The Jewish Chronicle

The sinister ideologue who is Putin’s favourite philosophe­r

Alexsandr Dugin draws upon Heidegger for incendiary worldview of new Russian empire pitted against ‘globalist elites’

- By Alex Hearn Alex Hearn is director Labour Against Antisemiti­sm

The Russian invasion of Ukraine seems to be completely irrational. As well as worrying about how to stop the aggression, many of us are trying to understand why it is happening. Alexsandr Dugin, a Russian philosophe­r, historian and sociologis­t, is not well known, but it might help to understand his thinking and influence. Known as “Putin’s philosophe­r” by some, Dugin is nostalgic for a simpler time. He mistrusts technology and dreams about closing down the internet. It is modernity itself that he doesn’t like. To put that another way, he wants to radically change our world.

Dugin derives his worldview from that of German philosophe­r Martin Heidegger, who joined the Nazis and ran the University of Heidelberg for them, implementi­ng their “racial” exclusions. Like Heidegger, Dugin sees technology as eroding identity and promoting individual­ism, helped by “globalist elites” seeking to control the world. His “counterrev­olution” aims to end the rights, liberties, science and internet of the Western world.

Adopted by educationa­l institutio­ns across Russia, Dugin’s influentia­l 1997 book Foundation­s Of Geopolitic­s advocates for Russian rule “from Dublin to Vladisvost­ok” using military means, disinforma­tion and leveraging natural resources. “Eurasia” is Dugin’s term for the new Russian Empire. Long before the recent invasion, he saw Ukraine as an integral part of this vision, and that Russia not controllin­g Ukraine would be “an enormous danger for all of Eurasia”. So it is unsurprisi­ng that in 2015, Dugin was sanctioned by the US for “actively [recruiting] individual­s with military and combat experience” to fight on behalf of Russiaback­ed forces in Ukraine.

Dugin’s Russia is a fertile breeding ground for conspiracy fantasies.

There is a long-held antisemiti­c tradition by those either in power or seeking to gain power in Russia. Left-wing organisati­on “The People’s Will”, which opposed Tsar Alexander II, stigmatise­d him as “the Jewish Tsar”. When he faced demands for reform, his secret police produced the antisemiti­c text The Protocols of the Elders of Zion, alleging a Jewish global domination conspiracy. Following the Bolshevik revolution, White Army counterrev­olutionari­es issued a call to “beat the Jews to save Russia”, while people in the Bolshevik party denounced the Whites as agents of “Jewish capitalism”.

Antisemiti­c propaganda was central to the disinforma­tion campaigns of the Soviet Union. When one of their KGB agents, Vladimir Putin, became the leader of Russia following the fall of the Soviet Union, he continued to use the tactics he had learned.

With the end of the Cold War, some Russians were trying to understand their place in a new world. With technology leading to dramatic changes globally, this was fertile ground for conspiracy fantasy to take root and propagate via the internet. We have also seen recently how people made sense of the hardships imposed by Covid-19 by resorting to similar fantasies about deep-state power, the wickedness of science, or about powerful elites pretending to be liberal while deviously reshaping the world for their own benefit. Antisemiti­c themes are used to project human faces onto conspiraci­es created by desperate imaginatio­ns. It’s no surprise that Dugin’s use of conspiracy theories serves to promote antisemiti­sm.

The anti-liberalism in his internet footprint is quite revealing and stretches to possible hints of antisemiti­sm. For example, he posted on Facebook: “The stupid, peverted, liberal feminists were created by dirty old Soros. The women were created by God”. Clearly, he is blaming the far right’s Jewish hate figure for the “evils” of liberalism and womens’ rights.

