Banning Russian-language Media will Safeguard Ukraine
Ukraine has been taken to task internally and externally by
Ukrainian, Russian, non-Russian and global organizations for attempting to
limit access of Russian-language programming, news and other media to audiences
in Ukraine.
The rationale behind this effort by its proponents has been the
need to cleanse the Ukrainian nation of the negative effects of centuries-long
russification, which was codified in the infamous Ems Ukaz of 1876 that banned
the use of the Ukrainian language in the Russian empire, including subjugated
eastern Ukraine. Furthermore, by giving the people the opportunity to promote
their native Ukrainian language, culture and heritage, the advocates of this
campaign are indeed safeguarding the existence of an independent, sovereign
Ukraine. After all, in addition to hating the country of Ukraine, there are
many examples of Moscow also detesting the Ukrainian language and its speakers.
Yes, for Ukrainians, it’s a matter of national preservation.
The national discrimination and hatred felt by Ukrainians at
the hands of Russian colonizers and dictators were also experienced by the other
then captive nations that achieved their freedom only in the early 1990s. Today,
they are still endeavoring to preserve their national languages, cultures and
heritages in the face of continued Russian pressure, among them Lithuanians
come to mind.
Vilnius has been an ardent supporter of Ukraine in the latest
Russian act of aggression, condemning Moscow’s belligerent actions against all
of the now former captive nations. While Lithuania is not engaged in a hot war
with Russia, the Kremlin is attacking the Baltic state on the linguistic and
cultural fronts with barrages after barrages of Russian-language programming
and popular events.
Euronews reported this week that Rimvydas Valatka, a Lithuanian political analyst and signatory of
the act that secured Lithuania’s independence in 1991, discovered that a new
cable TV package featured in addition to the usual news, sports and sitcoms at
least six stations that broadcast in Russian. Furthermore, Valatka discovered
that Russia TV, Moscow’s ubiquitous
television network and primary Russian-language offender, has an annual budget
of about $275 million, a little less than a third of his country’s entire
defense budget for 2019. Apparently, russification for Moscow continues to be
as significant a weapon of colonization and domination in its arsenal as tanks
and nuclear weapons – perhaps more so.
Valatka said that figure amounts to a lot of muscle for the
Kremlin in Lithuania, which officially banned RT in September 2020. However, he
added, it’s not been effective, according to the Euronews story.
“Although [RT] has been banned by Lithuania for the
dissemination of propaganda and enmity, it is still omnipresent on the cable TV
channels and on the internet,” Valatka told Euronews.
Lithuania’s State
Security Department (VSD) pointed out that RT is just one of a number of
soft power weapons that Moscow uses to get its dangerous narrative across in
the Baltic state. More broadly, the media is a prime vessel for promoting
Russia’s language, culture and history in Lithuania – the first steps in
establishing a beachhead for further conquest.
Russian infiltration of Lithuania is also conducted through
other popular venues. Euronews said it is of little surprise that since 2014
Russian influence in Lithuania has taken the form of so-called “soft power”
rather than a barefaced attempt to actively interfere in politics in the
country – as Russia does in other countries or by military invasion as it does in
Ukraine. Simultaneously with the growth of Russian-language media, the battle
for influence between east and west has recently manifested itself in
basketball in a spat over whether Baltic teams should take part in Russia’s professional
basketball league, the VTB. Valatka observed that if the club had accepted the
offer it would have become, “perhaps unbeknownst to it itself, part of the
Russia propaganda machine.”
Ukraine, Lithuania and the other former captive nations, who
know firsthand Russian repression, are correct to seal their borders to any
form of Russian influence.
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