternative, albeit not an easy or inexpensive one: direct-to-home satellite
television which would carry Western television broadcasts to the Russian
people in ways that the Putinists would find far more difficult to block and
even more difficult to counter.
As Shtepa points out, the West has
the ability to turn the information war against Moscow and to take it on in a
place where the Kremlin assumes it is untouchable – Russian-language
television.
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