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Home » Editor’s Column » Economic Crises and Presidential Terms -- Through a Western Looking-glass.
Economic Crises and
Presidential Terms -- Through a Western Looking-glass.
By Sergei Roy,
Editor, www.guardian-psj.ru
I sometimes envy Western
correspondents who write about Russia
the ease and comfort attendant on their job. Their formula is as simple as pie:
blackwash anything that happens or does not happen in this country, and your
copy will be a sure and easy sell. If the facts of real life interfere with the
blackwashing process, ignore them, or invent your own - plainly speaking, tell
lies, however brazen and absurd. Actually, the more brazen and absurd, the
better. The Goebbels formula.
If you think this an exaggeration, I suggest we go through just one such
epic, one of a zillion written in the same spirit - the Daily Telegraph's Moscow correspondent Adrian Blomfield's piece
"Russia's crumbling economy provides stiffest test yet for autocratic leader" in
DT's 17 Nov 2008 issue. Practically every sentence in this exercise is either a direct lie or some
other trick in the propaganda warfare bag of tricks.
What evidence does the author provide for his scary phraseology about a
"crumbling economy"? Here goes: "Russia's own stock markets have
been the world's worst performers, with share prices falling by 75 per cent
since the summer." The world's worst
performers? Man, have you heard of basket cases like Iceland,
Ukraine, the Baltics, Hungary, and
others lining up for aid from the IMF? We here in Russia have forgotten how to
spell IMF - yet we are said to be "crumbling"!
OK, Russia's
stock market has not been too healthy - just like some others one could name,
given that the crisis is global and coming as it does from you-know-where. But
equating the stock market, with its soap bubbles, "toxic derivatives," money
out of the air and its overall Las Vegas spirit, with what is generally
referred to as the "real economy" is just a propaganda trick. Blomfield never
mentions the fact that very, very few Russians are shareholders, even fewer
have had anything to do with stock market games, and that the absolute majority
of them are just like me - without any access to or interest in the stock
market. What immediately and vitally concerns millions of Americans, with
shares on their hands losing value by the day, is a remote and only dimly
understood preoccupation for us. It may be sad, in the capitalist scheme of
things, but it's true here in Russia.
Leaving this fact out of the picture skews it enough to make it unrecognizable.
To justify his verbiage about a crumbling economy, Blomfield would have to
quote a similar 75 percent drop in production, or at least something like it.
Instead, he is quoting some anonymous sources "predicting that growth could
slow to between 2 and 3 per cent, a disastrous slowdown." Marvellous. France posts a
0.7 percent growth, and that is great news that all the airwaves are full of
for days on end - and no wonder, compared with recession among its neighbors. Russia is
anonymously expected to slow down to 2 and 3 percent - and it's a "disaster."
That's logic according to Blomfield, borrowed straight from a textbook on
psyops.
These projected percentages are, of course, no more than a figment of an
anonymous imagination, yet even without them we Russians know things are going to be tough, in the real
economy and all-round - not because President Medvedev tolds us so the other
day in so many words, but simply because we can put two and two together,
especially where the twos are two widely different prices of a barrel of oil.
So what? So bloody what? We have seen much, much worse, and not so long ago.
We've been through the thousand-fold rise in prices in 1991-1992, brought about
by a shock therapy engineered by our Western-trained and -directed radical
liberals. We've been through the August 1998 meltdown and ruble devaluation,
engineered by the same bunch. Those were real disasters for us, under those
darlings of the West, Boris Yeltsin and his radical-liberal cohorts.
I clearly remember the times when Russia's entire forex reserves were a
paltry $12 billion - not enough to stave off a crisis for a day even. Now these reserves
are closer to half a trillion, which makes them the world's third, and that's
reason enough, for me and the likes of me, to take the tough times ahead in our
stride. Times just cannot be worse than they used to be. It will be yet another
occasion for us Russians to exercise our national characteristic that has seen
us through countless times of war, famine, crisis and all sorts of troubles
down the ages - endless patience and a certain bloody-mindedness in the teeth
of adversity.
That is not the explanation Adrian Blomfield palms off on his readers.
His "explanation," in fact, reads like Russophobic hate mail: "Subjected
to more than a century of propaganda masquerading as news, Russians often seem
to live in a different reality from the rest of us... at a time when their country is locked in its
worst financial crisis in a decade, they are more optimistic about the economy
than they have ever been."
