Saturday, May 23, 2009

Russian denialism is now “guarding” against “false history”

Simple truths will cost three to five years in jail.

We were appalled to read of Russian president Medvedev’s decree establishing a commission to counter “increasingly harsh, depraved, and aggressive” attempts to rewrite history.

Moreover, deputies of the ruling United Russia party have submitted a bill to criminalize accusing the Red Army of atrocities or illegal occupation, including foreigners. The bill is expected to sail through both houses of the Duma. Soon, to mention the Baltic states were occupied will be punishable by three years

in jail for private individuals—and five years in jail for officials and the press.

We urge you to write to your legislative representatives to make them aware of Russia’s headlong rush to criminalize recounting undeniable facts of history, that is, that the USSR, unprovoked and based on staged incidents and lies as excuses, invaded and brutally subjugated the Baltics. Hitler, and Stalin’s so-called “liberation” were nothing but a change in oppressor.

The story, from the Moscow Times, is reproduced here for the purpose of our commentary.

Moscow Times, May 20, 2009

Commission to Guard Against False History

By Nabi Abdullaev / The Moscow Times

President Dmitry Medvedev has ordered the creation of a new commission tasked with countering attempts to rewrite history to the detriment of Russia's interests, the Kremlin said Tuesday.

The presidential decree establishing the commission follows a May 8 video address posted on Medvedev's web site in which the president complained that attempts to falsify history were becoming "increasingly harsh, depraved and aggressive."

The initiative appears to be part of a Kremlin drive to defend its vision of the country's 20th-century history.

The Kremlin has bristled at Ukraine's efforts to get the Stalin-era Holodomor famine to be declared as genocide and the Baltic states' anti-Soviet positions on World War II.

At the same time, Russian historians have repeatedly accused the Kremlin of trying to whitewash Soviet history in school textbooks and elsewhere.

Medvedev's chief of staff, Sergei Naryshkin, is to head the 28-member commission, which is charged with collecting and analysing information about attempts to diminish Russia's prestige by falsifying history, according to the decree signed by Medvedev last week and published Tuesday.

The commission, which is to meet at least twice annually, is also to coordinate the government's efforts to combat such falsifications, the decree says.

In his May 8 video address on the eve of the Victory Day holiday celebrating the defeat of Nazi Germany in World War II, Medvedev said Russians find themselves "in a situation in which we have to defend the historical truth and once again prove facts that not so long ago seemed most clear.

"It is difficult and sometimes even creepy. But it is necessary to do," he said

Members of the new commission include senior officials — primarily deputy ministers and security service officials — historians, Kremlin spin doctors and State Duma deputies.

Alexei Makarkin, a political analyst with the Center for Political Technologies, welcomed the initiative, saying it could help the state formulate a coherent policy toward Soviet history and lead to the opening of archives for researchers.

Should Russia's historical archives — many of which are maintained by the military and the secret services — remain closed, the entire campaign would degenerate into a "defense of the historical myth about Russia in the interests of the country's rulers," said Dmitry Oreshkin, an analyst with the Mercator think tank.

The creation of the new commission comes on the heels of a bill submitted to the Duma by a group of deputies from the ruling United Russia party that would criminalize attempts to rehabilitate Nazism in former Soviet republics.

Under the bill, which is likely to sail easily through both houses of the parliament, Russian and foreign citizens could be sent to prison for up to three years for accusing the Red Army of atrocities or illegal occupation during World War II, an allegation commonly lodged in the Baltic countries.

If such accusations are made by an official or disseminated in the media, the crime would be punishable by up to five years in prison, according to the legislation.

The bill, spearheaded by Emergency Situations Minister Sergei Shoigu, also calls for severing ties with countries that officially revise the history of World War II and barring the leaders of such countries from entering Russia.