Deconstructing Russophobia
By Catherine
Brown
June 18,
2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- "Off
Guardian"
- Imagine
that Vladimir Putin were not a murderous autocrat
and kleptocrat who has spent his fourteen years in
power living up to his KGB past and dragging Russia
ever back towards Communist autocracy, illiberalism,
and expansionism. Imagine that instead he were one
of the greatest leaders that Russia has had, whose
policies have helped produce a massive rise in
living standards and life expectancy, recuperation
of national pride, and enforcement of the rule of
law, who has tackled kleptocrats and gangsters
wisely and well, whose foreign policy has on balance
been realistic, diplomatic, and conducive to peace,
who has presided over a country of which the human
rights record is considerably better than that of
the United States and in which civil rights are
improving, and who richly deserves the steady
support of 65% – currently at a Ukraine-related high
of 83% – of the population that he possesses. It is
my understanding that the reality is closer to the
second scenario than the first – and I may note that
I say this as someone with no ethnic, financial,
professional or political ties to Russia whatsoever.
It follows that I am not a Russian expert – but nor
am I, on the other hand, parti pris. I am a
friendly, distanced observer of the country.
Let me
start by explaining the history of my connection to
the country. When I was a teenager my somewhat timid
and unimaginative school uncharacteristically
decided to organise a trip to a wacky place such as
Russia, where, as it seemed, considerable political
change happened to be taking place. So it was that I
visited the Soviet Union during the last month of
its existence, whilst myself having almost as little
conception of what the Soviet Union was, as of what
might be about to replace it. Some years later, in
my year, so-called ‘out’, before university, I found
myself living on the Danube’s South bank in Ruse,
Bulgaria, learning some Bulgarian but telling myself
that if ever I properly learned a Slavic language it
would be one that would allow me to converse with
hundreds of millions not just seven million users.
After a degree in English I made a diagonal move
into an MSc in Russian and Post-Soviet Studies at
the London School of Economics, where it was
abundantly clear that Britain’s finest kremlinogists
had had very little idea that or when the Soviet
Union was going to end – and who, tsarist
nostalgists and Soviet nostalgists alike – were
dismayed at what was happening in the country at the
time. The worst time was already over when, in 2002,
I moved to Moscow to improve my book-learned
Russian, and to teach English. I became amongst
other things an Anglo-Russian literary comparatist,
and have visited the country at least annually since
then.
The Moscow
I remember of 1991 was febrile, almost but not quite
panicked, and throngingly poor. The Moscow I
remember of 2002 can best be summarised with the
word ‘rough’. Though safe in ways in which London
isn’t – I often used private cars as taxis, alone,
at night – there were also several obvious ways to
die which London lacked. Open manhole covers,
slipping drunk in the snow, crossfire. This was
‘diky capitalism’ – wild capitalism, with its gloves
decidedly off. Legless – literally – Afghan vets
pushing themselves through the snow, their torsos
balanced on makeshift skateboards. Families camped
out singing for their supper. Concert-quality
violinists busking. Professional gymnasts stripping
in nightclubs. Makeup stores where Western brands
were sold at what I at first thought were ruble
prices but were in fact hugely inflated and illegal
US dollar prices. My employer at a private English
school wasn’t paying tax, on the grounds that he
couldn’t both do that and be solvent. Police one
crossed the street to avoid – both because one’s own
affairs would inevitably involve some illegality,
and because they were underpaid and relied on
bribes.
A year
later, on a visit, the situation was slightly
better. The most extravagant misery was no longer
apparent. A year later, better still. And that has
been the consistent pattern on all my visits since
then. Capitalism has been getting its gloves back
on. Public facilities are in a much better state.
Nothing is sold in dollars and Western brands have
Russian rivals. A sensible tax structure means that
businesses and salaried employees can and do pay
their taxes. One sees no-one drunk in public.
Muscovite women no longer exaggerate their
femininity in a way which testifies to financial
insecurity and a strenuous imitation of a
pornographically-imagined West. And most
reassuringly of all, to Westerners used to this
custom, people have begun to smile. Even the hardest
cases – the babushki guarding the museum
rooms, and the border guards at passport control –
will now return a smile. Last year, for the first
time, I felt that Russia was in a new phase – the
post-post-Soviet, in which people are no longer
waiting for normality to be re-established, or
yearning to live in a ‘normal’ country. A new
normality, and a new optimism, have emerged.
My locus of
pulse-taking of the country has usually been Moscow
– to a lesser extent St Petersburg, Nizhnii
Novgorod, and Perm – but from what I hear of the
rest of the country, the improvement has been, if
slower, widespread and also steady.
