Wolf vs Bear
Source: http://www.robertamsterdam.com/2009/10/wolf_vs_bear.htmPosted on Friday, October 30th, 2009 | In Investing Lessons, Russia
Demonizing NATO is a favorite Kremlin pastime, Michael Bohm says in an op-ed in the the Moscow Times today. Taking Medvedev’s questionable assertion that there are NATO missiles in Europe, pointing at Russia, as a recent case in point – he traces the history of Russian NATO bashing.
There is a rich Soviet history of crude anti-NATO propaganda. Old copies of Krokodil magazine, for example, contain plenty of grotesque caricatures filled with the bloody hands of rapacious Uncle Sam-like figures representing NATO, craving to take over the world. Two generations of Russians grew up reading Krokodil as well as Sergei Mikhalkov, who, in addition to writing several versions of the Soviet anthem, wrote popular, highly politicized fables such as “The Wolf-Diplomat” with direct references to NATO as the predatory wolf that gobbles up innocent hares. Even today, the sound of the word “NATO” invariably evokes a knee-jerk negative response among many Russians, even among the intelligentsia who understand perfectly well that NATO’s military capability and its relationship to Russia are completely different now than they were during the Cold War.
Given the degree to which NATO has disarmed over the past 18 years, it is ridiculous, of course, to speak seriously about a NATO military threat to Russia. (The alliance’s “political threat” to Russia should not be confused with a military threat.)
But the spirit of Krokodil and Mikhalkov continues to this
day, particularly among the conservative journalists and political
analysts like Mikhail Leontyev, Alexei Pushkov and Alexander Prokhanov.
One popular radio and television host recently described NATO on Ekho
Moskvy radio as “the iron leviathan that crushes all humanity.”
Granted, many Russians to this day find it hard to forgive NATO for its
military campaign in the former Yugoslavia, and true, we hear plenty of
inflammatory Russia-bashing from Poland and the Baltic states. But
isn’t “iron leviathan that crushes all humanity” a bit of an
overstatement to describe NATO?
This overblown rhetoric can be heard on a regular basis in the Russian
mass media, particularly on government-controlled television. It would
be nice if this could be dismissed as harmless bluster — or even
encouraged as diversity of opinion, if such pluralism, in fact,
existed. But the problem is that anti-NATO and anti-U.S. propaganda by
the country’s conservative journalists and analysts dominates the mass
media, and it has a direct impact on the public. Opinion polls,
including the most current ones, confirm that anti-NATOism and
anti-Americanism have stayed at the same levels as during the Bush era,
despite Obama’s clearly new approach to Russia. Some polls indicate
that negative feelings toward NATO and the United States have actually
increased since Obama became president. This results in a
self-perpetuating vicious circle: the more anti-NATOism increases, the
more the politicians and journalists want to cater to this public
opinion, fueling anti-NATOism even more. This can hardly help “reset”
U.S.-Russian relations.The anti-NATO rhetoric looks particularly primitive and obsolete after
Russia agreed in July to provide the United States and other NATO
countries with an air corridor for military shipments. In addition, new
NATO Secretary-General Anders Fogh Rasmussen has made a commitment to
improve NATO-Russian relations, and this offers a lot of hope.
Read the whole article here.
Last 5 posts by Robert Amsterdam
- Grigory Pasko: Journalists Are Fleeing Russia - November 20th, 2009
- Evgeny Lebedev and the Londongrad Blues - November 20th, 2009
- The Obstacle of Pride - November 20th, 2009
- The Iron (Pipeline) Curtain - November 20th, 2009
- Yurgens: A Taliban-controlled Afghanistan is no picnic for Russia - November 20th, 2009
![]() About Robert Amsterdam (http://www.robertamsterdam.com/)
Robert Amsterdam is a lawyer and an advocate for rule of law. His blog was created to express views which may stimulate debate and discussion on topics of international interest. Robert believes that we live in a world of unchallenged impunity, and he views his blog as merely a small attempt to shine a light on issues he views as important in countries with which he is engaged. He make no apologies or pretense of objectivity - he is merely stating his opinions. |



