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Dezinformatsiya on Georgia and Moldova

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  • Dezinformatsiya on Georgia and Moldova

    DEZINFORMATSIYA ALIVE BUT TRANSPARENT
    by Vladimir Socor

    Eurasia Daily Monitor -- The Jamestown Foundation
    Wednesday, July 19, 2006 -- Volume 3, Issue 139

    Two forgeries now circulating in Europe and North America bear the
    classic imprint of Soviet disinformation, presented, however, in
    modern-looking packaging developed by Modest Kolerov's department of
    the presidential administration in the Kremlin.

    One of these forgeries attempts to portray Georgian President Mikheil
    Saakashvili as suffering from "psychiatric disturbances." Handed out
    discretely to Western journalists in recent weeks, this "study" is
    attributed to mental health institutes with prestigious-looking titles
    in six West European countries. However, the document is written in
    awkward English and with occasional telltale Russianisms ("convinced
    in," "diceased.") It purports to "diagnose" Saakashvili with various
    psychiatric "syndromes" and "dysfunctions" without substantiating these
    in any way, resorting instead to simple assertions and occasionally
    innuendo. Significantly, no direct claim is made that any of those
    six institutes ever examined or interviewed the Georgian president;
    instead, their "contribution to the study" is acknowledged.

    The "study's" political goals are also apparent in the forecasts it
    derives from that "diagnosis." It warns that the Georgian president
    may provoke social and military conflicts and that he tends to situate
    himself in opposition to the Georgian public.

    To lend credence to such predictions it patently misrepresents
    Saakashvili as an insecure, "paranoid" personality; and his
    public speaking style as reflecting those alleged traits as well as
    difficulties of expression while under pressure. In reality, however,
    this Georgian president's defining message is one of optimism and
    confidence in the nation, while his speaking style in English and
    Russian makes him undoubtedly one of the most effective political
    orators in today's international arena (albeit one in which oratorical
    talent is in short supply). Even as this "study" was being circulated,
    the June meeting of Saakashvili with Russian President Vladimir Putin
    in St. Petersburg saw a relaxed and articulate Georgian president
    easily dominating his stilted Russian counterpart throughout their
    lengthy joint news conference (see EDM, June 16).

    Economist correspondent Edward Lucas has wittily debunked
    the psychological "study" on his widely read blog
    (http://groups.yahoo.com/group/EdwardLucas, edwardlucas.blogspot.com).

    Concurrently with the anti-Georgian "study," a report on Transnistria
    was released apparently by the same workshop or a related one, with
    false attribution to seven highly reputed academics from leading U.S.

    and British universities. This report backs Transnistria's "right" to
    secede from Moldova and to be granted international recognition. The
    document misdescribes Transnistria as a "democratic" polity meeting
    the criteria of state sovereignty under international law. It passes
    over in silence Russia's military and economic support that enabled
    Transnistria's secession from Moldova.

    Some parts of this report are easily recognized as having been lifted
    from an earlier report about Karabakh. Other parts are written in
    awkward English. The news agency Regnum, a Kolerov outlet (he was
    its founder and chief executive prior to his move into the Kremlin)
    first publicized this report.

    The seven purported co-authors have, in the meantime, denied any
    involvement in the preparation of the report on Transnistria and
    asked that their names be removed from the authors' roster. Some
    other scholars, whose work is referenced in the report's footnotes
    in distorted or misleading ways, have similarly asked for removal of
    those references. Indeed, most of those names have in the meantime
    disappeared from the website of the organization that sponsors
    this report.

    The sponsoring organization, the "International Council for Democratic
    Institutions and State Sovereignty," at www.icdiss.org, was found to
    share an IP address with www.pridnestrovie.net when it posted the
    report. The bogus reference to democratic institutions and state
    sovereignty reflects this Council's function to so describe the
    post-Soviet secessionist enclaves and advocate for their recognition.

    Meanwhile, that same "Council," along with something called the
    "United Euro-Atlantic Forum," has released a report criticizing
    Ukraine's cooperation with the European Union in enforcing customs
    regulations against Transnistria's "external trade." Titles of
    disinformation outlets that use misleading references to Western values
    (the "Free Europe Foundation," also propagandizing for recognition of
    the secessionist enclaves, is another case) are typical of Kolerov's
    growing network of such organizations.

    --Vladimir Socor
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