Beyond Propaganda, How authoritarian regimes are learning to engineer human souls in the age of Facebook
Beyond Propaganda
How authoritarian regimes are learning to
engineer human souls in the age of Facebook.
By Peter Pomerantsev
This essay
is adapted from the first in a series of publications by the Legatum
Institute’s Transitions Forum on the politics of information in the 21st
century.
Pity the
poor propagandist! Back in the 20th century it was a lot easier to control an
authoritarian country’s hearts and minds. All domestic media could be directed
out of a government office. Foreign media could be jammed. Borders were sealed,
and your population couldn’t witness the successes of a rival system. You had a
clear narrative with at least a theoretically enticing vision of social justice
or national superiority, one strong enough to fend off the seductions of
liberal democracy and capitalism. Anyone who disagreed could be isolated,
silenced, and suppressed.
Those were
the halcyon days of what the Chinese call “thought work” — and Soviets called
the “engineering of human souls.” And until recently, it seemed as if they were
gone forever. Today’s smart phones and laptops mean any citizen can be their
own little media center. Borders are more open. Western films, cars, and search
engines permeate virtually everywhere. All regimes are experimenting with at
least some version of capitalism, which theoretically means that everyone has
more in common.
Yet the
story is far from straightforward. Neo-authoritarian, “hybrid,” and illiberal
democratic regimes in countries such as Venezuela, Turkey, China, Syria and
Russia have not given up on propaganda. They have found completely new ways of
pursuing it, many of them employing technologies invented in the democratic
world.
Why fight
the information age and globalization when you can use it?
Often, the
techniques are quite subtle. After analyzing the real-time censorship of 1,382
Chinese websites during the first half of 2011 — 11,382,221 posts in all —
researchers from Harvard University found that the government’s propagandists
did in fact tolerate criticism of politicians and policies. But they
immediately censored any online attempts to organize collective protests,
including some that were not necessarily critical of the regime. One heavily
censored event, for example, was meant to highlight fears that nuclear spillage
from Japan would reach China.
That analysis
made clear that the government’s priority is not to stop all criticism, but to
undermine the self-organizing potential of society. “The Chinese people are
individually free but collectively in chains,” the Harvard study concludes.
Indeed, the Internet has turned out to be a useful tool of control: it allows
people to “blow off steam” and also gives the government a barometer to measure
public opinion.
Elections
can also serve as an authoritarian tool. In Venezuela, Hugo Chávez would have
elections so often that the opposition, which lacked the same level of funding
and media access, never had the chance to compete. Chávez averaged some 40
hours of direct media time a week, including his own variety show, Alo
Presidente, which ran every Sunday for as many hours as Chávez required. A mix
of Jay Leno and Mussolini, the show allowed Chávez to share his views on
anything from baseball to George W. Bush; to answer phone calls from the
populace; to share personal anecdotes, fire ministers, announce the start of
wars, or burst into song. International celebrities such as Naomi Campbell,
Danny Glover, and Sean Penn would appear on the show, lending their star power
to the Chávez brand of permanent socialist revolution.
Meanwhile,
Chávez and his successor Nicolás Maduro “drape censorship in the glove of the
invisible hand” to muzzle dissent. Instead of shutting down critical media
outlets, they simply make sure that they fail. “First,” writes Daniel Lansberg-Rodríguez,
“media outlets are regulated so as to become economically uncompetitive: a
newspaper, for example, might be denied a favorable exchange rate for importing
printing paper; a broadcaster might regularly be hit with fines on spurious
charges of libel or indecency. Second, once the business started failing, a
dummy corporation, sometimes owned anonymously, mysteriously appears and offers
to buy it out, even generously. Third, despite initially guaranteeing that the
editorial line would remain unchanged, the new management soon began shedding
staff and shifting coverage until its message became all but indistinguishable
from the Panglossian views of the ruling party.”
A similar
formula applies in Turkey, where Recep Tayyip Erdoğan has also managed to
skillfully integrate crony capitalism into his authoritarian media management.
According to Turkish commentator Berivan Orucoglu, companies whose media
businesses are sympathetic to the government win handsome state contracts in
other sectors. Companies whose media are critical of the government lose
government tenders and become targets of tax investigations.
For its
opponents this new propaganda can be hard to resist, particularly as the
counter-narrative has become so much more elusive. In the 20th century the
democratic capitalism of the West had a powerful answer to Soviet
totalitarianism: free markets, free culture, and free politics. Mercedes,
merchant banking, rock ’n’ roll, and parliament were a more attractive
proposition than Ladas, the Five Year Plan, the Red Army Choir, and the
Politburo. But today’s neo-authoritarians are offering a new deal: you can have
the trappings of a Western lifestyle — all the German cars, reality shows,
Naomi Campbell, and blue-chip shares you desire — while having none of the
political freedoms of the West, and indeed despising the West.