What
could you say about a people like that? A bunch of propaganda-besotted morons,
surely, and that's pure, undiluted Russophobia. I particularly liked this bit
about "more than a century of propaganda masquerading as news": In Blomfieldian
chronology, the trend was started around 1900 by none other than Czar Nicholas
II. That must have been the reason why the Bolsheviks shot him and his entire
family out of hand, I suppose.
As one reads
on, suspicion creeps in that it's his readers that Blomfield takes for morons,
not the Russians: "Obeying orders from the top, Russian television has banned
the use of words such as "crisis", "decline" and
"devaluation". Coverage of the mayhem in the country's stock market... is
scant."
Scant?! Why
don't you watch the 24x7 Vesti
channel, where you can seldom hear or see anything other than such coverage,
complete with diagrams every hour? Not to mention all the other channels, including
the English-language Russia Today. Or
a myriad newspapers and radio stations. And who could ban the use of words like
"crisis", "decline" and "devaluation" in the media, when
the country's top officials, its president and premier, constantly use them?
Really, this
sort of lies would make even Goebbels blush. There has been so much blather
about ruble devaluation in Russia's media that both Medvedev and Putin have
gone on record, more than once, to the effect that there is no question of
ruble devaluation or re-denomination, citing precise measures the government is
taking against such an eventuality - and Mr. Blomfield is treating us to select
quotations from "1984." Crazy...
If Russia's
masses are portrayed as gullible morons brainwashed by "more than a century of
propaganda," then the fountainhead of that propaganda, the Russian media, are
sycophantic, Nazi-type perveyors of the most rancid nonsense about the West -
according to Blomfield, that is. Here is what these jackals say about the West:
"just as in Soviet times, Russians are told how bad everything is in the West.
The US, Russians are told,
is in irreversible decline, while desperate Britons are throwing themselves
into the Thames. The Queen, facing imminent
penury, has been forced to pawn her diamonds and, according to one tabloid
front page, we can no longer afford to bury our dead."
All I can say
is, I wish Mr. Blomfield betrayed his predilection for anonymity at least once,
giving chapter and verse for just one of his sources - say, that tabloid he
mentions. I have been in the journalistic profession here for more years than I
care to remember, and I have never come across any such flimflam - which,
according to Blomfield's skit, makes up the substance of Russia's press.
For the DT readers' information: Russian
journalists take their foreign news from foreign sources. I cannot answer for every
"tabloid," but the general rule is to name the foreign sources of such foreign
news. For those media people who do not read in every European language, there are
such Internet resources as Inopressa or InoSmi complete with Russian
translations of an extremely wide variety of material from European, US and
other outlets. Mr. Blomfield will be interested to find there scores of his own
stories - in Russian. If he came up with a few canards there, they will merely
be reproduced in the Russian media, and he will have no one to blame for it
other than himself.
So, unlike
Blomfield, Russian journalists do not have to exercise their ingenuity
inventing stories about the West - they just borrow them from open sources. If
someone threw himself or herself in the Thames - OK, some Russian tabloid may
notice the story in a British one and print it, why not. If it's a canard, it's
a canard in every clime, Russia included. But to insist that Russia's media do
nothing but bamboozle their public with this kind of trash is a lie - not very
pure but much too simple.
It is not long
before Blomfield, in his hatred for his Russian colleagues, grows personal: he
describes my good friend Edward Lozansky, president of the American University
in Moscow, as a "former dissident" who is now "close to the
Kremlin." Jesus H. Christ... Ed, who was a painful thorn in the Kremlin's
side for decades, a dissident who was thrown out of the USSR and whose trials
made world news (there is a BBC documentary, feature film, and hundreds of
articles in all major newspapers about his story, including, by the way, the Daily Telegraph), a US citizen who has
ever been a dyed-in-the-wool Republican and won personal praises from Ronald
Reagan, both Bushes, and even John McCain, Ed who is quite prominent on the international
scene for his relentless efforts to bring the US and Russia closer together ...
"close to the Kremlin"!
Come to think
of it, in this frame of reference I, too, qualify for the description. I live
not two miles from the Kremlin, I used to take my nanogeneraian mother to the Dormition Cathedral there, and on one occasion
the British Council invited me to attend an Armenian violinist's concert held,
for reasons better known to the Council, in the Kremlin's Armory - and how
closer can one get? Then again, I share Ed's purpose of bringing Russia within
the European commonwealth of nations as an equal partner - definitely reason
enough to classify me as "close to the Kremlin," I suppose. Though I distinctly
remember the times when I was refered to as "that grandfather of Russian
liberalism," and not so long ago, either...
