By Eric Vandenbroeck
and co-workers
When two drones
crashed into the roof of the Kremlin in early May, the Russian presidential spokesman
Dmitry Peskov didn’t need to wait for an investigation to identify the culprit.
He stated confidently that the United States, not Ukraine, masterminded the
attack. “Kyiv only does what it is told to do,” he explained. A few days later,
after the Russian writer Zakhar Prilepin, a staunch
Russian nationalist and outspoken supporter of the war, was nearly assassinated
by a bomb placed in his car, Russia’s Foreign Ministry stated with equal
confidence that the United States was behind that crime, too. This was even
though the person identified as the prime suspect was someone from the fringes
of society who, like Prilepin, had fought alongside
Russian-backed separatists in Ukraine’s Donbas region.
These assertions are
not casual. As Moscow’s “special military operation” in Ukraine turns into a
long and brutal war, the old ideology of Russian messianism, which had already
become the Kremlin’s preferred tool for manipulating public opinion, has been
stirred into a defining rationale for the regime. No longer is Russia simply
bringing to heel a weak and feckless Ukraine that has fallen under the spell of
“neo-Nazis.” According to the new framing, Russia’s real fight is against the
mighty United States, which wants to destroy it. At the same time, Ukraine—just
like the European Union and NATO—is merely an obedient U.S.
satellite. For the Kremlin, a sinister U.S. plot offers a convenient
explanation for why the war has dragged on for so long and why Putin has proved
to be not such a great military strategist after all. It also helps explain to
average Russians why the war was started in the first place.
In this context, the
“special operation” has evolved from an effort to recover lost imperial lands
into a civilizational battle between the forces of good embodied by Russia and
the forces of evil, sometimes called “satanic,” personified by the United
States and its allies. Already, this simple idea has taken on extravagant
proportions. In May, Nikolai Patrushev, the head of Russia’s Security Council,
predicted that Americans would soon be seeking to exploit Russia’s vast
expanses for resettlement purposes because an imminent eruption of the supervolcano beneath Yellowstone National Park would leave
them with nowhere to live. (That a senior Russian official was endorsing such
an absurd conspiracy theory prompted a social media riff borrowing from Tsar
Alexander III’s famous dictum: “Russia has only three allies: the army, the
navy, and the Yellowstone volcano.”)
But the Kremlin is
deadly serious. By fixating on the United States, Putin is tapping into the
late Stalinist doctrines that made up the ideological foundations of
the Cold War: the United States rules the world and has always wanted to
weaken, if not destroy us. Of course, many ordinary Russians—at least when they
are not being told otherwise by the Russian state—have tended to be indifferent
or even partial to the United States. But as Stalin knew and Putin has
discovered, those attitudes can be shifted by effective propaganda.
By conjuring a
nefarious, all-powerful adversary, the Putin regime can create a new
justification for a hugely costly war that has already lasted well over a year
and seems unlikely to end anytime soon. Such a strong external enemy also
justifies intensified repression of internal enemies—dissidents, civil rights
activists, lawyers, journalists, professors, and various “foreign agents.” The
late Stalinist regime operated under the same logic. In April 1951, George
Kennan wrote, “No ruling group likes to admit that it can govern its people
only by regarding and treating them as criminals. For this reason, there is
always a tendency to justify internal oppression by pointing to the menacing
iniquity of the outside world.”
Damn Yankees
The United States was
not the original focus of Russian xenophobia. During World War I, Germany was
considered the main enemy, and patriotic hysteria was fueled by anti-German
sentiment. Then, in the early Soviet years, France and the United
Kingdom were considered the main adversaries—. In contrast, the United
States was a distant, well-developed, but soulless capitalist society from
which to borrow technology and industrial specialists. Turning the United
States into the main enemy was more of a postwar phenomenon. Even then, Stalin
was initially more preoccupied with, as he put it in 1946, “the replacement of
Hitler’s domination by Churchill's domination,” in his growing Anglophobia, he
overlooked the transformation of America into a supreme power. But he quickly
made up for it in propaganda and repression when “Anglo-American spies” came on
the scene.