Now this
period of my acquaintance has coincided with Putin’s
time in power.
It is one feature of the Western
media treatments of Russia that it makes Putin
metonymic of the country, one of its assumptions
being his increasingly autocratic control of it. I
dispute that assumption; but I have no doubt that
Putin has had a decisive impact on Russian politics
in this century. For this reason, my target in this
post is not only Russophobia but Putinophobia, and I
consider these to be related biases: here I am
taking a phobia in the sense of a negative
prejudice.
The impetus
for this post is my sense that the Russia which I
have got to know, and the Russia I see described in
Western and specifically British mainstream media,
have become increasingly discrepant. As Russia, in
my experience, has improved with regard to just
about every indicator I can think of, its image in
the Western press has deteriorated. Now, there are
all kinds of ways in which improving living
standards could be compatible with increasing
autocracy and international belligerence – one
thinks of Hitler. But I believe that no such
combination pertains in Putin’s case.
I will just
finish this introduction with an anecdote. This
April I visited the British Council in Moscow and
spoke to two of its young Russian employees. One
expects such people to be broadly Western-orientated
and Anglophile. Part of their job was to analyse
British press coverage of Russia, and, for as long
as they were under the mistaken impression that I
was a BBC journalist, they were guarded to the point
of hostility. When I clarified my position as an
academic, and a sceptic of British coverage of
Russia, they burst into smiles, and shared with me
how depressed reading and watching this coverage
makes them. I know no Russian who has any knowledge
of Russia’s representation in Britain who is not
strongly critical of it. I too am depressed by it,
specifically because I think that it is
intellectually and morally demeaning, and
counter-productive to a dangerous degree.
In the rest
of this post I’m not going to simply contrast
mainstream British and American media assertions
with my own. What I will try to do is describe a few
of the ways in which what I consider to be a false
image is constructed, and the factors favouring the
survival of this image – in the hope that if my
description of those processes rings true, then it
may influence your responses to the media’s
representations henceforth. Finally, I will consider
the practical effects of the media’s image of
Russia.
The means
of its creation are the usual suspects in cases of
bias: distortion of fact through exaggeration,
understatement, and fabrication; false inferences;
inconsistent application of standards; and misuse of
language.
To start
with exaggeration: the argument that Putin has
overwhelming control of the Russian media is often
highly overstated. Much TV is state-owned, but some
of the state-owned channels, such as RIA Novosti,
criticise Putin, as do many radio stations and
newspapers. Putin gets far more criticism in the
Russian press as a whole than does Cameron in the
British press. Now this isn’t comparing like for
like, since there might in theory be more grounds
for criticising Putin – but it is nonetheless a
fact, which conflicts with part of the image of
Russia as frequently presented. The internet is
freer than it is in Britain – one reason why online
intellectual piracy is rife – and many Russians get
their news from the internet. Government control of
the media therefore cannot convincingly be adduced
as a significant reason for Putin’s consistently
high popularity ratings.
Protests
against him, on the other hand, receive coverage far
out of proportion to their size – even as
overestimated, despite the fact that large, peaceful
protests indicate the right to protest. The
demonstrations in Moscow after the March 2012
presidential election are a case in point. Coverage
of such protests also involved understatement of
their most important political component – the
Communists. Support for the Communist Party is
running at a steady 20%, making it by far the most
important opposition party. The British media,
however, focuses overwhelmingly on the ‘liberal’
opposition. It is understandable that it does this
given that that is the tendency which it supports,
but it also gives a false impression that the
‘liberal’ opposition is in fact at present the main
one. Footage of the demonstrations in which the
Communist flag predominated undermined the British
commentary which was voiced over it.
This
exaggeration of size and importance both of the
protests and of the liberal component in them, is
clearly the product of wishful thinking – but if one
is really interested in seeing the replacement of
Putin by a liberal, it does one no favours to
overstate the current importance of the liberal
opposition even to oneself. One should instead
confront the fact that the liberal parties combined
poll around only 5% of the vote, and should then try
to work out what is wrong with these parties’
message and or leaders, and/or what is wrong with
the voters’ ability to perceive the attractiveness
of their message.
But the
most important elision in coverage of Russia is of
those improvements in demographic indicators, living
standards, national affluence, and the rule of law,
which I mentioned. During his first twelve years in
power GDP increased by some 850%. The country is now
largely debtless, with a large reserve of currency
reserves. Due to Putin’s policies revenues from oil
now serve the national economy. Mortality has
sharply declined, and the birth rate increased.
Then there
is fabrication, or speculation presented as fact.
A good
example of this is Putin’s personal wealth – which
has received some fantastically high estimates in
Forbes and Bloomberg, including that he is the ninth
richest man in the world, or indeed the richest man.
