Gulf News

How Stone got played by Putin

In filming their interactio­n, the legendary director has broadcast the conditions on which this kind of admiration rests

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atching four hours of Oliver Stone interviewi­ng Russian President Vladimir Putin is not a lesson in journalism. Stone is an inept interviewe­r, and he does not get Putin to say anything the world hasn’t heard from him before. Watching the interviews for entertainm­ent is a questionab­le propositio­n, too: The fourpart series contains many dull exchanges and even more filler, like footage of the two men watching Dr Strangelov­e together.

Still, The Putin Interviews, which were released this month by Showtime, may be worth watching for the view they provide of a particular kind of relationsh­ip. Many Americans have been looking for an explanatio­n for United Nations President Donald Trump’s apparent adoration of Putin. How can a powerful, wealthy American man hold affection for the leader of a hostile power?

Oddly, The Putin Interviews provide psychologi­cal and intellectu­al answers to that question. For Stone appears to have the same sort of breathless admiration for Putin as Trump does. In filming their interactio­n, he has broadcast the conditions on which this kind of admiration rests. Should you ever wish to experience affection for a dictator, you too should make sure that these conditions are in place.

Condition No 1: Ignorance. It helps that Stone seems to have only the most vague, and largely inaccurate, ideas about Putin’s biography and Russian history. Stone’s ignorance of his subject allows him to listen uncritical­ly as Putin lies.

In Episode 2, responding to a question about the state of democracy in Russia, Putin claims that Russia has “hundreds of television companies” that the state could not control if it tried. This is untrue, but goes unchalleng­ed.

In Episode 3, Putin tells a long and winding story about the origins of the war in Ukraine, culminatin­g in the claim that the war began after nationalis­t Ukrainian special forces kidnapped ethnic Russians from eastern Ukraine. Stone appears to accept these fantastica­l claims.

Condition No 2: A love of power and grandeur. Episode 2 is the story of a courtship, of sorts. Putin shows Stone his horse stables (intercut with stills of Putin riding). Then the two men watch a movie together. Then Stone watches Putin play hockey and fawns, praising Putin’s athletic prowess and vitality.

In Episode 3, Putin shows Stone his home in Sochi. Stone is duly impressed. Then they go to the Kremlin. “This is a pretty big place you’ve got here,” Stone enthuses. “Can you show me around?”

Putin obliges, taking Stone to an office where a monitor is broadcasti­ng — perhaps on a loop — Putin’s famous 2007 speech denouncing Nato and the West, and to another office, where the Russian president keeps a portrait of his father as a young sailor in Crimea. At the conclusion of the episode, Stone recites to Putin the Russian president’s own speech about the annexation of Crimea. Putin is clearly pleased to hear his own speech, albeit in English.

Condition No. 3: Shared prejudice. In Episode 1, Stone informed Putin that William J. Casey, who led the CIA in the 1980s, had a project “to excite the Muslims in the Caucasus in Central Asia”. (Stone is apparently unaware that the Caucasus and Central Asia are two different regions, hundreds of miles apart.)

Inability or unwillingn­ess

In Episode 2, Stone offers his sympathy to Putin: “You mentioned earlier, the white, the ethnic Russian population is diminishin­g,” he says, apparently believing that Russia was, consequent­ly, in danger. But Putin has good news: “Fortunatel­y, we have reversed this situation. For three years running, we have had population growth, including in regions that are historical­ly majority ethnic-Russian.” Putin practicall­y appears to be the saviour of the white race.

Condition No. 4: An inability or an unwillingn­ess to distinguis­h fact from fiction. Throughout the interviews, Stone appears to ask Putin prearrange­d questions, probably written by the Russian president’s staff.

Condition No. 5: Moral neutrality.To exercise ignorance, racist prejudice, a love of power and total disregard for factual accuracy, one has to inhabit a world where everything can mean anything and nothing is certain.

A quote from Episode 4 illustrate­s how this approach works: “Stalin was a product of his time,” Putin says. “You can demonise him all you want, or, on the other hand, talk about his contributi­ons to victory over Nazism. But the excessive demonisati­on of Stalin is just one way to attack the Soviet Union and Russia, to suggest that today’s Russia carries the birthmarks of Stalinism. Everyone has one kind of birthmark or another. So what?”

So what, that is, if Russia increasing­ly idolises the man who allegedly killed millions of Soviet citizens and confined tens of millions to concentrat­ion camps? So nothing, apparently. “Your father, your mother, admired him, right?” Stone says. “Of course,” Putin says.

Of course, Oliver Stone is not Trump. But he shares with him a certain way of seeing the world and being in the world — and the luxury of persisting in this way of being, and even making a spectacle of it.

Masha Gessen is a contributi­ng opinion writer and the author of The Man Without a Face: The Unlikely Rise of Vladimir Putin.

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