Montreal Gazette

Kremlin targets trust-based solidarity in West

Canada should prepare for an onslaught of Russian fake news, Brian Lee Crowley says.

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Canadians to whom all this talk in America and Europe about Russian-inspired fake news seems a rather paranoid fantasy that has nothing to do with us are about to get a rude awakening.

We are preparing to send Canadian troops to Latvia as part of a NATO tripwire mission to warn off the Kremlin from expanding its destabiliz­ing efforts from Ukraine to the Baltics and beyond. That will put us directly in the Russians’ crosshairs and we should be preparing for an onslaught of Russian fake news about appalling criminal misbehavio­ur by our troops (as has already happened to the Germans leading a similar mission in Lithuania) and a wholly imaginary “public outcry” by Latvians who will allegedly want no part of NATO “warmongeri­ng.” Nor will our military presence be the only target: Russian disinforma­tion aims to undermine trust in all institutio­ns, including business.

Since the end of the Cold War, we have forgotten the power of ideas to inspire people to action. If people do not have access to sound ideas, however, the alternativ­e is not silence.

On the contrary: the space we have left unoccupied will rapidly fill with bad, damaging, mistaken, misleading and dangerous ideas. At least some of the audience then become unwitting instrument­s of the ideas’ originator­s.

Remember that after the fall of the Berlin Wall, the West’s greatest disarmamen­t was not in military hard power, but in soft power; we dismantled virtually all our capacity to respond to Russian propaganda. In the Cold War, fiction was confronted with truth: Radio Free Europe/Liberty, the BBC, Radio Canada

Russian disinforma­tion aims to undermine trust in all institutio­ns.

Internatio­nal and others projected credible facts in local languages to those behind the iron curtain.

We laid down those arms. Russia did not. If anything, the Kremlin has redoubled its efforts, with the result that in ideas terms, the West today is bringing a knife to a gunfight.

As Estonian-Canadian documentar­y filmmaker and author Marcus Kolga says, what the Kremlin does best is sow doubt. And it does that by underminin­g facts with conspirato­rial theories; theories rooted in anti-Zionism, homophobia, xenophobia and a general mistrust of our establishe­d institutio­ns.

By corroding trust, Putin breaks down establishe­d relationsh­ips and gains the upper hand. The West’s solidarity — which ultimately led to the collapse of the U.S.S.R. — was based on trust in each other and the values we collective­ly represent.

The most potent weapon the Kremlin possesses is the ability to sow doubt in the minds of the population­s of the West about who is doing what to whom and why.

The Americans are playing right into the Kremlin’s hands with their reaction to Vladimir Putin’s clear attempts at manipulati­on of the U.S. election via hacked emails, hacking claims the Russian government does not deny. By making the issue one of Russian influence over President Donald Trump and his advisers, rather than the Kremlin’s malevolent intentions, the U.S. political class is helping to fertilize the very seeds of mistrust that the Kremlin is trying to sow.

People in business cannot afford to be indifferen­t to this phenomenon, as underminin­g confidence in the trustworth­iness of our economic institutio­ns is every bit as much grist to the Kremlin’s mill as attacking our politics.

In a world where conspiracy theories targeting business and political leaders and institutio­ns are hugely popular and no one seems interested in any philosophy that cannot be printed on a T-shirt, trust will become increasing­ly scarce. Yet trust, and especially trust in institutio­ns, is the foundation on which market economies are based.

Indeed, according to one economist, “If you take a broad enough definition of trust, then it would explain basically all the difference between the per capita income of the United States and Somalia.” If we do not defend it, who will?

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