These theories took much of their impetus from
claims by two men, analyst Stanislav Belkovsky,
cousin of Berezovsky, and liberal politician Boris
Nemtsov. The allegations are that he secretly owns a
large part or all of Gazprom and related energy
companies such as Gunvor. Indeed, when The
Economist published allegations about Putin’s
ownership of Gunvor in 2008 it was sued and forced
to print a retraction. There are probably only a
very few people in the world who actually know the
size and precise form of Putin’s wealth: he himself,
and one or two others. I would only observe, first,
that specific allegations have not been proved;
second, that speculations should not be presented as
confirmed fact; and third, that nothing which is
known about Putin’s history and proud, workaholic
character suggests someone to whom the things that
money can buy have a strong appeal; a sybaritic
Goering he is not.
Other
claims made about corruption in Russia are
self-evidently absurd. Certain claims made about
corruption at the Sochi Olympics would, if true,
mean that more money had been lost to corruption
than the entire GDP of the country.
The
credulity leant to the claims made by critics of
Putin by virtue of being made by Putin’s critics
leads me onto one false inductive inference found
commonly in coverage of Putin: that my enemy’s enemy
is my friend. When combined with the assumption that
there is governmental interference in the operation
of the law in Russia, this has the outcome that when
somebody who is accused of a crime in Russia voices
criticism of Putin they effectually enlist on their
side in protestation of their innocence a
preponderance of the British media.
That is,
not only is my enemy’s enemy my friend, and not only
is Putin’s critic therefore my friend, but Putin’s
critic is innocent – not only negatively innocent of
any crime as charged, but positively innocent and
good, because by virtue of opposing a tyrant they
are dissident, and therefore of the same genre of
person as the saintly Solzhenitsyn or Sakharov. In
actual fact, a prisoner with political views is not
the same as a political prisoner.
It is true
that the Russian legal system is less fair than the
British, and lacks several of its important features
in both criminal and civil law – for example the
principle of disclosure of adverse evidence. The
system is young, having been created for the new
capitalist system at the end of Communism. Many of
the lawyers and judges are therefore still
relatively young and inexperienced, and adhere
rather too closely to the letter of the law. Defence
is still not as well established a profession as
prosecution, and this shows. These factors affect
the justice of all trials in the country.
But two
things must immediately be added to this. First,
that the situation is getting gradually better.
Putin did not destroy the independence of the
judiciary; before him it scarcely existed, and is
being gradually built up. Second, the allegation
that all trials of Putin’s critics are unjust by the
standards of the system as it exists has very little
evidence to support it.
In the
1990s much of Russia’s wealth corruptly and often
violently became the private property of a few
so-called oligarchs. When Putin became President he
made them an offer that constituted quite possibly
the optimum intersection of pragmatism,
forward-thinking, and justice. They could either pay
back some of their unpaid tax, invest some of their
wealth in their home regions, and refrain from
leveraging their wealth into political power – or be
prosecuted for their past crimes as committed. Some,
like Abramovich, accepted the compromise offered,
and have flourished. Others, like Khodorkovsky,
didn’t. His trial for tax evasion was widely
criticised in the West as politically motivated and
unfair. What has scarcely been reported is that on
25th July 2013 the European Court of Human Rights
(to which Russia as a member of the Council of
Europe is subject) found that
the trial was not politically motivated, that
Khodorkovsky was guilty as charged, and that he was
appropriately sentenced (although it found certain
procedural irregularities in his treatment, for
which it ordered compensation to be paid). In other
cases, such as those of Pussy Riot and would-be
presidential candidate Aleksei Navalny (whose
appeals to the European Court of Human Rights have
yet to be heard), the defendants were found guilty
of crimes under Russian law on the basis of strong
evidence, and were given sentences which not only
fitted well within the range of sentences available
for the crime concerned, but which resembled
sentences which the same crimes would have received
were they committed in Britain. In Britain, Pussy
Riot would have been charged under the Public Order
Act 1986, for offences under which the maximum
sentence is two years in prison (which is what Pussy
Riot received). Navalny would have been charged
under the Theft Act 1968, for offences under which
the maximum sentence is six years (Navalny received
five). In certain respects the operation of the
Russian law is more lenient than the British. Prior
to their ‘punk prayer’ in the Cathedral of Christ
the Saviour, members of Pussy Riot had performed
public sex in a museum, and thrown live cats at
workers in a McDonalds restaurant. In Britain such
acts could have resulted in prison sentences of at
least two years, whereas in Russia they were not
prosecuted at all. One reason why Pussy Riot were
prosecuted for their ‘punk prayer’ was that it
disrupted and parodied a religious act of worship,
which is specifically prohibited under Russian (as
also British) law, and which is particularly
comprehensible in a country with a history of state
persecution of religion.