Yet during World
War II, things were different: Soviet soldiers and the Soviet population had a
strong affinity for their Anglo-American allies. At the Potsdam Conference in
July 1945, the Red Army’s song and dance ensemble performed two of the Allies’
most popular melodies: the British marching song “It’s a Long Way to Tipperary
and the Anglo-American folk tune “There’s a Tavern in the Town,” known in its
Russian version as “Kabachok.” Subsequently recorded
for the gramophone, these Russian versions were wildly popular in the Soviet
Union along with other American hits, such as “Coming In on a Wing and a
Prayer,” a World War II song about an Allied bombing raid that was sung in
Russian as “Song of the Bombers.” Another popular song, known in Russian as
“And in Trouble and Battle,” which was performed even before the war by
Alexander Varlamov’s jazz orchestra, turned out to be a Russian version of the
1934 American hit “Roll Along, Covered Wagon, Roll Along.”
It wasn’t just the
music of the United Kingdom and the United States that were stratospherically
popular by the war's end. So were the Allies themselves. On the morning of May
9, after the 3 AM radio announcement of Germany’s surrender, enormous jubilant
crowds poured onto the streets of Moscow. My father, who had just turned 17,
was woken by a classmate at four in the morning, and they rushed toward Red
Square, which was already full of people celebrating. Throughout the day,
people also flocked to the nearby square where the U.S. embassy was located, as
captured in photographs by Yakov Khalip
and Anatoly Garanin.
“We were naturally
moved and pleased by this manifestation of public feeling but were at a loss to
know how to respond to it,” recalled Kennan, then chargé d’affaires
at the embassy, who had not yet become famous for his “long telegram’’ on
Soviet conduct. Rapturous Muscovites were hoisting up anyone in military uniform
and were prepared to do the same to staff from the embassy of a friendly power.
Kennan, who spoke Russian, risked climbing onto the parapet over the embassy’s
entrance to shout: “Congratulations on the day of victory! All honor to the
Soviet allies!”
Although it was
unnoticed by the Soviet people at the time, Kennan could already sense the
emerging tensions of the Cold War. According to the historian John Gaddis, even
in the wake of their triumph over Hitler, the members of the Big Three alliance
were already at war with one another, at least ideologically and
geopolitically. In the later years of the Stalin regime, anti-Americanism would
serve an essential strategic purpose, countering the West’s new threat to
Soviet spheres of influence. Anti-Americanism became the cornerstone of the
Cold War's foreign policy, propaganda, and counterpropaganda. Not surprisingly,
a comparable confrontation with the West today has brought the old genie out of
the bottle—there are no more effective means.
“There Will Be Bombs”
In 2022, the
derogatory term Anglosaksy—“Anglo-Saxons”—suddenly
became frequently used in Kremlin discussions and even entered the vocabulary
of ordinary Russians. But the term, which refers to scheming Americans who lead
obedient European satellites, is by no means an invention of the Putin regime.
It came directly from the Soviet lexicon of power of the late 1940s and early
1950s when it was deployed to refer to the Soviet Union’s most important
adversaries. In its current ideology and propaganda, Moscow has intuitively or
consciously regurgitated classic Russian conspiracy theories, which have always
been—in both Soviet and post-Soviet history—a simple, universal way to explain
Russia’s problems or the expansionist actions of its rulers.
During the Cold War,
for example, the KGB actively promoted the idea of a secret U.S. plot against
the Soviet Union. Consider the widely circulated 1979 book CIA Target:
The USSR by Nikolai Yakovlev, a Russian historian recruited by the
KGB. Among other things, Yakovlev expounded a popular theory in Russian
security agencies and nationalist circles that there was an American “Dulles
Plan”—after C.I.A. director Allen Dulles— to destroy the Soviet Union. As the
Russian historian Viktor Shnirelman has shown, this
idea was likely inspired by an intentional misreading of a 1948 U.S. National
Security Council directive that may have become known to Soviet intelligence.
(The directive was exclusively defensive and contained not a single word about
the “destruction of the Russian people.”) The myth about the existence of
the “plan” even found its way into some Russian history books.
Although the Soviet
government moved closer to the United States during the Mikhail Gorbachev era,
extreme anti-Americanism thrived in some corners of the Soviet and post-Soviet
states. In the 1990s, for example, Filip Bobkov, a
former senior KGB officer, claimed that the United States had engineered the
collapse of the Soviet Union with the help of the “Yakovlev group”—this time,
the Yakovlev in question was Alexander, an architect of perestroika and
Gorbachev’s right-hand man. These conspiracy theories had lived on, unaltered,
on Russia’s nationalist fringe, including in the work of the Russian émigré
philosopher Ivan Ilyin (1883-1954), whose concept of a global “world behind the
scenes,” or Illuminati, became fashionable in the
Kremlin. (The influence of such philosophers on Putin, though, should not
be exaggerated: he has quoted Ilyin on perhaps two occasions, and he has
referred once to the classic Russian philosopher Nikolai Berdyaev, although he
probably knows no more about him than Brezhnev did about Marx. He showed that
the historical idea of Russianness shaped in opposition to the West has
endured.)
