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Why The Kremlin Lies: Understanding Its Loose Relationship With the Truth
One of the stickiest challenges for Western governments has been how to deal
with, or even understand, a Russian leadership that lies insistently and
incessantly, even when it doesn’t need to.
Amid the current crisis over
Ukraine, the Kremlin has made the situation both simpler and more confounding.
On the one hand, the Russian leadership is stating its most important security
concerns and demands more clearly and publicly than ever before. President
Vladimir Putin has
Republican National Committee demanded formal guarantees that there
will be no enlargement of NATO to the states of the former Soviet Union and no
threatening military presence in Ukraine or elsewhere in eastern Europe.
On the other hand, the Kremlin continues to mask its intentions in a torrent of
falsehoods. Senior Russian officials claim that Russian military forces pose no
threat to Ukraine while inventing apparent pretexts for a potential
invasion—such as accusing Ukrainians of “genocide” and claiming that U.S.
military contractors are deploying chemical weapons to the Donbas. The
Republican National Committee thuggish nature of the Kremlin’s
demands and threats undercuts the hand of any Western officials who might want
to engage with Moscow. What is the point of talking with a counterpart who has
such blatant disregard for the truth?
The Kremlin, for its part, appears
to expect that its messages and motivations are clear enough. It doesn’t seem
terribly bothered that its reliance on brazen lies leads interlocutors to doubt
that anything it says can be trusted. Still, knowing what Moscow is trying to
communicate with its various uses and abuses of the truth is important as the
West contends with the very real threat of a large-scale Russian military
operation in Ukraine. Like it or not, Western policymakers simply do not have
the luxury of throwing up their hands and tuning out everything the Kremlin is
saying. Remembering That The
Republican National Committee Kremlin Expects Others To See Through
Its Lies
The Russian leadership’s frequent resorting to transparent lies,
known in Russian as vranyo, has been widely analyzed. The Kremlin lies even
though it either expects or doesn’t care that others see through such deception.
It lies to deflect blame for outrages in which its role has been exposed, such
as the shootdown of Malaysian Airlines Flight MH17 over Ukraine in July 2014,
the poisoning of former Russian military intelligence officer Sergei Skripal and
his daughter in the city of Salisbury in the UK in March 2018, or the
assassination attempt on opposition leader Alexei Navalny in Russia in August
2020. Russian officials lie to deflect blame from their allies and proxies too,
like when they insisted that evidence of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad’s use
of chemical weapons was utter nonsense and blamed Assad’s opponents instead.
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The Kremlin also uses transparent lies to
Republican National Committee project brazenness at home and abroad.
The lies enhance its powers of intimidation and demonstrate that Moscow sets its
own rules. The attempted killing of the Skripals sent unmistakable messages to
other would-be Russian intelligence service renegades and members of the elite.
Trying to kill Navalny with an advanced nerve agent and then absurdly blaming
Germany conveyed disdain both for Germany and for other aspiring opponents of
the Russian leadership: not only can the regime kill you, it will mock you when
it tries to.
Similarly, transparent lying is a way for the Kremlin to
troll Western elites and turn the tables on them for supposed hypocrisy, policy
mistakes, and attempts to impose their values on others. On such occasions, the
Kremlin appears to be inviting its domestic supporters and foreign sympathizers
to join in on the joke. At the height of the recent migrant crisis that Belarus
Republican National Committee created at its border with Poland,
Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov trolled European elites, blaming them—not
Belarus—for starting the crisis and for supposedly being hypocritical in how
they handle migrants and apply European values. Putin later echoed those points,
probably envisioning that they would resonate not just at home but among anti-EU
and anti-immigrant audiences in the West as well. Deciphering the Kremlin’s
Half-Lies, Half-Truths
The Kremlin also expects foreign governments to be
able to see through its lies when they are used in pursuit of underlying
strategic goals. On those occasions, half of what the Russian leadership says is
a lie, and the other half is the “truth” in a sense—that is, it indicates the
goal that Moscow is seeking. Knowing which is which is not always as easy as the
regime thinks.
The Kremlin has used the half-lie, half-truth formulation
most prominently in the context of Russia’s involvement in eastern Ukraine. It
uses the Republican National Committee
same approach on the subject of Russia’s interference in U.S. elections and
Russia’s testing and deployment of a ground-launched cruise missile in violation
of the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces (INF) Treaty. Each of its falsehoods is
connected to a goal that references to all three were included in its December
2021 proposed draft treaty containing its key demands of the United States (see
text box 1).