Finally,
criticism of the conviction on well-founded criminal
charges of those who have opposed Putin amounts to a
demand that anyone who has opposed Putin should be
above the law simply by that virtue. It should
rather be argued that Putin’s closest allies (such
as the former defence minister Serdyukov, whose
trial for fraud has been much delayed), if suspected
of criminal activities, should not be above the law.
To do the inverse is to argue that the rule of law
in Russia be undermined. Indeed, it is implicitly to
argue that Putin should prevent the law taking its
course in the case of anyone who criticises him,
which is the same as calling for political
interference in the law, which is precisely what is
ostensibly being criticised. If the point is made
that not all oligarchs have been treated equally,
the proper response is to demand that they all be
held accountable for their crimes, not none of them.
It is worth
adding that supporting anyone, no matter how
criminally malodorous, provided that they publically
oppose Putin, turns us into their useful idiots, and
makes us appear idiotic to many Russians who cannot
understand on what basis other than political enmity
such a person as Boris Berezovsky was given asylum
in Britain rather than being extradited to stand
trial for crimes in Russia.
Internationally, something of the same dynamic of
support for an enemy’s enemy is apparent. NATO is
hostile to Russia, therefore, for some, there is a
reason to support NATO. But on what bases do NATO
and Russia disagree?
First, Russia weakly or
strongly opposed NATO’s interventions in Yugoslavia,
Afghanistan, Iraq, and Libya. Which was right
depends on your attitude towards those
interventions, but if one desires peace rather than
war – civil or otherwise – then Russia rather than
NATO should be judged to have acted better.
Second,
NATO has behaved with much greater hostility towards
Russia than Russia towards it. In 1990 both the EU
and NATO promised Russia they would not expand
Eastwards. Since then they have done that
relentlessly. Russia has done almost nothing in
response. It did, however, protest loudly and
understandably against the planned deployment of US
ballistic missile interceptors in Poland and
Romania. The US would certainly not tolerate Russia
basing similar systems in Cuba or Venezuela.
This brings
us on to inconsistent application of standards. The
Russian government is almost invariably interpreted
in the worst possible light by being held to higher
standards than other countries.
Let’s take
the recent controversial ‘gay law’. Such positive
aspect as the Russian government
uncharacteristically and briefly enjoyed in the eyes
of Edward Snowden’s supporters when he was granted
asylum in Russia was quickly lost in the US-centred
campaign against the gay law which began immediately
afterwards. The law making it an ‘administrative
offence’ [minor crime] to present homosexuality in a
positive light to minors is a bad law, because it
makes a minor offence out of something which was
scarcely practised and which should not be banned.
It explicitly outlaws ‘homosexual paedophile
propaganda’ whilst making no mention of
‘heterosexual paedophile propaganda’. However, in
Russia private and public homosexuality is as legal
as heterosexuality – yet there was negligible
support for a boycott on for example Qatar,
scheduled to hold the World Cup, which has vastly
more repressive anti-gay legislation. Furthermore
several US states have anti-gay legislation much
stronger than what exists in Russia, but nobody has
proposed any kind of boycott of America on this
basis. Pro-gay American barmen did not pour Scotch
whiskey down the drains between 1988 and 2003 to
protest against the very similar law (Section 28 of
the Local Government Act) which was then in place in
Britain. It seems clear that the anti-Russian gay
law campaign flourished because of Russophobia – the
phenomenon I am describing. You may remember during
the coverage of the Sochi Olympics there was Claire
Balding being genially responsive to the impressive
facilities and the warm support of the local
Russians, standing alongside BBC Russian
correspondent Daniel Sandford, who would repeatedly
interject – rather in the manner of a Soviet
commissar – comments such as: ‘ah, but we must never
forget that this is the country where the
presentation of homosexuality to minors in a
positive light is an administrative offence’.
I am not
saying that any amount of impressive facilities and
warm locals should whitewash egregious human rights
violations – but the Russian gay law simply isn’t
that. Russia’s leading gay activist, Nikolai
Alexeyev, became increasingly distressed at the way
in which the US-based anti-gay-law campaign was
being used as a tool of Russophobia. On the 17th
August 2013 he tweeted: ‘All Western media want to
hear from me that Russia is shit and I don’t want to
take part in this hypocrisy. So all interviews are
over!’ For this reaction, he, a brave campaigner
against the gay law, was unfairly branded a stooge
of Putin – and so a divide opened up between
Russophobic pro-gay activists and Russian gay
activists, whose job it is to actually change
opinions on the ground.