The Kremlin’s theses about
the dangerous West and Russia’s opposition to it, which Putin repeats nonstop,
were formulated long ago in the late Stalin era, sometimes even in verse. In
1951, Pravda published “On the Soviet Atom,” a poem by the children’s poet
Sergei Mikhalkov, who also wrote the words to the
Soviet and then Russian national anthems. Roughly translated, it went something
like: “There will be bombs! / There are bombs! / You should take that into
account! / But it’s not in our plans / To conquer other countries.” Those lines
could be lifted straight from one of Putin’s speeches.
Then there is the
practice of portraying Russia’s American enemies as stupid. The message is,
“Our opponents may be cunning, but we can see right through them.” In the late
Stalin years, the Communist leadership propagated the cliché of Americans
roaming Moscow with cameras and bribing children with candy to look sad,
showing the despondency of life in the Soviet Union. “Look, Alik
is crying / They’ll film him for America!” joked the children’s poet Agniya Barto in the 1950s.
Similarly, Putin and Dmitry Medvedev, the former Russian president, and deputy
chairman of the Security Council, now habitually name and shame Western enemies
in their speeches as “morons” and “half-wits.” Accompanying this is Putin’s
growing obsession with LGBTQ topics and obscene jokes about Westerners.
America First, Russia Second
As much as official
Russia has often been anti-American, it has also long been obsessed with U.S.
economic power and even U.S. goods and food. One of the main slogans from the
1960s Khrushchev era focused on matching and overtaking the United States
regarding per capita meat, milk, and butter production. When Putin came to
power, the idea of catch-up development was hardly less present. In some sense,
“America first” is effectively one of Putin’s slogans: everything is viewed
through the prism of the United States and the West. To be different means not
looking like Western people and not living like them. More precisely, it means
achieving similar successes while relying on one’s strength, upholding
sovereignty and “originality,” and practicing import substitution. In other
words, the Russian state and society continue to measure themselves against the
yardstick of the United States and its European allies.
The pattern goes back
to the earliest Soviet years. American “bourgeois specialists” appeared in the
Soviet Union during Stalin’s industrialization drive in the 1920s and 1930s.
The Soviet writer Valentin Kataev depicted them
somewhat ironically, but the truth is that without U.S. technology, it’s
unlikely that an industrial breakthrough would have been possible. When the
United States presented the American National Exhibition in Moscow in 1959—an
event that attracted more than two million members of the Soviet public who
tasted Pepsi and got their first look at American washing machines—Nikita
Khrushchev and Richard Nixon had their famous“kitchen
debate” at the fair site, in which they discussed the relative merits of
capitalism and socialism. At the time, the Soviet leadership felt its
backwardness in the consumer sphere. This was also why the Soviet Union had to
lead the way in the space race: to break free of the catch-up matrix.
Amerika, a Russian-language magazine about American life
published by the U.S. State Department, was a coveted item, although less so
than jeans, chewing gum, and soft drinks. Characteristically, the magazine was
banned in 1948, when Stalinist anti-Americanism was in full force, and was
rereleased during Khrushchev’s anti-Stalinist thaw in the 1950s. At the
beginning of the 1970s, Leonid Brezhnev gladly accepted prototypes from the
U.S. car industry as a gift from the Americans, adding to the atmosphere of détente.
And when the Soyuz and Apollo missions jointly docked in space in July 1975, it
was commemorated in Moscow with the appearance of “real Virginian tobacco” in
cigarettes named after the historical event: not the choking fumes of the
motherland, but the fragrant aroma of another world. By the twilight years of
the Soviet Union, Soviet industry was so dependent on Western supplies and
technologies that the sanctions imposed on Moscow for the invasion of
Afghanistan put entire industries, such as chemical engineering, in jeopardy.
Even in the
post-Soviet era, the Russian fixation with U.S. models and Putin’s talk of a
U.S.-imposed unipolar world created a sense of unavoidable dependence on
“them.” Respondents in Russian focus groups would sometimes say that Russia’s
1993 constitution was written in Washington and that Putin’s amendments to it
were required to make the country truly sovereign. At the same time, however,
people understand that the United States has been an economic powerhouse from
which Russia could learn much to achieve the same standard of living. Once
again, a combination of Russian superiority and inferiority has been
simultaneously expressed in Moscow’s contradictory attitude toward its American
rival.
