Tuesday, February 14, 2012


The Power Vertical

'Question More'

A screenshot of the RT page featuring the controversial ads.

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Russia Today (RT), the Kremlin's English-language television news channel, is reporting that a series of provocative advertisements for the channel was rejected by major airports in the United States. One of the ads features images of Iranian President Mahmud Ahmadinejad and U.S. President Barack Obama superimposed over one another next to the question "Who poses the greater nuclear threat?"


The ads promote the station's new "Question more" slogan. Another ad in the series juxtaposes a microphone and an automatic rifle with the question, "Which is the more powerful weapon?" A third asks whether climate change is "science fact or science fiction," while a fourth contrasts images of a soldier and a terrorist while asking "is terror only inflicted by terrorists?"


The RT ads, including one that compares a British police officer with a tattooed soccer hooligan, are being displayed on street ads in the United Kingdom. A spokesman for BAA, the company that manages the major U.K. airports in London, Glasgow, Edinburgh, and elsewhere told RFE/RL the ads had been declined at their facilities as well, although RT's story decries only the U.S. airport ban.


As is often the case with controversial ad campaigns, this one is getting a lot of mileage in the so-called alternative press. RT's version of the matter has been reproduced verbatim on websites as diverse as Irish Nationalism, Silobreaker, and something called the Global Europe Anticipation Bulletin.


Over at "The Guardian," Luke Harding puts the RT initiative into context, noting that "next year the Russian government will spend $1.4 billion (866 million pounds) on international propaganda – more than on fighting unemployment."


Harding writes:

 

The Kremlin employs two major PR agencies, Ketchum and GPlus, and in London uses Portland PR. And then there are the angry bloggers – a shadowy army of Russian nationalists who are active on western newspaper websites, including the Guardian's Comment is free site. Anyone who dares to criticise Russia's leaders, or point out some of the country's deficiencies, is immediately branded a CIA spy or worse. "They [the Kremlin] are coming to realise that information matters and that control of information internationally matters even more," says Evgeny Morozov, a Yahoo! fellow at Georgetown University's institute for the study of diplomacy.


This is definitely something to keep an eye on. One can't help but wonder if there is a connection between these efforts and a startling op-ed that appeared in yesterday's "The Sydney Morning Herald," in which former Australian parliamentarian Ross Cameron celebrates the 10th anniversary of Vladimir Putin's power in Russia by lauding Putin as a free-market liberal who has been "entrenching the rule of law" in Russia and is the most popular politician "in the democratic world."

Cameron ends by saying, "it is hard for me to see how anyone of good faith could regret his continued influence in Russia and the world." Needless to say, the "shadow army of Russian nationalists who are active on Western newspaper websites" have been lining up to second Cameron's opinions. "Wow! I had no idea," one reader writes. "I just went along with the standard media line that Putin was Stalin-lite. I now agree -- Putin isn't perfect but maybe he is perfect for Russia today." Maybe the reader meant to write "perfect for Russia Today."


Harding ends his piece with a quotation from Margarita Simonyan, "RT's 29-year-old editor in chief," responding to whether RT can find an audience in the West. "People will be surprised at how much there is in the world that they haven't been told before," Simonyan said. If only viewers of Russian domestic television had any idea of how much there is in Russia that they haven't been told before.


-- Robert Coalson

Tags: propaganda , advertising , pr , Russia

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Comment Sorting
Comments
     
by: Political Dissident
January 13, 2010 07:11
RT can and should do a better job.

The same basic thought applies to other media outlets including RFE/RL.

Overall, it's good that RT is out there to offer the English language audience a slant different from what's evident at established venues like RFE/RL, among others.

I'll say this much for RFE/RL over RT: the former is better when it comes to posting dissenting comments.

The suggestion that there're Kremlin connected folks actively posting comments in cyber isn't more well proven than saying that there's a well funded/organized band of anti-Russian and/or anti-Russian government activists on the worldwide web.

by: observer from: Eastern Europe
January 13, 2010 11:50
As about 'the suggestion that there're Kremlin connected folks actively posting comments in cyber isn't more well proven' - of course it is proved. And Russians don't hide this - an opposite, they like to brag about this. And of course they will never accept this officially. Don't forget who is in power in Russia -
cover operations are of the essence for the regime. This is just their way of thinking and acting, which they can not change. At least till
they are not exposed . Thanks for the post.
And pls don't pretend to be so naive...

by: Political Dissident
January 13, 2010 16:18
The below comment overlooks that there're people who are independently in agreement with some of the positions taken by the Russian government.

In comparison, it hasn't been proven that some anti-Russian and/or anti-Russian government advocates aren't getting an organized backing.

BTW, the mentioned Guardian has seen some abusive behavior against pro-Russian advocates.

by: Independent observer from: USA
January 13, 2010 21:21
I would agree with the latest post:
"The suggestion that there're Kremlin connected folks actively posting comments in cyber isn't more well proven than saying that there's a well funded/organized band of anti-Russian and/or anti-Russian government activists on the worldwide web."
And YES, don't be naive ..... it is ALL politics, on all sides. That just proves once again that the West is still worried about Russia getting more influence.

by: Capt Perceptive from: Oz
January 14, 2010 03:52
"The suggestion that there're Kremlin connected folks actively posting comments in cyber isn't more well proven than saying that there's a well funded/organized band of anti-Russian and/or anti-Russian government activists on the worldwide web."

I have no idea what this means- perhaps you can help? Are you an expert on one group or the other?

RT is a vanity project. It is not a news outlet.

by: Political Dissident
January 14, 2010 13:41
Independent Observer, in other words, some in the West don't want a more level playing field.

Captain Perceptive, your "vanity project" remark gets a chuckle.

Hope some key RT folks are reading this.

by: La Russophobe from: USA
January 21, 2010 12:23
How would Russians react to an ad from Voice of America blurring the image of Vladimir Putin and Shamil Basaeyev and asking who is a bigger threat to Russian security and urging "Question more"?

They'd be outraged, yet they have no problem turning the tables. It's a sad commentary on the barbaric nature of today's neo-Soviet Russia.

Mr. Cameron is pond scum, we have the full details:

http://larussophobe.wordpress.com/2010/01/15/editorial-ross-cameron-treacherous-russophile-bastard/

by: Political Dissident
January 22, 2010 09:52
How would many people from a given country would react when notified of a major media organ whose jounalists linked to a source expressing anonymously bigoted views about the people and nation in question?

There's nothing particularly brilliant about Harding's piece.

He has appeared on RT, unlike a number of reasonably pro-Russian sources.

This point serves to underscore how Russia screws itself in a way that isn't often discussed.

by: Political Dissident
January 22, 2010 14:40
Excuse the second use of "would" in the last set of comments.

To reiterate what was previously expressed:

- while in need of improvement, RT isn't a bad alternative to the more established English language mass media

- besides RT, improvement is an issue elsehere in media

- RFE/RL is better than RT when it comes to posting dissenting comments.

About This Blog

The Power Vertical is a blog written especially for Russia wonks and obsessive Kremlin watchers by Brian Whitmore. It covers emerging and developing trends in Russian politics, shining a spotlight on the high-stakes power struggles, machinations, and clashing interests that shape Kremlin policy today. Check out The Power Vertical Facebook page or