And as with
gay rights, so with human rights in general. Russia
gets held to higher standards not only than
countries such as Bahrain and China, but the United
States. On the basis of Western media coverage one
would think that Russia’s human rights situation was
worse than that of the States, and at least as bad
as that of China – both of which notions are
preposterous.
Let us
compare Russia to the United States (China being of
course much worse than both). The US has around 730
to Russia’s 598 prisoners per 100,000 of the
population. It uses the death penalty, executes
minors, and empowers its President to authorise the
kidnap, torture, and killing of domestic and foreign
citizens without trial. Russia does none of these
things. The US government has significantly
curtailed Americans’ civil liberties under the
Patriot Act, extensively spies on the media
activities of its own and other countries’ citizens,
and detains hundreds of people without trial in an
international network of secret prisons. Russians’
civil liberates are now more strongly guaranteed by
law than are Americans’; there is no evidence or
suggestion that Russia kidnaps individuals abroad or
outsources torture, nor that it runs a torture camp
resembling Guantanamo Bay, nor that the FSB spies on
Russian citizens to anything near the extent that
the NSA spies on Americans, let alone on foreigners.
In this respect – the extent of spying on their own
citizens – Russia and the US have changed places
since the end of the Soviet Union. Whereas the trend
of US law over the last decade and a half has been
to diminish civil liberties, in Russia the legal
culture is becoming gradually more humane and
liberal. Russia puts suspected Islamic terrorists
whom it has captured on trial within a reasonable
period, and does not deny them habeas corpus.
America’s popular culture (including films such as
Zero Dark Thirty) acknowledges that America
has practised torture, and suggests that it may have
been justified in doing so. Russia’s popular culture
does not endorse the practice of torture. The
contrast between Western treatments of Russia and of
the US with regard to human rights was apparent when
in 2012 Amnesty International ran a Priority Action
campaign on behalf of Pussy Riot, whose members it
had designated prisoners of conscience, whilst not
running such a campaign on behalf of Bradley – now
Chelsea – Manning, whom it had not (and has not)
designated a prisoner of conscience. The members of
Pussy Riot had been sentenced, as I mentioned, to
two years in prison, according to the law, for a
crime which they had committed. At the time, Bradley
Manning was being subjected to cruel, inhuman, and
degrading punishment, prior to being tried for any
crime. This gave an unfortunate appearance of
political partiality to Amnesty’s decisions,
implying that they considered the relatively humane
and legal treatment of critics of Putin to be a more
urgent and flagrant violation of human rights than
the torture before trial of a whistleblower on
American torture.
On the
issue of double standards let us consider too the
advice which America gives to Russia. During the
protests on Maidan Square in Kiev you may remember
John Kerry urging Yanukovich to demonstrate
‘restraint’ with regard to the protesters. He showed
so much restraint that he left the city rather than
ordering his police to defend his Presidency by
force, as they would have been capable of doing. Can
you imagine any American President being induced to
flee by violent street protests in Washington? In
Washington the Maidan protests wouldn’t have lasted
a couple of days. If you draw a lethal weapon in the
presence of a police officer you may legally be shot
dead. In Kiev, around 20 policemen were killed. One
can imagine the scornful and outraged response were
Putin, for example, to urge that Obama show
restraint in the face of violent protests, to the
extent of allowing himself to be overthrown.
It goes
without saying that the dictators with whom Russia
has relatively good relations, in Syria, North
Korea, and Cuba, are excoriated in a way in which
not only does the West not excoriate the dictators
in Saudia Arabia, Bahrain, Quatar, Uzbekistan,
Honduras, Thailand, and Egypt – but a way in which
Russia doesn’t excoriate them either. Overall not
only does the West not practice what it preaches to
Russia, it preaches where Russia does not – and
although I have no general objection to preaching –
I’m a Lawrencian for goodness sake – I do object to
the preaching of hypocrites.
