Russia’s anti-American fever goes beyond the Soviet
era’s
MOSCOW — Thought the Soviet Union
was anti-American? Try today’s Russia.
After a year in which furious
rhetoric has been pumped across Russian airwaves, anger toward the United
States is at its worst since opinion polls began tracking it. From ordinary
street vendors all the way up to the Kremlin, a wave of anti-U.S. bile has swept
the country, surpassing any time since the Stalin era, observers say.
The indignation peaked after the assassination of Kremlin critic Boris Nemtsov, as conspiracy theories started to swirl — just a few hours
after he was killed — that his death was a CIA plot to discredit Russia. (On
Sunday, Russia charged two men from Chechnya, and detained three others, in
connection with Nemtsov’s killing.)
There are drives to exchange
Western-branded clothing for Russia’s red, blue and white. Efforts to replace
Coke with Russian-made soft drinks. Fury over U.S. sanctions. And a passionate,
conspiracy-laden fascination with the methods that Washington is supposedly
using to foment unrest in Ukraine and Russia.
The anger is a challenge for U.S.
policymakers seeking to reach out to a shrinking pool of friendly faces in
Russia. And it is a marker of the limits of their ability to influence Russian
decision-
making after a year of sanctions. More than 80 percent of Russians now hold negative views of the United States, according to the independent Levada Center, a number that has more than doubled over the past year and that is by far the highest negative rating since the center started tracking those views in 1988.
making after a year of sanctions. More than 80 percent of Russians now hold negative views of the United States, according to the independent Levada Center, a number that has more than doubled over the past year and that is by far the highest negative rating since the center started tracking those views in 1988.
Nemtsov’s assassination, the highest-profile political killing during Vladimir Putin’s 15 years in power, was yet
another brutal strike against pro-Western forces in Russia. Nemtsov had long
modeled himself on Western politicians and amassed a long list of enemies who
resented him for it.
The anti-Western anger stands to
grow even stronger if President Obama decides to send lethal weaponry to the
Ukrainian military, as he has been considering.
The aim would be to “raise the cost” of any Russian intervention by making the
Ukrainian response more lethal. But even some of Putin’s toughest critics say
they cannot support that proposal, since the cost is the lives of their
nation’s soldiers.
“The United States is experimenting
geopolitically, using people like guinea pigs,” said Sergey Mikheev, director
of the Kremlin-allied Center for Current Politics, on a popular talk show on
the state-run First Channel last year. His accusations, drawn out by a host who
said it was important to “know the enemy,” were typical of the rhetoric that
fills Russian airwaves.
“They treat us all in the same way,
threatening not only world stability but the existence of every human being on
the planet,” Mikheev said.
Soviet rhetoric was officially
anti-Western, but it couldn’t repress ordinary Russians’ passion for the
Beatles or their enthusiasm for getting news from jammed Voice of America
broadcasts. Those positive feelings spilled over after the 1991 collapse of the
Soviet Union.
But the list of perceived slights
from the United States has long been building, particularly after the United
States and NATO bombed Serbia, a Russian ally, in 1999. Then came the war in
Iraq, NATO expansion and the Russia-Georgia conflict. Each time, there were
smaller spikes of anti-American sentiment that receded as quickly as they
emerged.
Putin cranked up the volume after
protest movements in late 2011 and 2012, which he blamed on the State
Department. It wasn’t until last year, when the crisis started in Ukraine, that
anti-Americanism spread even among those who once eagerly hopped on planes to
Miami and Los Angeles.
Fed by the powerful antagonism on
Russian federal television channels, the main source of news for more than
90 percent of Russians, ordinary people started to feel more and more
disillusioned. The anger seems different from the fast-receding jolts of the
past, observers say, having spread faster and wider.
The years of perceived humiliations
have “led to anti-Americanism at the grass-roots level, which did not exist
before,” said Vladimir Pozner, a journalist who for decades was a prominent
voice of the Soviet Union in the United States. More recently, he has to
explain the United States inside Russia. “We don’t like the Americans, and it’s
because they’re pushy, they think they’re unique and they have had no regard
for anyone else.”