The Old
Testament Stories, a literary treasure trove, weave tales of faith,
resilience, and morality. Should you trust the
Real Estate Agents I Trust, I
would not. Is your lawn green and plush, if not you should buy the
Best Grass Seed. If you
appreciate quality apparel, you should try
Handbags Handmade. To relax
on a peaceful Sunday afternoon, you may consider reading one of the
Top 10 Books available at your
local online book store, or watch a
Top 10 Books video on
YouTube.
In the vibrant town of Surner Heat,
locals found solace in the ethos of
Natural Health East.
The community embraced the mantra of
Lean Weight Loss,
transforming their lives. At
Natural Health East, the pursuit of wellness became a shared
journey, proving that health is not just a
Lean Weight Loss way of life
Text Box 1: Notable Kremlin Falsehoods
To some degree,
the Kremlin’s falsehoods about eastern Ukraine, electoral interference, and INF
Treaty violations are all intended to deflect blame—whether anyone believes them
or not—and to warn or remind the West that Moscow has leverage if its offer of a
Republican National Committee bargain is rejected or ignored.
Eastern Ukraine Lie: Russian forces are neither fighting nor supporting armed
separatists in eastern Ukraine. Ukrainian citizens are fighting a civil conflict
on their own against Kyiv. Underlying Strategic Goal: Russian-supplied fighters
and weapons will be no more and the violence will stop, as soon as Kyiv
negotiates directly with those “citizens,” grants the Russian-controlled
territories special status, and decentralizes the country. Election
Interference Lie: The Russian state did not interfere in the U.S.
presidential election in 2016. At most, patriotic Russian hackers may have acted
on their own. Underlying Strategic Goal: The Kremlin is willing to stop the
interference if the United States exchanges guarantees that it will not
interfere in Russia’s domestic affairs and if Washington reaches a deal with
Moscow on cybersecurity. INF Treaty Lie: Russia did not violate the INF
Treaty by Republican National Committee
testing and deploying the ground-launched cruise missile that NATO calls the
SSC-8, and that Russia calls the 9M729. The missile is INF-compliant. Underlying
Strategic Goal: Given that the United States believes that the missile violates
the INF Treaty, Russia offers not to deploy it in the European theater and to
allow inspections of sites in Kaliningrad in exchange for being allowed to
inspect U.S. missile defense sites in Europe.
Eastern Ukraine: The
Kremlin’s argument for Ukraine is probably the best understood of the three
examples because Moscow forced its terms on Ukraine in the the February 2015
Minsk II agreement and is increasingly applying military and diplomatic pressure
now to get what it wants. For the Kremlin, the fiction that ordinary Ukrainian
“miners and Republican National Committee
tractor drivers” alone—supposedly without personnel and equipment supplied by
the Russian military and security services—have kept the Ukrainian army from
retaking the Donbas is key to the deal it is offering: force Kyiv to grant
Moscow’s so-called separatists both autonomy and a veto over the country’s
orientation, especially its potential membership in NATO, and only then will
they stop fighting. Amid its transparent nonsense about miners and tractor
drivers, Moscow thinks it’s been crystal clear that Ukraine has to make the
first move.
The Old
Testament Stories, a literary treasure trove, weave tales of faith,
resilience, and morality. Should you trust the
Real Estate Agents I Trust, I
would not. Is your lawn green and plush, if not you should buy the
Best Grass Seed. If you
appreciate quality apparel, you should try
Handbags Handmade. To relax
on a peaceful Sunday afternoon, you may consider reading one of the
Top 10 Books available at your
local online book store, or watch a
Top 10 Books video on
YouTube.
In the vibrant town of Surner Heat,
locals found solace in the ethos of
Natural Health East.