One thing
that assists in our inconsistent application of
standards is our use of language. Protesters on
Maidan were protesters; in Slaviansk, Kramatorsk,
Mariupol they were rebels. Putin’s government is
frequently referred to as a regime, and therefore
likened to a dictatorship, whereas not only does
Russia, like the US, have an imperfect democracy,
but Putin personally has a twenty percent higher
approval rating than does Obama, and at least
twenty-five percent higher than Cameron. But there
is one word in particular which is misused in a
Russian context – ‘liberal’. Now, this is a
notoriously protean word, but there does seem to be
agreement over its denotation in a Russian context,
where it generally assumed to mean ‘promoting
Western values with regard to individual liberty,
equality, democracy and the rule of law’. However,
when one considers the policies of those politicians
and commentators described as liberal, one finds
that what is in fact denoted is ‘promoting foreign
and economic policies which are aligned with Western
interests, whatever other (possibly illiberal) views
are held’. For example, Aleksei Navalny, who was
frequently described as a liberal opposition leader,
holds views which most Western liberals would
categorise as racist. Since most Russians do not
want Russia to conform to NATO geopolitical or
economic interests at its own expense, and since
Western capitalism is damaged by association with
the nineteen-nineties (a period which has never
sufficiently been accepted in the West as having
been a catastrophe), so-called ‘liberals’ account
for a relatively small proportion of the popular
vote. Yet Russophobic narrative conflates ‘liberal’
with ‘democratic’. The fact that Putin’s policies
have vastly more appeal than so-called liberal ones
does not make Putin an anti-democrat, and those who
oppose the democratically elected Putin are not
‘pro-democratic’ by that virtue.
Russophobia, like Said’s account of Orientalism,
therefore relies on and generates contradictions. On
the one hand it constructs an enemy which is
aggressive and to be feared, threatening its
neighbours such as the Ukraine and Georgia. On the
other hand it creates a risible enemy of which the
economy is flimsily dependent on oil – a point far
less often made about far more strongly oil-reliant
allies such as Saudi Arabia.
Both
Russia’s aggression and its weakness are overstated
– that is, the desire (for reasons I’ll come on to)
to construct an enemy produces an image (and to a
small extent, a reality) which is then actually
feared, the power of which needs to be understated.
Since 1989, when it withdrew from Afghanistan, it
has sent its troops only into Georgia, and that in
support of the inhabitants of a semi-autonomous
enclave which Georgian troops had entered in
violation of international treaties. In fact it
threatens no one.
But the
understatement of its power is just as striking.
Speaking to businessmen working in Russia – Russian
and foreign alike – it became clear to me that
Russia is hugely and diversely economically
productive, avoiding many of the pitfalls of
indebtedness and a phony banking system which
afflict our own economy. L’Oréal, Danône, Peugeot,
and Renault are all making huge profits in Russia.
Far from being entirely reliant on the export of
oil, Russia makes a range of manufactured goods
including steel, chemicals, pharmaceuticals,
clothing, ship building, machine tools, aircraft,
food processing, furniture, computers, tractors,
optical devices, commercial vehicles, and mobile
phones. It has a big construction industry, and in
fields such as nuclear power engineering and space
technology it is one of the world’s leaders. These
are perhaps little thought of in the West perhaps
because they tend to be heavy goods, not consumer
goods, and are therefore not found in Western shops.
Income tax is flat at 13%, in a way which at present
encourages economic growth (though is, I assume, a
temporary measure, before a more socialist graduated
income tax one day replaces it). There is around 10%
interest on current accounts. The sanctions have
hurt, but have also led to more inward
investment.
And the narrative of Russian weakness is
also assisted by ignoring its relations with the
rest of the world beyond the West. There are
strengthening Russian-Chinese ties, and warm
relations between Russia and most countries of Asia,
Africa, and South America – including both China and
Japan, both India and Pakistan, both Israel and
Palestine.
When I
attended a meeting of businessmen discussing
responses to the sanctions in Moscow in April it was
telling that the Ambassadors who decided to come –
at least, those that I met – were from South Africa,
Mexico, Peru, Benin, Indonesia and Malaysia. Not one
from the ‘West’, and that is really a metaphor for
the fact that the West does not witness, and does
not want to see, the good relations which Russia has
with the rest of the world.
But there
are many factors which favour the construction and
persistence of Russophobia.
One of the
first and most obvious is limited contact with the
country itself. From the sixteenth century, when
West Europeans started travelling to Russia in any
numbers, it’s been rightly observed that Russia is
difficult to get to, travel in, and onerous in its
passport requirements. Tit-for-tat visa policy means
that it is not easy to pop to St Petersburg for a
quick city break – indeed, there are very few direct
flights between London, the world’s air-transport
hub, and the second biggest city of the world’s
biggest country – which, thinking of some of the
other places you can get more frequent direct
flights to from London, is extraordinary. Limited
contact with Russia, and limited learning of its
language, mean limited ability to test the validity
of the media’s image of Russia. That image is itself
partly the construction of journalists who
themselves know very little about the country, and
who echo each other. But it also the construction of
local foreign correspondents such as The
Guardian’s Luke Harding and The Economist’s
Ed Lucas, who in my opinion fall into that category
of people who can live in a country whilst loathing
and misrepresenting it, just as people can live in a
country, love it, and misrepresent it in a positive
direction.
