A Russian Journalist’s Perspective No
Advertising - No Government Grants - This Is
Independent Media
By David Swanson
May 15, 2017 "Information
Clearing House"
- Dmitri Babich has worked as a journalist
in Russia since 1989, for newspapers, news
agencies, radio, and television. He says
that he used to always interview people,
while lately people interview him.
According to Babich, myths about Russian
media, such as that one cannot criticize the
president in Russia, can be dispelled simply
by visiting Russian news websites and using
Google Translator. More newspapers in Russia
oppose Putin than support him, Babich says.
If Russian news is propaganda, Babich asks,
why are people so afraid of it? Was anyone
ever afraid of Brezhnev’s propaganda? (One
might reply that it wasn’t available on the
internet or television.) In Babich’s view
the threat of Russian news lies in its
accuracy, not in its falsehood. In the
1930s, he says, French and British media, in
good “objective” style, suggested that
Hitler wasn’t anything much to worry about.
But the Soviet media had Hitler right. (On
Stalin perhaps not so much.)
Today, Babich suggests, people are making
the same mistake that the British and French
media made back then, failing to
appropriately stand up to a dangerous
ideology. What ideology? That of neoliberal
militarism. Babich points to the swift
response of NATO and the Washington
establishment to any proposals from Donald
Trump to ease up on hostility toward Russia.
Babich is not naive about Trump. While he
says that Barack Obama was decidedly the
worst U.S. president ever, he does not
predict great things from Trump. Obama,
Babich explains, had incompetence to match
his militarism. He imposed sanctions on
Russia that hurt the most pro-Western
organizations. “He became a victim of his
own propaganda.”
I asked Babich why I’d heard such positive
comments on Trump from so many Russians. His
answer: “Unrequited love for the U.S.,” and
“hope,” and the thought that because Trump
won he must be smarter than he seems.
“People hate to wake up,” Babich concluded.
Pressed on how people could possibly place
hope in Trump, Babich said that because
Russia has never been colonized (despite
Sweden and Napoleon and Hitler trying),
Russians are only now learning what Africans
colonized by the West understood about the
colonizers.
Asked why Russia would make alliances with
China and Iran, Babich replied that the U.S.
and E.U. wouldn’t have Russia, so it is
taking its second choices.
Asked about Russian journalists who have
been killed, Babich said that while more
were killed in the time of Boris Yeltsin, he
has two theories. One is that an opponent of
Putin’s is responsible. Babich named a
politician who died around the time of the
last killing. The other theory is that
people enraged by the media are responsible.
Babich said he couldn’t take seriously the
idea that Putin would himself be responsible
for killing someone right next to the
Kremlin.
Asked about the approach of RT (Russia Today) television, Babich said that the approach of the news agency Ria Novosti of trying to imitate the New York Times gained no followers because people can already just read the New York Times. By opposing U.S. crimes and giving voice to alternative perspectives RT has found an audience. I think this interpretation is borne out by the CIA report earlier this year hyping the danger of RT. If the U.S. media were providing the news, Americans wouldn’t look for news elsewhere.
Babich and I discussed these and other topics on the RT show “Crosstalk” on Sunday.
CrossTalk: Bullhorns on Hysteria
This article was first published by David Swanson . Org