All this is too
silly for words. Things get even sillier, though, as Blomfield moves from the
economy and journalism into the field of politics. Of all the constitutional
changes proposed by President Medvedev, only the extension of the presidential
term from four years to six is discussed at length - and it is, of course, a
sign of "panic behind the scenes," what else. Not a word about all the other,
in my view much more significant moves. The proposal to make the government
more accountable to the Duma, providing for the premier's annual reports to the
legislators? Utterly ignored. The regional electorates' greater say in the
composition of the upper chamber of parliament? Dead silence. Extension of the
Duma's term of service to five years? Ditto. Why?
No prizes for
guessing why. Russia
has a symbolic figure that stands for its move away from its near collapse in
the hated 1990s to the current modest prosperity and enhanced prestige. That
symbolic figure is Vladimir Putin. So when any Russia-hater hits on a slur to
throw at this figure, he does throw it and keeps throwing it in the hope that
some of the mud will stick. None of the other constitutional changes offer much
of a chance for such mud-slinging, but the term extension does.
The mud in this
case is that this constitutional change will enable Putin to grab the
presidency for 12 years rather than eight and thus become even more of an
autocrat than he now is. Which is awful, of course. It was all-right for a
French president to serve a seven-year term, but for a Russian one to serve for
six years or, God forbid, 12 in a row is plain unspeakable.
It could, of
course, be argued that this business of the length of presidential service is a
purely internal, Russian matter; that, after all, elections are elections, and
the people elect whomever they prefer. If they like Putin so much, why
shouldn't they give him the top job for whatever term the legislators
stipulate? You know, the people's concern is entirely with their own
well-being, not with pleasing the Daily
Telegraph - but the Daily Telegraph seems
to think otherwise.
It's a pity,
though, that DT's man again had to
resort to outright lies to make his point: "Russia's leaders scarcely even
bothered to justify the need to extend the presidential mandate, claiming that
the measure was good for democracy without ever saying how."
Now, is it a
lie, or is it? Every RF politician of any note, from the president down, has
been at pains to explain the pressing need for such a move, citing the need for
greater stability, for changing the present procedure in which presidential and
parliamentary elections come sort of lumped together, for giving a newcomer to
the post of president more time to actually carry out his program rather than
learn the administrative ropes in his first year and fight in the next election
campaign in the fourth, and so and so forth. A plethora of reasons has been
given, some more convincing, others less, but to say that none has been brought
out is simply yet another crude lie of Blomfield's.
From lies to
hyper-imaginative speculation: "every independent analyst (anonymous again! - SR) says they will be more surprised if
Mr Putin is not president within two years than if he is." This sort of
"independent analysis" vividly reminds me of the months and even years prior to
the March 2008 presidential election in Russia, when what I then called a whole
"cottage industry" flourished, all devoted to the burning issue of "Will he or
won't he?" Meaning, of course, will Putin run for a third term of office or
not? Despite Putin's numerous public assurances that he was not going to
violate a clear stipulation of the RF Constitution, the Commentariat refused to
believe him and, like I said, built a whole industry around the
pseudo-problem. Well, it looks like Russia
specialists of the Blomfield type intend to treat us to a repeat performance.
In fact,
they've given the campaign a start already. Putin let drop somewhere: "As for who will run for office and
when, it's too early to talk about that now." This was immediately taken by
Blomfield, along with others, as a "hint that an election could be held sooner
than 2012, when Mr Medvedev's first term is due to expire." In Russian, this
sort of surmise is described as "sucked from the finger." Putin could have
meant "sooner than 2012," as Blomfield's independent but very anonymous
analysts hypothesize, or "later than 2016," or "not before 2020," or any other
date. In short, he said what he said -- that it was "too early to talk about
that."
Yet talk, and
write, the Commentariat will. Not much harm in that, of course, unless you happen
to be a dedicated environmentalist fighting against the destruction of forests
for the production of newsprint. But the lies, the lies...
No, I do not
envy Western Russia specialists their ease and
comfort, after all. "Thou shalt not bear false witness" is still good enough
for a great many people, and,
Lord, how
I want to be in that number,
When the saints go marchin' in...
Links:
Letter to the Editor-1
Letter to the Editor-2
Letter to the Editor-3
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