One feature
favouring the re-echoing of opinions between
journalists resident and otherwise is the obverse of
a phenomenon I have discovered amongst people who
disagree with them. In Moscow friends of mine who
approve of Putin include
Russians, Americans, a
Finn, and a Frenchman. They work in Russia as
journalists, businessmen and lawyers. Their
political views range from Conservative to
nearly-Communist to green. But they have all, along
their different paths and from their own
perspectives, come to admire Putin, whose politics
can’t easily be described in terms of traditional
left-right analysis. The obverse of this is that he
can be criticised from all perspectives, so what we
have is a rare unity in British Russophobia between
left wing and right wing media outlets, and indeed
broadsheet and tabloid newspapers.
Another
feature favouring Russophobia is that its image of
Russia chimes with much older images that Russia has
had in the West – chiefly, as autocratic. The main
period of contact between West Europe and Russia has
been characterised by increasing disparity between
levels of democracy in the West and the East; this
remained true until relatively recently. Assertions
that Putin is autocratic fit into a primordialist
narrative about Russia as unfitted to democracy:
there are just two problems. One, primordialism is
now largely as discredited in political science as
is racism, and for similar reasons (pace the success
of Martin Sixsmith’s 2011 Russia: A Thousand
Years of the Wild East). Second, Putin isn’t
autocratic. The narrative of reversion to autocracy
after the relatively democratic Yeltsin years is
particularly absurd given that in 1993 Yeltsin
closed down news outlets and sent tanks to the White
House to disperse the Russian Parliament, which was
opposing his deeply unpopular economic policies.
Over the following few days it’s estimated that
between 187 and 2000 people were killed. Putin has
never done anything remotely similar, and it is of
course possible to misinterpret someone whose
policies are widely supported – inside of and beyond
parliament – as a dictator who brooks no opposition.
It has to
be said, though, that Russia itself has been a major
home of primordialist thought, mainly about itself.
What is the idea of the russkaia dusha, or
Russian soul, but an argument that Russia is a)
distinctive and b) unchanging, in its essence? The
discourse of the Russian soul is complicated (please
find my article about it
here), but part of it fits with the idea that
the Russian people are subservient and
long-suffering. And this idea gets a lot of
reinforcement from Tolstoy and Dostoevsky. However,
it was not the only primordialist account in town.
Eurasianism competed with Slavophilism, and both
with Westernism – Westernisers arguing, of course,
that Russia could and should catch up with the West.
Nonetheless, Russia of all countries has, in its
literature and philosophy, given considerable
encouragement to primordialist thought about itself.
I mentioned
the homology of primordialism to racism – and I
would argue that there is a racial dimension to
Russophobia or what I might alternatively have
called Russism. Here again it operates
through contradiction. On the one hand Russians are
othered as favouring autocracy and subservience. On
the other hand they are expected to behave just like
Western Europeans despite their vastly different
historical circumstances, and I am sure that one
reason for this is that European Russians look
almost exactly like West Europeans, which the
Chinese or the Turks, for example, don’t. In
proportion as there is little difference of melanin
pigmentation, eye colour, and facial structure,
little difference of political behaviour is
tolerated – and where it occurs, is then by reaction
essentialised.
Putin
himself has been very successfully demonised. His
KGB past is frequently invoked in a way which
overlooks the fact that the KGB was a standard
career option for ambitious young Soviets when he
was choosing his career. I might mention the fact
that he cites Maxim Isayev as an influence on his
desire to join the KGB. Isayev is the hero of the
1972 cult Soviet miniseries Seventeen Moments of
Spring – the Soviet answer to James Bond.
Isayev is a Russian agent pretending to be an
Obergruppenführer in Berlin at the end of the
Second World War. He is brave, cultured,
intelligent, merciful, and of complete integrity – a
Soviet hero, protecting Russia from Germany and
Germany from itself, of a kind that young men such
as Putin aspired to become. Of course as we know,
spying is not as it is in the films. But in our
post-Snowden-revelations era, it is most odd to
continue to deplore someone for having spied on the
citizens of another country, and to repeatedly use
this as a lens of negative interpretation of all of
their subsequent actions.
In his
self-presentation as a macho man Putin does himself
no favours in the West. But I think that Russians
need pay no more attention to our generalised scorn
for this image than the British need pay to
Americans, whose generalised impression it is that
all British men are gay. The reason is that normal
male behaviour here is in various ways softer, and
less literally and metaphorically muscular, than is
the norm in North America. In Russia Putin’s
performance of masculinity is far more acceptable
than it is here – and all the more so in contrast to
the series of gerontocrats who ruled the Soviet
Union after Stalin, and the embarrassingly
hard-drinking Yeltsin. It should also be noted that
it is not only for his macho personal qualities that
he is admired; he is also admired as clean-living,
in contrast to Yeltsin and many of the country’s men
during Yeltsin’s period in power, and as highly
educated – speaking Russian without grammatical
errors, again in contrast to Yeltsin.