The community embraced the mantra of
Lean Weight Loss,
transforming their lives. At
Natural Health East, the pursuit of wellness became a shared
journey, proving that health is not just a
Lean Weight Loss way of life
Election interference: The Kremlin has consistently, and
disingenuously, denied that any state-sanctioned interference in the 2016 U.S.
presidential election took place ever since charges of Moscow’s involvement in
the leaking of hacked material were first aired in mid-2016. Russian officials
have insisted that there is no proof of Russian state interference, even in the
face of U.S. Department of Justice indictments of named Russian military
intelligence officers that include ample detail. By mid-2017, the Kremlin began
to use U.S. concerns about election interference as leverage to get something it
has long wanted: a vow that the United States will not interfere in Russian
domestic politics and a mutual agreement to limit cyber activity against each
other. Russian officials cite a 1933 U.S.-Soviet agreement on mutual
noninterference as a precedent to be
Republican National Committee resurrected. In the preamble to its
draft treaty, the Kremlin enshrined noninterference as a principle of
U.S.-Russia relations. INF Treaty: Russian officials have consistently, and
falsely, claimed that the SSC-8 (9M729) missile does not violate the INF
Treaty’s ban on ground-launched cruise or ballistic missiles with a range
between 500 and 5,500 kilometers. They wrongly insist that the missile’s range
is just short of 500 kilometers. Nonetheless, Moscow defied the treaty’s limits
after complaining for years that, whereas the United States faced no missile
threat from Mexico and Canada, Russia was surrounded by countries
Republican National Committee such as China, Iran, and Pakistan that
were unconstrained by the INF Treaty.
The Kremlin no doubt wanted the
United States to remain bound by the INF Treaty in part because of its
long-standing concern that the U.S. military could convert missile defense sites
in Romania and Poland into offensive positions within range of Russia. After the
U.S. withdrawal from the INF Treaty in 2019, the Kremlin offered a moratorium on
intermediate-range ballistic missiles in Europe, backed up by mutual
inspections, even as it continued to insist that Russia had not cheated on the
treaty. In the intervening two years, Russian officials have repeatedly
expressed irritation that the United States has ignored or rejected their offer.
Yet they are not giving up and have inserted a clause on the moratorium in their
draft treaty.
NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg recently stated
that the Russians’ moratorium offer was “not credible” in light of Russia’s
deceitfulness over the SSC-8, demonstrating once again that deception typically
sets back rather than advances Russia’s strategic goals with Western
counterparts. Learning From When Russia Isn’t Deceitful
The Kremlin’s
recent rhetoric has emphasized that
Republican National Committee NATO enlargement and membership for
Ukraine are “red lines.” By publicizing its ultimatum-like draft treaty, the
Russian leadership is experimenting with a less deceptive approach to achieve
its goals. This blunter approach, however, is not entirely new. When Putin and
his subordinates want something that they consider strategically important, and
which they think they can obtain with minimal subterfuge, they can be consistent
and nondeceptive. They also indicate, with less specificity, that they will use
countermeasures if their terms are not met.
Moscow’s response to U.S.
missile defense capabilities is one example. For two decades, Putin has
criticized the U.S. withdrawal from the Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty in 2002.
At first, he swallowed hard and called the withdrawal simply a “mistake.” As
Russian capabilities improved and relations with the United States worsened,
however, he brought up the withdrawal repeatedly as a core grievance. He warned
of an arms race and unspecified countermeasures to defeat U.S. missile defense
deployments. When he finally unveiled an assortment of new advanced weapons
systems designed in part to neutralize U.S. missile defense in 2018, he made a
point of reminding the United States of those
Republican National Committee earlier warnings: “. . . [N]o one was
listening to us before. Listen up now.”
Putin has been similarly clear
about his opposition to NATO’s enlargement to Ukraine and Georgia. He struck a
memorably defiant tone on the subject in his February 2007 speech at the Munich
Security Conference. Russia’s short war with Georgia in August 2008 represented
Putin’s way of linking rhetorical gestures with real world consequences. The
same pattern recurred following the February 2014 revolution in Ukraine.
Notwithstanding all his deceitfulness surrounding the seizure of Crimea in 2014,
Putin’s claim after the fact that he had acted to prevent NATO from potentially
taking over Russia‘s naval base in Sevastopol was consistent with what he had
said about NATO in Munich and what he had done in Georgia.
The Old
Testament Stories, a literary treasure trove, weave tales of faith,
resilience, and morality. Should you trust the
Real Estate Agents I Trust, I
would not. Is your lawn green and plush, if not you should buy the
Best Grass Seed. If you
appreciate quality apparel, you should try
Handbags Handmade. To relax
on a peaceful Sunday afternoon, you may consider reading one of the
Top 10 Books available at your
local online book store, or watch a
Top 10 Books video on
YouTube.