A
particularly bizarre example of this are the Night Wolves, the Russian Hell’s
Angels sponsored by the Kremlin, who were instrumental in the annexation of
Crimea. The Night Wolves tap into Western “cool,” riding around on
Harley-Davidsons and hosting huge concerts with German heavy-metal music. At
the same time they worship Stalin and Putin and call openly for the
resurrection of the Russian Empire. Along similar lines, Gary Rawnsley,
Professor of Public Diplomacy at Aberystwyth University, notes how Chinese
propagandists, less colorful but equally liquid in their approach to ideology,
“project deliberately contradictory messages.” Today’s Chinese “Communist”
Party champions Confucius as well as the Cultural Revolution, and praises the
stocks and shares of Shanghai alongside Maoist songs.
Clearly,
simple indoctrination is no longer the goal. In a 2014 study, Haifeng Huang of
the University of California looked at the political attitudes of 1,250
students at one of China’s “key national universities” (kept anonymous for the
sake of security). Huang’s research showed that while students who attend
propaganda courses might not believe the government is “good,” they do believe
it is “strong.” “A sufficient amount of propaganda can serve to demonstrate a
regime’s strength in maintaining social control and political order,” argues
Huang. He calls this propaganda a form of “signaling” rather than
“indoctrination”: the point is to intimidate, not to convince anyone of an
ideological message.
Something
like this is also at work in Syria. In her classic study, Ambiguities of
Domination, Lisa Wedeen tried to understand why Syrians living under Hafez
al-Assad’s rule in the 1990s repeated some of the regime’s palpably absurd
claims, for example that Assad was the country’s “greatest pharmacist.” Wedeen
concluded that the falseness was the point: “the regime’s power resides in its
ability to impose national fictions and to make people say and do what they
otherwise would not.
This obedience makes people complicit; it entangles them
in self-enforcing relations of domination.”
According
to longtime Syria-watcher (and ex-Financial Times correspondent) Abigail
Fielding-Smith, Bashar al-Assad, Hafez’s successor, now seeks to reimpose this
model of complicity. The revolution against Bashar began in February 2011, when
teenagers painted slogans about the Arab Spring on a wall in the town of Deraa.
The security services’ reaction — arresting and torturing the teens — seemed
extreme. But it followed from the logic of the regime, which requires citizens
to demonstrate false loyalty, however absurd. Any breach in the code becomes
powerfully subversive.
Today,
official Syrian television continues to show unbelievably positive stories
about the country’s progress, although everyone knows about the devastating
civil war, whether through friends and relatives at the front or from the
numerous alternative sources of media, satellite and online. But the regime is
largely unbothered by this fact. In September 2011, Syrian TV tried to
undermine Al Jazeera broadcasts of protests in Syrian cities by claiming that
Qatar had built life-sized replicas of their main squares in order to stage
fake protests there, which were then allegedly filmed by French, American, and
Israeli directors. The goal, according to one Syrian journalist, is not to
convince people that this bizarre story is true:
“The aim is
to confuse people” — to make it hard to understand what is true and what is
false.
Assad isn’t
alone in this. Many of the new authoritarians have realized that in the 21st
century you don’t need to censor information all of the time, and you can’t do
it anyway. But you can create enough disinformation to spoil the media space
and prevent people from understanding what is happening. In Turkey, Erdoğan has
created a conspiracy-mongering Twitter-bot squadrons. The Chinese have the so-called
“50 Cent Party” — online scribes who are paid 50 cents for every pro-regime
comment they post. The Kremlin uses “troll factories” to post pro-Kremlin
messages and slander critics in Russia and abroad.
And the
result? Take the Baltics, where large ethnic Russian minorities are exposed to
radically different realities through local and Kremlin media. Research by the
Open Estonia Foundation showed that ethnic Russians living in the country end
up disbelieving both sides and struggling to form opinions. If anything,
Russian Baltic audiences are more drawn towards Kremlin sources because they
are more emotional and entertaining, offering them fantasies — invented tales
of Russian children crucified by Ukrainian militants, for example. Respondents
in focus groups among ethnic Russian audiences in Latvia said that news on
Russian TV channels is “emotionally attractive, because some news you watch
[like it’s] an exciting movie. You don’t trust it, but watch it gladly.”
If there is
a competition between different versions of reality, in other words, the side
that is less constrained by the truth may be more likely to win. But if this is
the case, then the entire premise of liberal media is undermined.
We have
long believed that more information means better decisions and better
democracy. If disinformation becomes a deluge, this may no longer be the case.
We are also seeing the same trend in countries such as the United States, where
different sides of the political spectrum are splitting off into separate
realities — producing disinformation such as stories about the Democrats’
health care reform including “death panels,” or that President Obama was born
outside the U.S.
Today’s
autocrats, “illiberal democrats,” and their propagandists have learned how to
use phenomena previously associated with democracy — elections, the Internet,
the press, the market — to undermine freedoms. They have learned how to disrupt
the soft power of liberal democracy with a liquid treatment of ideology. And
they do so by using Western technology and Western money. While the EU and the
U.S. government decry the disinformation, aggression, and war-mongering on
Kremlin TV channels, it is worth keeping in mind that these networks are kept
afloat by revenue made from Western advertising.
Taken from: http://foreignpolicy.com/
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