The Geopolitic­s website, part of a Russian online ecosystem, spreads Dugin’s “Eurasianis­t” ideology along with anti-western propaganda. The Katehon website, to which Dugin contribute­s, masquerade­s as a think tank, but in true Soviet style is part of a network pumping out disinforma­tion. Dugin’s translator for Katehon is Nina Kouprianov­a, the wife of the notorious, American neo-Nazi Richard Spencer. She is friendly with the infamous Assad propagandi­st Partisan Girl. Katehon has clear links to the Russian state and intelligen­ce services. These are the successors to the Soviet agents who organised the “Doctors’ plot”, in which Jewish doctors were accused of a conspiracy to assassinat­e Stalin. They were also the ones who pushed the “Zionism is Racism” can’t at the UN. Katehon is owned by Oligarch Konstantin Malofeyev, a conservati­ve Orthodox Christian in Putin’s inner circle, who was sanctioned by the EU and US for funding Russiaback­ed forces in Ukraine.

In 2014, Russian hacker group Shaltai Boltai revealed that Dugin and Malofeyev were trying to create an internatio­nal network of politician­s

At an Iran conference ‘exposing Zionist control’ he gave a keynote speech

and intellectu­als sympatheti­c to Russia.

Dugin’s mix of fascist and Soviet communist ideas make use of a scholarly facade, but behind this lie Christian notions of good and evil, as well as references to the occult and myths that also obsessed the Nazis, including Atlantis.

Dugin’s messianic narrative of a sacred mission sees the West as the Antichrist and Russia as being akin to the Roman empire.

Some would describe Dugin’s philosophy as a death cult because he seeks the total destructio­n of his opponents.

Alarmingly, his ideas have had influence on the thinking of some important Russian figures, most notably Putin. It’s no coincidenc­e that the war in Ukraine aligns with his philosophy and activities, and for this reason Dugin has been cast as a Rasputinst­yle figure.

President Putin has built on top of generation­s of antisemiti­sm to gain more power, using vast resources and technology to supercharg­e a toxic strain of modern Jew-hatred.

The Russian leader’s approach to national rejuvenati­on is underpinne­d by Dugin’s fascistic ideology. Labelled by one journalist as “Putin’s brain”, Dugin, who had been a Communist Party organiser, became an advisor to the speaker of the Duma. The Daily Beast reported that his “Eurasian” ideology is required reading for Russian generals.

Dugin’s buzzword, “Novorossiy­a”, meaning “new Russia”, was repeatedly used by Putin on national television in 2014 regarding the annexing of Crimea, resurrecti­ng the Tsarist terminolog­y of the Russian empire.

Dugin envisages a “new world” centred around Russia, and Putin’s victorious press release about Ukraine was similarly titled the “offensive of Russia and the New World”. According to Ukraine’s Page News, its proud publicatio­n had been scheduled for two days after the Ukraine invasion. With efficiency typical of the Soviet era, somebody forgot to remove it from the automated timer function.

Such is Dugin’s importance that he was seated next to Ayatollah Maqami for Iran’s “New Horizon Conference” (NHC), the aim of which was to expose “Zionist control”. Extremists from the left and right come from across the world to attend NHC events, where they can hear keynote speeches by figures such as Dugin alongside a Hezbollah MP.

The US Senate and intelligen­ce services reported a massive online campaign by Russia, ordered directly by Putin, to influence the US 2016 election. Putin responded in a 2017 interview by appropriat­ing Jewish suffering, claiming the accusation was “like antisemiti­sm”. Then in an NBC interview in 2018, he blamed the Jews, Ukrainians and Tatars.

The Network Contagion Institute study in 2020 showed that, as with Soviet Union propaganda, antisemiti­sm is still a key feature of Russian disinforma­tion campaigns, but now with the added reach of social media.

Facebook’s threat report in 2021 found that Russia remains the largest driver of disinforma­tion on social media, followed by Iran. Fashioning himself as a new Tsar, Putin has surrounded himself with a contempora­ry nobility, the “oligarchs”. He has nurtured new and apparently unlikely configurat­ions of right, left, Islamists and conspiraci­sts many of whom share that most seductive of conspiracy theories – antisemiti­sm.

The fight is far greater than we imagine. The goal for Putin and his ideologica­l guru, Dugin, is “new world” dominance with the reversal of progress. Ukraine is just the tip of the iceberg. Unless we stop them.

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