Anti-American measures quickly
suffused the nation, ranging from the symbolic to the truly significant. Some
coffee shops in Crimea stopped serving Americanos. Activists projected racially
charged images of Obama eating a banana onto the side of the U.S. Embassy in
Moscow. Russians cheerfully flocked to exchange Western-branded clothing for T-shirts
with pictures of an Iskander missile launcher that said “Sanctions? Don’t make
my Iskander laugh.”
“This anti-Western propaganda radically
changed the atmosphere in the society,” said Lev Gudkov, the director of the
Levada Center, the opinion polling firm. “It has become militarist.”
Many Russians tapped into a
deep-rooted resentment that after modeling themselves on the West following the
breakup of the Soviet Union, they had experienced only hardship and humiliation
in return.
“Starting from about 1989, we
completely reoriented toward the West. We looked at them as a future paradise.
We expected that once we had done all that they demanded, we’d dance for them
and they would finally hug and kiss us and we would merge in ecstasy,” said
Evgeny Tarlo, a member of Russia’s upper house of parliament, on a Russian talk
show last year. Instead, he said, the West has been trying to destroy Russia.
The anti-Americanism makes it harder
for American culture to make inroads through its traditional means — soft-power
routes such as movies, music and education. Last year, Russian policymakers
ended a decades-old high school exchange program that offered their nation’s best and brightest the chance
to spend semesters at U.S. schools. Few Western artists now perform on Russian
soil.
Western diplomats also say privately
that they find themselves frozen out of speaking engagements and other
opportunities to explain their countries’ positions to Russian audiences. And
Russians who work for local outposts of Western companies say their friends and
neighbors increasingly question their patriotism.
A handful of business leaders have
warned that Russia risks permanently stunting its own economic development with
the angry self-isolation.
“I worry that the recent crisis
might drive Russia into a certain historic confrontation, hampering the
country's development in all spheres,” said former finance minister and Putin
ally Alexey Kudrin in an interview with TASS.
But those are lonely voices amid the
torrent of anti-Western fury.
“What the government knew was that
it was very easy to cultivate anti-Western sentiments, and it was easy to
consolidate Russian society around this propaganda,” said Maria Lipman, an
independent Moscow-based political analyst who is working on a study of anti-Western
attitudes.
Even McDonald’s, long an embodiment
of Russian dreams about the West, was targeted for supposed health violations
in the fall. Some of its most prominent locations were forced to shut down
temporarily. When they reopened, McDonald’s started an advertising campaign
emphasizing its local ties and its 25-year history in Russia, playing down the
Golden Arches’ global significance as a bright beacon of America.
Last week, one McDonald’s billboard
in the heart of Moscow read: “Made in Russia, for Russians.”
Here is a wiki post on the subject, too: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anti-American_sentiment_in_Russia
Poster’s comments:
1)
What do you expect with amateurs and light weights in present
charge in the USA? Some we elected, and some the elected people appointed or
hired, often with other politicians approving in our USA Constitutional system
of government.
2)
What do you expect with apparent rampant political and
financial corruption going on at many levels in the new world USA these days?
Now while this most likely always existed, it sure seems worse than normal
right now.
3)
How willing are we to fight foreigners for at least keeping what we have these days?
Said another way, if the amateurs get us into a war, are we willing to fight
from our end of things? To most, that means all of us, including our children. Paying
a lot more extra taxes is one example of sacrifice.
4)
Do we even know what war can mean to us these days? I think
we do.
5)
How much do we want to change things, like at least many of
the present people in charge?
6)
How “smart” are we about promoting the good and moral people
in charge that still exist at many levels? They will make a lot of difference,
too.
7)
Nobody I know expects a perfect world. Now most people
expect a better world than what exists today. Said another way, one has to
start somewhere.
8)
There is no moral equivalency that I know of. The Russian
“war fervor” is just that, a serious threat to the world, and should be
regarded as such. Said another way, we in the new world USA still have a good
deal that is worth defending however that sorts out.
9)
If nukes or other weapons of mass destruction get used, do
pay attention to the world’s weather patterns. Down range patterns of fall out
do make a big difference to those that live where ever this deadly stuff falls
to the earth.
10) Last, and
over the Christmas time frame, even the Russians over-reacted to a farcical Onion
News report of the Russian military shooting down Santa Claus in his sleigh. So
that was a good hint to me of how bad the banter is these days. Wars can start
for such silly things, or so many examples from our past suggest could happen
again.
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