Paul
Goble
Staunton, October 2 – As Vladimir
Putin gets his country involved in ever more wars, a subtle but significant
change has come over Kremlin propaganda: Russian-government media are no longer
attacking specific regimes but rather whole peoples, much as happened in World
War II when Moscow shifted from attacking Nazis to attacking Germans as such.
Even as he has launched his war in
Syria, Putin in no way has cut back his propagandistic attacks in any way
against Ukraine, Russian commentator Igor Yakovenko says, but there has been a
major shift in that propaganda, one that does not bode well for the future of
either Russia or Ukraine (kasparov.ru/material.php?id=560E219A18048).
“If earlier the target of Russian
propaganda was the leadership of Ukraine, with Moscow constantly stressing that
Russia has nothing against ‘the fraternal Ukrainian people’ and that the whole
case was about ‘fascists among the Ukrainian authorities,’” he argues, “now,
the target has turned out to be the entire Ukrainian people.”
Emblematic of this shift, Yakovenko
continues, is the coverage “Komsomolskaya Pravda” gave on September 30 to the question
of ethnic crime in Moscow. Not only did it talk about “gypsies” from Ukraine,
but it quoted Russian police commanders to the effect that the influx of people
from Ukraine had pushed crime up in the Russian capital.
“Not a word about criminals from
other countries and representatives of other peoples,” just about Ukraine and
Ukrainians. The deed has been done, “the anti-Ukrainian shell has been prepared,
and it can be shot into the brains of millions of Russian. [And] xenophobic
filth goes press.”
Yakovenko points out that beginning
journalism students are taught “professional ethnics” and told that “crime does
not have a nationality.” Talking about the ethnic background of those involved
in crimes is acceptable only if one is conducting “a special analytic
investigation about ethnic groups” and that in the mass media it is “impermissible.”
“It is obvious,” the Russian
commentator says, that the “Komsomolskaya Pravda” writer was told to find
something “against the Ukrainian people” so that no one in Russia would have
any doubts about “the justice of the war. If Ukrainians are so bad, then war
with them is the right thing, and Putin acted correctly in taking Crimea away
from them.”
The editors of the paper certainly
should have known better, and those in charge of the Ukrainian edition of “Komsomolskaya
Pravda” didn’t run this “filth.” Yakovenko says he hopes that the Ukrainian
authorities won’t close the paper down but rather put the following notice on
its masthead:
“Be warned! This publication
uses the brand of the xenophobic Russian newspaper ‘Komsomolskaya Pravda.’ The
content can contain at any moment anti-Ukrainian propaganda.”
Yakovenko says that “it is
necessary to somehow show the Putinist Nazis a measure of responsibility,”
especially since “what happened at the jubilee session of the UN General
Assembly shows that a tribunal over them in the near future is not very
probable.”
Illusions about that must be
dispelled, he argues, as much illusions that the worsening of economic
conditions will lead Russians to oppose their government. “In present-day Russia,” he writes, “optimism
and loyalty not only are not falling along with the standard of living but
on the contrary are growing. The poorer life in Russia becomes, the happier
people are.”
At least part of the explanation for
that is to be found in the regime’s use of xenophobic propaganda. Given this situation, “the winter in Russia
will be a long one,” and that is something that it would be desirable for both
the Russians themselves and their immediate neighbors to take into consideration.
This latest outburst of xenophobia
is the third major one in Russia in the last century. During the Russo-Polish war of 1920,
Bolshevik leader Grigory Zinovyev was so racist in his comments about the Poles
that other party leaders complained to Lenin about it. Lenin agreed but
demonstrated his own xenophobia by ordering on the same day a new dictionary of
“the great living Russian language.
Then in World War II, Soviet writer
Ilya Ehrenburg echoed the racism of the Nazis in his propagandistic articles
about the Germans, an approach that was at odds with what Soviet propagandists
said the war was about but one that for a time enjoyed the support of the
Kremlin leader of that time and afterwards when he directed the same venom
against Soviet Jews.
And then in the 1990s, both to
distract the attention of Russians and to prepare the way for a war against
Chechnya, the Russian government promoted the racist idea of the evil nature of
“persons of Caucasus nationality,” an ugly echo of Stalin’s “persons of Jewish
nationality” in the late 1940s and early 1950s.
The re-appearance of such
state-sponsored xenophobic viciousness must be condemned even by those who feel
they cannot stop it, for as Nadezhda Mandelshtam pointed out, “happy is the country
in which the despicable will at least be despised.” On that standard, Russia is
not a happy country, and the West, to the extent it fails to speak out, isn’t
either.
And there is a particular reason to
speak out now: such anger directed at one people can easily be transferred to
another, especially because propagandists often link groups together. Thus,
today, an article in Moscow appeared suggesting that ISIS and the Maidan were “brothers
in arms” (kavkazoved.info/news/2015/10/01/majdan-i-ig-svodnye-bratja.html).
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