Still, until Putin
returned to the presidency in 2012 and Russia annexed Crimea in 2014,
Russians’ complexes about the United States were not so noticeable. In the
initial years of his rule, beginning in 2000, Putin was still adjusting to the
West and wary of squandering the legacy of Boris Yeltsin, his predecessor. He
did not see Russia as a trendsetter in the Western-led world order. The open
hostility to the West expressed in Putin’s speech at the 2007 Munich Security
Conference, however, marked the start of deteriorating relations with the
United States—delayed only slightly by an attempted “reset” during Medvedev’s
four-year presidency. By 2014, Moscow’s new emphasis on Russian pride and
reawakened great-power aspirations brought back all the old hang-ups about the
United States, stirring up a quasi-patriotic hysteria. But the strongest
manifestation has surfaced since the “special operation” began last year.
Since then, Russian
attitudes toward the United States have worsened drastically. In February 2022,
31 percent of Russians had a positive attitude about the United States. A year
later, according to the Levada Center, the independent Russian opinion research
organization, just 14 percent of respondents had a positive view of the United
States, and 73 percent had a negative attitude. The decline in positive
attitudes toward Europe is not far behind: 18 percent of Russians polled had a
positive opinion of EU countries in February 2023, compared with 69 percent who
did not. When combined with conspiracy theories and Putin’s growing isolation,
Russian fixations with America have become a potent recipe for militarism.
The Sources Of Russian Conduct
Putin’s embrace of
conspiratorial anti-Americanism is especially dangerous because of his regime’s
growing disregard for the old red lines. During the Cold War, at least, both
sides agreed that the consequences of inflicting damage on each other would be
unacceptable. Putin’s problem—in fact, the whole world’s problem right now—is
that the Russian government lacks the one instinct that since the late 1960s
has consistently led to détente with the West: the willingness to negotiate.
Instead, Putin has suspended cooperation on nuclear nonproliferation, discussed
the possibility of a nuclear strike with infantile levity, expressed teenage
grievances, and shown an unwillingness to maintain a minimal level of dialogue.
All of these actions unfavorably distinguish Putin’s anti-Americanism from that
of his late Soviet predecessors.
“The political
personality of Soviet power as we know it today,” Kennan wrote in 1950, “is the product of ideology and
circumstances.” If one looks at the sources of Russian conduct today, the
circumstances are a dictator obsessed with his mission. As for the ideology,
Russia’s new foreign policy concept refers to the country’s “special position
as an original state-civilization, a vast Eurasian and Euro-Pacific power”—a
noteworthy new term. This concept further cites Russia’s role in consolidating
“the Russian people and other peoples that make up the cultural and
civilizational community of the Russian world”—a geographic space whose borders
are not specified.
The eclectic essence
of this ideology, which has re-emerged at various stages of Russia’s historical
development, was described astutely in Vladimir Nabokov’s “Conversation Piece,
1945,” a short story in which a former White Army colonel who emigrated to the
United States declares, “The great Russian people has waked up, and my country
is again a great country.” He continues: “We [have] had three great leaders. We
had Ivan, whom his enemies called Terrible, then we had Peter the Great, and
now we have Joseph Stalin. … Today, in every word that comes out of Russia, I
feel the power, I feel the splendor of old Mother Russia. She is again a
country of soldiers, religion, and true Slavs.”
In his Victory Day
speech on May 9, Putin said that Russia’s enemies were notable for
their ideology of superiority. Interestingly, he uses almost everything that
can be said about him—“exorbitant ambition, arrogance and permissiveness,” as
he put it in his speech—and lays it at the door of his opponents. Herein lies
the deeper purpose of Russian anti-Americanism: to attribute everything you are
plotting, all those evil plans you are hatching, to the United States.
But this resurrected
ideology also reflects the disappearance of the bipolar Cold War order and the
loss of Russian greatness and power that has come with it. Thus, when Putin and
his team members talk about a new multipolar world, they try to reassert
Moscow’s lost superpower status and portray themselves as a guiding light for
the former Soviet republics and the countries of Africa, Asia, and Latin
America. All of this is a consequence of the psychological trauma of the
collapse of the Soviet Union, which the elite who came to power in 2000 carried
with them. Twenty-two years later, that trauma has resulted in a global
catastrophe.
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