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Ukraine

How Putin’s narratives have survived reality checks

Over 12 months of conflict, the Kremlin has relied on its tried and tested disinformation playbook.

Putin,Kremlin
Comrades in arms: the official Kremlin photo of Margarita Simonyan receiving an Order of Alexander Nevsky award for public service from Vladimir Putin in 2019

The Russian state has a long history of using information operations to try to shore up its military plans overseas. Of course all states try to win over the hearts and minds of the population either at home or where they are fighting. But Russia’s approach is a bit different.

What we see in Russia is a strange sort of intermeshing among official statements, interventions from people who are clearly on the Russian state’s payroll and the pronouncements of supposedly neutral but Kremlin-aligned commentators. It is not for nothing that Margarita Simonyan—a close associate of the president, Vladimir Putin, and the editor-in-chief of Russia’s international broadcaster, RT—once infamously said that Russia needed RT for ‘the same reason the country needs a defence ministry’.

The Russian state and its representatives frequently use lies to create cover for their military operations. And some are believed, at least temporarily or in part. Back in 2014, Putin personally denied the involvement of Russian special forces in the annexation of Crimea, claiming that the military equipment sported by the ‘little green men’ on the peninsula could be bought from any local shop. Following the 2018 poisoning of two Russian nationals in Salisbury, England, three Russian suspects were charged. Putin said the suspects were private citizens, even though later open-source investigations proved them to be senior members of Russian military intelligence.

Since then, western nations have learned the value of pre-empting Russia’s disinformation attempts. If we look back to a year ago, Russian officials kept insisting that no invasion of Ukraine was planned, even as Russian tanks continued to mass on Ukraine’s borders. Indeed, RT’s commentators were dismissing all such concerns as ‘Russophobia’ right up to the day of the invasion. RT’s broadcast rights were subsequently revoked across the European Union and in the United Kingdom.

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Shifting narratives

The key difference between the invasion of Ukraine and earlier Russian provocations is not only that the intelligence reports had been clear about the Kremlin’s intent all along but that western governments had taken the unusual step of publicising them. This meant Russia’s political elite was unable to pass the invasion off as a response to some unanticipated provocation when it had so clearly been pre-planned.

The Kremlin’s narratives have shifted throughout the conflict. The initial pretext for Russian involvement in Donbas was supposedly to protect Russian-speakers from ‘genocide’. The Kremlin has consistently tried to portray Ukraine as ‘institutionally Nazi’—ignoring the fact that Ukraine’s president, Volodymyr Zelenskyy, is Jewish and that Russia’s Wagner group of military mercenaries itself has clear ultra-nationalist links. Russia habitually uses such mirroring techniques to project its worst attributes on to others.

A few months into the conflict, Russia extended its stated goals from ‘de-Nazification’ to ‘de-Ukrainisation‘. It ramped up unambiguous propaganda about Ukrainians being Russians by another name and suggested that Ukrainian nationhood was made up. In this narrative, the Ukrainian state is in itself neo-Nazi and for that reason must be liquidated, as were the Nazis themselves by the Red Army in 1945.

Whenever evidence of Russian war crimes has emerged, the familiar playbook of Russian information operations has kicked in. For instance, when civilian mass graves were left behind by Russian forces in Bucha and Irpin, Russian politicians dismissed the evidence as fake and state-controlled domestic television aired hours’ worth of conspiracy theories.

The Kremlin even tried to get the United Nations to discuss what had happened in Bucha as a Ukrainian deception operation. The UK—which had previously alleged that Russia used the UN Security Council to spread false information—was at that point the Security Council chair. It refused to convene the council, so this time the Kremlin’s well-rehearsed mirroring technique came to nothing.

Legacies of colonialism

Public-service broadcasters, including the British Broadcasting Corporation and Deutsche Welle, have comprehensively debunked many Kremlin falsehoods. But—as with all disinformation—the power of these comes not from their factual accuracy but from how believable audiences feel them to be. This helps explain why Kremlin narratives about the west using Ukraine to undermine Russia ring true for many beyond the Euro-Atlantic bubble. It is a plausible line in many countries still grappling with the legacies of colonialism.

What is more, though Russian media operations have been disrupted in the United States and Europe, they have been less affected elsewhere in the world. Over the past year, for example, RT has given a high profile to its Indian Telegram channel on its international Twitter feed. Its website remains accessible via a mirror site in the UK and it has expanded with the new RT Balkans web service.

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Western unity in the face of Russian aggression is an important factor in Ukraine’s fight for its sovereignty. Improved understanding of how Russian disinformation works—and how to pre-empt and resist it—has been important in cultivating this unity. But that unity does not necessarily extend to the rest of the world.

Russia is actively courting public and political opinion in the wider world—and its efforts have met some success. It is no surprise that states such as Iran and North Korea have had no problem supplying arms to Russia or that allies such as Belarus and Syria have refused to condemn it at the UN. But even democratic India declined to condemn the Russian invasion, instead abstaining from the UN vote. This speaks to the wider resonance of Russia’s ‘counter-hegemonic’ propaganda push and—in a protracted conflict—we ignore this wider context at our peril.

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons licence


Precious Chatterje-Doody lectures in politics and international relations at the Open University in Britain. She is co-author with Ilya Yablokov of Russia Today and Conspiracy Theories: People, Power and Politics on RT (Routledge, 2022).

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