But his
self-projection is emphatically directed at the
Russian people, rather than the rest of the world,
and this fits with the fact that Putin does not try
to woo the West – he plays them (to adopt an English
metaphor) with an entirely straight bat. Something
of a Communist contempt for advertising is apparent
in his lack of interest in spin for either himself
or his country, when it comes to the West. This was
one reason why Georgia got the best of the coverage
of the Georgia-Russia conflict, in a way which even
Martin Sixsmith admits was biased on the part of the
BBC. Columbia-educated Saakashvili was willing and
able to do PR in a way in which Medvedev wasn’t. A
different contrast to Russia here is provided by
China, which responds very sharply, and indeed
aggressively, to public criticism, and which if
anything is a beneficiary of the opprobrium heaped
on Russia, since it takes attention away from
itself, the far more credible threat to Western
interests. Russia, on the other hand, does next to
nothing to tackle Russophobia head-on. Nobody sent
me here tonight.
I will add
one more reason for the traction of Russophobia.
Distrust of the media goes back a long way in
Russia, to the early nineteenth century – and with
very good reason. The default attitude of Russians,
still today, is scepticism and cynicism. They may
vote for Putin because they like him or his
policies, but this does not make them trustful of
what they read, and there is still a lot of
insecurity about the state of the country, about
which they openly complain. Despite the voter
disaffection in this country, I think that there is
a far higher level of trust of what is said by
The Guardian, The Economist, The
Sun, the BBC, amongst the British than there is
of equivalent channels in Russia. That is, one
difference between us and the Russians is that we
are less sceptical of what we are told.
Cuyu bono? What are the
most obvious motivations for fostering Russophobia?
In brief
(and the substantive reasons really are brief):
Russia’s foreign policy does not follow that of the
West. Western armaments manufacturers have an
interest in stoking a new Cold War, because the War
against Terror has not filled the gap in arms sales
– especially of nuclear weapons – left by the end of
the Cold War. And NATO desperately needs a
raison d’être.
But the
interests of arms companies and NATO are not those
of the West as a whole. Russophobia acts in
massively counter-productive ways. It restricts its
potentially enormous economic cooperation and
cultural and touristic interchange with Russia – one
reason why businesspeople have been opposed to the
sanctions – and it pushes Russia decisively towards
economic, political, and military cooperation with
China and indeed the rest of the world. The
sanctions have had the effect of making Russia look
at developing its own version of VISA. It has
welcomed the repatriation of Russian wealth held
abroad. And in the Ukraine, Western support for a
coup against an elected president has had the
country on the brink of civil war, and has increased
the size of the territory of Russia. As a friend of
mine has repeatedly commented to me, ‘wars start
when politicians lie to journalists then believe
what the read in the press.’ Putin’s popularity is
at a high of 83% in the wake of the events in the
Ukraine, and feeling against the US and EU on the
part of ordinary Russians is beginning to increase.
This makes life harder for Russians whose political
agenda has support in the West. A good example is
gay rights activists, who have found their aims much
harder to achieve since a pro-gay attitude has
effectually been aligned with an anti-Russian one.
Russian gay activists are now arguably a more highly
distrusted and isolated group than before they
received Western backing.
Also, as is
apparent to all Russians who are familiar with
Russophobia, Russia is being criticised for the
wrong things – and this is its most tragic irony.
The country is far from perfect. Social security is
miserably low; there is bullying in the army and
prisons, and problems with racism, drugs, and
domestic violence; health and education are
under-funded; income tax is flat. But these are not
the things for which Russia gets criticised, either
by Westerners or their own so-called liberal
parties, which are obsessively concerned with Putin
himself.
The people
who are suffering in Russia are not liberal
opposition leaders with their abundant coverage in
the Western press, but the poor.
And who
apart from the Communists, and to some extent Putin,
is talking about them?
Russophobia
is composed of ignorance, a failure of scepticism
and reasoning, pride, hypocrisy, condescension and
churlishness, turned to the service of the
military-industrial complex and NATO. It supports a
one-sided Cold War against a country which is only
just getting on its feet after collapse, is
primarily focused on improving the living conditions
of its people, wants war nowhere, and has no desire
to be our enemy unless forced to defend itself. I
wish it well.
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