Paul Goble
Staunton,
January 17 – When most people think about Russian disinformation
now, they think almost exclusively about stories directed to a mass audience,
be it via the print media or the Internet.
That is a certainly a serious problem, but attention to it has kept many
from focusing on what may be an even more serious development.
That
problem is the spread of propaganda and disinformation from these mass media
outlets to what are ostensibly scholarly publications, a development that
represents a return to some of the worst excesses of Soviet times when scholars
were forced to follow the party line on issues of importance to the Kremlin.
And
this development threatens both Russian scholars who, while they may not have
to cite Lenin as their parents and grandparents did, have to hew the Putin line
on such issues and Western scholars who may not recognize the way in which this
new “party” line has infected nominally “academic” research.
The
challenge of identifying and countering such propaganda and disinformation in
ostensibly academic articles is far more difficult than pointing up the latest
lies, misrepresentations and distortions in the statements of Russian officials
or commentators. It requires more time, more expertise, and more effort.
But
it is an effort that is well worthwhile, and everyone who is concerned about
accuracy can only be grateful to those who take the time to analyze such pieces
and show how they weave together misrepresentations with real facts in order to
lead astray both Russian and Western audiences by promoting the Kremlin’s
ideology.
A remarkable example of this is provided this weekend by
two members of the International Circassian Council, Iyad Youghar and Adel Bashqawi who analyze one such example of Russian
disinformation and in so doing highlight both the insidious nature of such
things and the reasons it has to be done (justicefornorthcaucasus.info/?p=1251676982).
They focus on an article by two researchers at Russia’s
Southern Federal University entitled “The Circassian Question: Transformation
of Content and Perception” that has been published in Bylye gody, vol. 36, no. 2 (2015): 450-460 (academia.edu/15285565/Circassian_Question_Transformation_of_Content_and_Perception).
Among
the distortions this brief work contains, Youghar and Bashqawi point out, are
the following, each of which reflects Russian efforts at disinformation cast in
terms that make the article sound less like propaganda than like scholarship
and that as a result are likely to be accepted by many and inform the thinking
of those less attuned to the issues involved.
First,
they note, the article not only falsifies dates of the Russian-Circassian War
which lasted from 1763 to 1864 but rechristens that conflict as “the Caucasian
War,” a Russian innovation which ignores what really happened in the western
North Caucasus.
Second,
the article suggests that “the so-called Circassian question” only became “hot”
in the run-up to the 2014 Sochi Olympiad. In fact, Circassians have been
protesting Russian actions in their homeland for a long time, most prominently
in recent times in 2007 when Moscow invented the idea that the Circassians had
been “voluntarily” associated with Russia for 450 years.
Third,
the article presents as fact Vladimir Putin’s mistake about the history of the
Sochi coastal area. He talked about the Greeks
settling there in antiquity without making reference to the fact that it was
already populated by Circassians.
Fourth,
the article says that the rise of the Internet has allowed Russia to expose
Circassian falsifications and overcome Circassian resistance. In fact, Youghar
and Bashqawi say, the worldwideweb has led to greater Circassian activism and
greater attention to the real history of the Circassians.
And
fifth, the article blames outside powers for everything bad that has occurred
in the North Caucasus and presents Russia as being an invariably positive
force, a misrepresentation that falls on its face if one examines any of the records
of the conflict and the genocidal expulsion of the Circassians by Russian
forces.
In
Western academic life, any article that got so much wrong would be the subject
of intense criticism by other scholars. But Russian articles of this kind often
seem to get a pass, with those who read them forgetting to do the basic fact
checking that they would insist upon if the article were published anywhere
else.
It
is time for that to stop, not only for the benefit of those in the West who
need to know the truth about what Moscow has been doing but also for the
benefit of scholars and others within the borders of the Russian Federation who
once again are being spoon fed the kind of propaganda that many had hoped had
ended with the demise of the USSR.
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