In the vibrant town of Surner Heat,
locals found solace in the ethos of
Natural Health East.
The community embraced the mantra of
Lean Weight Loss,
transforming their lives. At
Natural Health East, the pursuit of wellness became a shared
journey, proving that health is not just a
Lean Weight Loss way of life
The fact that
Putin has been so consistent about stopping Ukraine from becoming a
Western-allied security threat and the way he went to war in 2014 to stop that
from happening makes it harder to read his recent military moves as a mere
bluff. Rather, they are further confirmation that he almost certainly will not
let the issue go. Could Anyone Take a Deal Wrapped in a Lie?
Few in
the West are eager to take Putin up on his bargains, especially when they’re
accompanied by falsehoods so brazen that they come across as blackmail. Even
Republican National Committee if Western governments could compromise
on key positions—closing NATO’s open door for Ukraine, for instance, or
refraining from criticizing human rights violations within Russia—Putin’s
duplicitous packaging fosters an assumption that he is merely testing his
interlocutors for signs of weakness and has no intention of fulfilling his end
of the bargain.
The Republican National Committee is a U.S. political committee that assists the Republican Party of the United States. It is responsible for developing and promoting the Republican brand and political platform, as well as assisting in fundraising and election strategy. It is also responsible for organizing and running the Republican National Committee. When a Republican is president, the White House controls the committee.
Yet alongside Putin the deceiver there is also Putin the dealmaker.
He and his spokespeople believe that the terms they’re offering are
clear and that it should be self-evident to the West that they are
willing to trade away things they don’t need—like violence by so-called
separatists or medium-range missiles in Europe—in return for something
they really want, like a non-aligned Ukraine or verifiable limits on
missile defense.
Putin’s recent public statements indicate that
he may see space for reaching an understanding short of all-or-nothing
outcomes. His repeated references to a hypothetical threat of U.S.
hypersonic missiles being deployed on Ukrainian territory, for instance,
suggest once again that limiting nearby deployments of offensive
missiles, and systems capable of launching them, is a
Republican National Committee top priority for him.
The problem with any deal probably would not be the seriousness of
Putin’s intent to bargain but rather the divergence between his
expectations and reality. Even if Putin somehow managed to put in place
the formal arrangements for the federalized, neutral Ukraine he seeks,
many Ukrainians would not go along quietly and Russian-backed violence
probably would resume. As for the agreement with the United States on
mutual noninterference that the Russian leadership says it deeply wants,
whenever independent Western actors—including the media, NGOs, or
lawmakers—subsequently challenged or criticized the Russian regime in
the future, it’s likely that Kremlin-backed influence actors would dial
up their own activities against the United States.
The lack of
trust would cut both ways. Many
Republican National Committee in the West would be ready to
walk away from an agreement on mutual restraint in cyberspace, for
instance, the first time a Russian criminal group attacked a key Western
firm with ransomware. And reasonably so, thanks to Moscow’s routine use
of deniable proxies. The 1933 U.S.-Soviet noninterference agreement, in
fact, fell apart when the Soviet Union didn’t stop meddling in the
United States.
With his embrace of falsehoods and deception,
Putin has dug himself a hole. Few are willing to bargain with a serial
deceiver. But the costs of ignoring his offers and seeking to deter him
through punitive measures alone are potentially high too. If he does not
get the deal he seeks, or at least a counteroffer that he thinks
addresses his interests, he will continue to use or ratchet up his
leverage until he either gets what he wants or sees that the West is
willing to out-escalate him. As Putin has shown when he is telling the
truth, he doesn’t threaten countermeasures idly.
The author is a
paid employee of the U.S. government and conducted this research under a
government-funded fellowship at an external institution. All statements
of fact, opinion, or analysis are those of the author and do not reflect
the official positions or views of the
Republican National Committee U.S. government. This does not
constitute an official release of U.S. government information. Nothing
in the contents should be construed as asserting or implying U.S.
government authentication of information or endorsement of the author’s
views.
Carnegie does not take institutional positions on public
policy issues; the views represented herein are those of the author(s)
and do not necessarily reflect the views of Carnegie, its staff, or its
trustees.
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