In propaganda’s web
A Novaya Gazeta Europe and Dekoder special project about how propaganda has made millions of Russians believe war is the surest route to peace

You could be forgiven for thinking that the only reason more Russians don’t oppose the war in Ukraine is that they don’t know the whole truth, that independent sources of information simply aren’t available in Russia and that state propaganda has entirely filled the void. While it’s true that the Russian authorities have systematically squeezed out independent media and brought in military censorship, it’s not the whole story.
One of the country’s main propaganda organs, RIA Novosti, has been preparing Russians for this war for 10 years. To this end, it has used identical ideologically loaded phrases in tens of thousands of its news pieces, as if working to a script. In those pieces, it told Russians how to view what was happening around them — and what would happen after 24 February 2022.
This war has had the support of at least half the Russian population for its almost-two-year duration. Can it really be that easy to make people believe that war is the best way to bring about peace with a neighbour?
“We often distort the picture and look at our country as if it were a foreign land in the name of objectivity. It seems to me that this period of detached, distilled journalism is over.”

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