BY LUCIAN KIM
The chance that Russia’s track and
field team will participate at the Rio de Janeiro Olympic Games next month
looks increasingly slim after the International Olympic
Committee backed a ban of Russian athletes because of the
widespread use of performance-enhancing drugs. Even as Moscow makes a last-minute appeal, evidence is mounting of a
state-run doping program that extends into
other Olympic disciplines as well.
Russian President Vladimir Putin’s
reaction is telling. Doping is a global phenomenon, he said on the day of the
IOC ruling, echoing his standard retort to questions about corruption in
Russia. “If someone tries to politicize something in this area, I think it’s a
big mistake,” Putin said, suggesting that his nation was the victim of
“anti-Russian politics.”
In fact, the doping scandal is a
symptom of a much larger problem: the casual disregard for the truth that has
become a hallmark of Putin’s rule. In a country where elections are rigged, lawsuits are fabricated, and state TV spews lies around
the clock, it’s hard to know what ordinary citizens are to believe anymore.
Beyond politics, corruption has not only gnawed away at Russia’s reputation as
a sports powerhouse, but cheapened the prestige of its once-vaunted
institutions of higher education.
Putin’s initial denial of Russia’s
2014 military intervention in Crimea — followed by a later admission of it —
was the clearest demonstration of the Kremlin’s belief that the ends justify
the means. Many Russians seem to agree.
In a poll taken by the independent Levada Center in April
2015, 37 percent of respondents said they believed their government that
Russia wasn’t militarily involved in eastern Ukraine. An almost equal portion,
38 percent, said that “even if there are Russian soldiers and military
equipment in Ukraine, it’s the correct policy for Russia to deny these facts in
the current global situation.” Eleven percent said the denial of Russian
involvement would only lead to an escalation of tensions and hinder a
settlement of the conflict.
Lying has become just one more
weapon in Russia’s “hybrid war” against its multitudinous foes. The favorite
defense from Kremlin apologists is that “everybody does it,” citing the U.S.
government’s false alarm over Iraq’s weapons of mass destruction as the most
egregious example.
Of course Russians are not
more prone to prevarication than anyone else, and Western politicians are
caught lying and cheating on a daily basis. The gleeful misrepresentation of the truth by Donald Trump, the presumptive Republican
presidential candidate, shows the lazy appeal of placing personal prejudices
over an examination of the facts. But Trump’s way has not yet been validated in
an election; in Putin’s Russia, lying has long become part of the system.
Russia’s political culture is
rooted in a cynicism that was born in the late Soviet era, when even committed
Communists couldn’t deny the huge gap between their ideals and the reality of
proletarian dictatorship. It was hard to have any ethical qualms about cheating
an immoral system that seemed designed primarily to make people’s lives
miserable. What’s more, bending the rules became a survival technique amid the
shortages that accompanied the end of Communism and the chaotic transition to
capitalism.
In the absence of rules, laws, and
institutions that would safeguard the most vulnerable, those who knew the most
tricks got the farthest, reaping Russia’s riches. Even today, it’s often
impossible to follow one law without breaking another. In the Russian
experience of the past 30 years, honesty has meant penury.
Communist-era dissidents such as
Vaclav Havel described the deleterious effects of a system built on fear and
lies. “Lying can never save us from another lie,” said the Czech writer. The
best way to overcome a repressive regime is to “live in truth.” Following the
peaceful Velvet Revolution in 1989, Havel became the president of his country
and later one of Putin’s fiercest critics.
Russia had its Velvet Revolution
moment five years ago, when Muscovites from all walks of life surprised Putin
by demanding honest elections and an end to institutionalized lying. Although
diehard Communists and Russian nationalists also took to the streets, the
impetus came from middle-class Muscovites, who wanted to live free and honest
lives like any other Europeans.
The Kremlin struck back by
saddling activists with legal cases to deter future protest and tainting
leaders with criminal investigations to show that they were no better than
anybody else. The world Putin inhabits is a dangerous place full of dirty,
double-crossing backstabbers. Blunders, or wonders, never just happen — they
are instigated by equally cynical adversaries at the U.S. State Department or
CIA.
Responding to a lie with facts
often has the unintended consequence of reducing the truth to just another
opinion, no less valid than the original falsehood. Irony, it turns out, is a
much more effective weapon.
After Wales ousted Russia from the European soccer championships 3-0 last month,
a meme did the rounds on the Russian internet in which Putin says: “Those
weren't our players. You can buy a uniform in any store.” The reference:
Putin’s famous fib that the troops occupying Crimea two years ago were not Russian,
but locals dressed in army surplus uniforms.
(Lucian Kim has been reporting
from Germany, eastern Europe, and the former Soviet Union since 1996. He
covered conflicts in Kosovo, Afghanistan, Georgia, and Ukraine. He is now based
in Berlin. Follow him on Twitter at @Lucian_Kim)
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