Beware the Anglo-Saxons!
Why Russian propagandists are so fond of invoking one particular historical term when talking about the West

A new, old spectre is haunting the world: the bloodthirsty Anglo-Saxons. Well, that is what the Kremlin wants the world to believe. Take the new Russian state-backed film Tolerance. Released in September 2025 to a less than enthusiastic public response, the dystopian tale of moral decay in the West opens with a warning of an “omnipresent Anglo-Saxon liberalism” that will “cause the ultimate degradation and extinction of once-prosperous countries and peoples”.
The United States is referred to as “the main inspirer, organiser and executor of the aggressive anti-Russian policy of the collective West”.
It wasn’t until the 16th century that scholars started to refer to the Anglo-Saxon origins of the English, in a bid to differentiate the country from Catholic Europe.
It is against this background of Anglo-Saxon as a term appropriated by white supremacists that modern Russian usage should be seen.
The Russian government has invested heavily in trying to persuade its citizens that they can trace their identity all the way back to a distant past in medieval times.










