Published: February 08, 2012
"Russia Is A Victim Of Western Media" Claims Russia Expert
WASHINGTON D.C., February 8, 2012 /PRNewswire/ --
Srdja Trifkovic, Foreign Affairs Editor of Chronicles and Executive Director of The
Lord Byron Foundation for Balkan Studies, in a recent article, has claimed that Western
media reporting on Russia is "bias" and "stereotypical", and has said that the "West"
should put more trust in Russia.
Trifkovic said: "Most Western media professionals tend to subscribe, consciously or
not, to a neo-liberal world outlook in general and to the tenets of multiculturalism in
particular. The result is notable media favouritism of allegedly disadvantaged,
non-Western, traditionally non-Christian societies.
"Behind the veneer of all-embracing diversity, however, we find a carefully calibrated
scale of acceptance or rejection of "the Other" depending on the cultural and political
preferences of the media professionals themselves. The result is moral and intellectual
relativism, which enables the media elite to pick and choose, which group or nation will
be approved for the status of sympathy or victimhood, and which will be denied the benefit
of the doubt.
"The image of Russia in the Western media indicates that Russia has been relegated to
the latter category. "It sounds paradoxical," said Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov,
referring to the Western attitude toward Russia, "but there was more mutual trust and
respect during the Cold War." His correct hint is that the Western opinion-makers detest
post-Soviet Russia - the state that no longer is subservient, as it had been in the 1990s,
but reviving its statehood and identity - more than the Cold War leaders of the West
detested the USSR.
"The problem of bias, stereotypical reporting and quasi-analysis is by no means new.
The collapse of Russia's institutions and social infrastructure under Yeltsin was
accompanied by Western approval of the key engineers of the disaster (Anatoly Chubais,
Yegor Gaidar, Boris Nemtsov, Vladimir Ryzhkov...). Their small political factions,
lionized by the Western media, were duly supported by the quasi-NGO network funded in part
by the Western taxpayers.
"Various anti-Russian stereotypes notably prevailed over common sense and journalistic
integrity at the time of Mikhael Saakashvili's attack on South Ossetia in August 2008,
with the mainstream media pack attacking Russia's "aggression" and criticizing Western
"passivity."
"While never missing an opportunity to hector Russia on democracy and criticize her
human rights record, the Western media have been and still are notably silent on the
discriminatory treatment of large Russian minorities in some former Soviet republics.
"In other words, the verdict depends on an actors' status in the ideological pecking
order of the media elite itself, not on his words and actions as such - in line with the
Leninist dictum that the moral value of any act by anyone is determined by that act's
contribution to the march of history. V.V. Putin's high approval rating is thus cited as
further "evidence" of his manipulative populism and "proof" that democracy remains
underdeveloped in Russia.
"The similarity of reactions to Russia on the right and left ends of the Western media
spectrum reflects the perception that Russia belongs to a tradition that is unworthy of
multiculturalist tolerance. The problem stems not from any misunderstanding of the Russian
mindset and tradition, but, on the contrary, from an accurate assessment by the media
class that Russia as such is an obstacle to the realization of their political, economic,
and ideological preferences in the modern world. The sin of the Russians, in the eyes of
the Western media elite, is that they are still defined by their ethnic, cultural and
religious identity.
"The problem exists. For it to be solved we need a paradigm shift in the West that
would pave the way for a "Northern Alliance" of Russia, Western Europe and North America,
as all three face similar geopolitical and demographic threats in the decades ahead. We
need to rediscover and cherish the commonalities of the spiritual traditions, history and
culture of the extended European family, from Anchorage via Berlin to Vladivostok."
Srdja Trifkovic is Foreign Affairs Editor of Chronicles: A Magazine of American
Culture, and Executive Director of The Lord Byron Foundation for Balkan Studies
SOURCE Russia Insights www.russia-insights.com
Copyright © 2012, PRNewswire
Copyright © 2012, NewsBlaze,
Daily News