Russophobia
– Symptom of US Implosion
By Finian Cunningham
March 24, 2017 "Information
Clearing House"
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There was a time when
Russophobia served as an effective
form of population control – used by
the American ruling class in
particular to command the general US
population into patriotic loyalty.
Not any longer. Now, Russophobia is
a sign of weakness, of desperate
implosion among the US ruling class
from their own rotten, internal
decay.
This propaganda
technique worked adequately well
during the Cold War decades when the
former Soviet Union could be easily
demonized as «godless communism» and
an «evil empire». Such stereotypes,
no matter how false, could be
sustained largely because of the
monopoly control of Western media by
governments and official regulators.
The Soviet Union
passed away more than a quarter of a
century ago, but Russophobia among
the US political class is more
virulent than ever.
This
week it was evident from
Congressional hearings in
Washington into alleged Russian
interference in US politics that
large sections of American
government and establishment media
are fixated by Russophobia and a
belief that Russia is a malign
foreign adversary.
However, the power of
the Russophobia propaganda technique
over the wider population seems to
have greatly diminished from its
Cold War heyday. This is partly due
to more diverse global
communications which challenge the
previous Western monopoly for
controlling narrative and
perception. Contemporary Russophobia
– demonizing Russian President
Vladimir Putin or Russian military
forces – does not have the same
potency for scaring the Western
public. Indeed, due to greater
diversity in global news media
sources, it is fair to say that
«official» Western depictions of
Russia as an enemy, for example
allegedly about to invade Europe or
allegedly interfering in electoral
politics, are met with a healthy
skepticism – if not ridicule by many
Western citizens.
What is increasingly
apparent here is a gaping chasm
between the political class and the
wider public on the matter of
Russophobia. This is true for
Western countries generally, but
especially in the US. The political
class – the lawmakers in Washington
and the mainstream news media – are
frenzied by claims that Russia
interfered in the US presidential
elections and that Russia has some
kind of sinister leverage on the
presidency of Donald Trump.
But this frenzy of
Russophobia is not reflected among
the wider public of ordinary
American citizens. Rabid accusations
that Russia hacked the computers of
Trump’s Democrat rival Hillary
Clinton to spread damaging
information about her; that this
alleged sabotage of American
democracy was an «act of war»; that
President Trump is guilty of
«treason» by «colluding» with a
«Russian influence campaign» – all
of these sensational claims seem to
be only a preoccupation of the
privileged political class. Most
ordinary Americans, concerned about
making a living in a crumbling
society, either don’t buy the claims
or view them as idle chatter.
Kremlin spokesman
Dmitry Peskov this week dismissed
the Congressional hearings into
alleged Russian interference in US
politics. He aptly said that US
lawmakers and the corporate media
have become «entangled» in their own
fabrications. «They are trying to
find evidence for conclusions that
they have already made», said Peskov.
Other suitable
imagery is that the US political
class are tilting at windmills,
chasing their own tails, or running
from their own shadows. There seems
to be a collective delusional
mindset.
Unable to accept the
reality that the governing structure
of the US has lost legitimacy in the
eyes of the people, that the people
rebelled by electing an outsider in
the form of business
mogul-turned-politician Donald
Trump, that the collapse of American
traditional politics is due to the
atrophy of its bankrupt capitalist
economy over several decades – the
ruling class have fabricated their
own excuse for demise by blaming it
all on Russia.
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The American ruling
class cannot accept, or come to
terms, with the fact of systemic
failure in their own political
system. The election of Trump is a
symptom of this failure and the
widespread disillusionment among
voters towards the two-party train
wreck of Republicans and Democrats.
That is why the specter of Russian
interference in the US political
system had to be conjured up, by
necessity, as a way of «explaining»
the abject failure and the ensuing
popular revolt.
Russophobia was
rehabilitated from the Cold War
closet by the American political
establishment to distract from the
glaring internal collapse of
American politics.
The
corrosive, self-destruction seems to
know no bounds. James Comey, the
head of the Federal Bureau of
Investigation, told Congress
this week that the White House is
being probed for illicit contacts
with Russia. This dramatic notice
served by Comey was greeted with
general approval by political
opponents of the Trump
administration, as well as by news
media outlets.
The New York
Times
said the FBI was in effect holding a
«criminal investigation at the
doorstep of the White House».
Other
news outlets are openly airing discussions
on the probability of President
Trump being impeached from office.
The toxic political
atmosphere of Russophobia in
Washington is unprecedented. The
Trump administration is being
crippled at every turn from
conducting normal political business
under a toxic cloud of suspicion
that it is guilty of treason from
colluding with Russia.
President Trump has
run afoul with Republicans in
Congress over his planned healthcare
reforms because many Republicans are
taking issue instead over the
vaunted Russian probe.
When
Trump’s Secretary of State Rex
Tillerson was reported to
be skipping a NATO summit next month
but was planning to visit Moscow
later in the same month, the
itinerary was interpreted as a sign
of untoward Russian influence.
What makes the
spectacle of political infighting so
unprecedented is that there is such
little evidence to back up
allegations of Trump-Russia
collusion. It is preponderantly
based on innuendo and anonymous
leaks to the media, which are then
recycled as «evidence».
Devin Nunes, the
ranking Republican on the House
Intelligence Committee, said earlier
this week that he has seen no actual
evidence among classified documents
indicating any collusion between the
Trump campaign team and the Russian
government.
Even former senior
intelligence officials, James
Clapper and Michael Morell who are
no friends of Trump, have lately
admitted in media interviews that
there is no such evidence.
Yet, FBI chief James
Comey told Congress that his agency
was pursuing a potentially criminal
investigation into the Trump
administration, while at the same
time not confirming or denying the
existence of any evidence.
And, as already
noted, this declaration of
open-ended snooping by Comey on the
White House was met with avid
approval by political opponents of
Trump, both on Capitol Hill and in
the corporate media.
Let’s just assume for
a moment that the whole Trump-Russia
collusion story is indeed fake. That
it is groundless, a figment of
imagination. There are solid reasons
to believe that is the case. But
let’s just assume here that it is
fake for the sake of argument.
That then means that
the Washington seat of government
and the US presidency are tearing
themselves apart in a futile civil
war.
The real war here is
a power struggle within the US in
the context of ruling parties no
longer having legitimacy to govern.
This is an American
implosion. An historic
Made-in-America meltdown. And
Russophobia is but a symptom of the
internal decay at the heart of US
politics.
Finian Cunningham, former editor and
writer for major news media
organizations. He has written
extensively on international
affairs, with articles published in
several languages.
This article was first published at
the
Strategic Culture
Foundation
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