Nichts ist bedeutender in jedem Zustande als die Dazwischenkunft eines Dritten – Goethe
Introduction
Imagery has been part of politics for millennia. Its prevalence and impact increases in the era of 24/7 global media. For Vladimir Putin’s regime in Russia, the image dimension is indispensable for internal control and international competition. This article argues that the political dynamics of a special international triangle are critical. These span historical time and memory, geo-strategic and cyber space, emotions and psychologies, and social contexts. The main target audience of Russian image politics is the Russian public. The regime conflates Russia with itself in theatrics combining iconophilia, iconomachy, “eventocracy” (Kalyan Reference Kalyan2020) and (re)constructions of national and individual personae. The chief adversary, and overt obsession, is the United States. An older and more complex preoccupation is that with Germany, a partial model, defeated foe, economic partner, and most important external audience. The Kremlin strives to aggravate and benefit from tensions between these allies: one a rival (the USA), and the other a past enemy and ambivalent friend (the FRG).
The article draws on official sources, practitioner interviews, opinion surveys, global media, and multidisciplinary scholarship. It proceeds with a discussion of images in politics and international affairs, setting out a theoretical terrain that encompasses affective-emotional and cognitive-instrumental motives. These are concurrent or interspersing, rather than mutually exclusive (Tomkins Reference Tomkins2008; Mercer Reference Mercer2010; Manghani Reference Manghani2013; Markwica Reference Markwica2018). Though one type of motive may take precedence at a given moment, each infuses political practice (Damasio Reference Damasio1994; Elster Reference Elster1999; Lebow Reference Lebow2005; Chiao Reference Chiao2015).
The next section considers features of Russian image politics: a fixation with greatness and retorts to diminution of that ideal; the manipulation of “history”; the dramaturgical fashioning of the USA as an enemy; the fusion of cultish leader and nation; and the use of religion to mythologise Russia’s purity and heroism. These strands feed into discursive and visual propaganda on the Ukraine crisis. Status concerns, resentment, cynicism, and anxiety inform regime behaviour as much as strategic or economic considerations. The third section examines German-Russian relations. Though strained at the official level, the two nations share economic interests, socio-cultural connections, and a mercurial past, which lives in the present. Russian agencies appeal to fringe and mainstream targets in German politics, society, and economy, endeavouring to exploit or even shape Germany’s images of itself.
Images and International Theory
Imagery is a basic element of mental processes and communication. Visual images are provided by monuments, statues, painting, photography, cartoons, effigies, maps, masks, television, and pixels. Thought images are evoked by memory, narrative, mythology, historiography, reportage, and discourse (Lippmann Reference Lippmann1922; Benjamin Reference Benjamin1994; Richter Reference Richter2007; Tschofen Reference Tschofen2016). Over time the two forms of image coalesce (Shepard Reference Shepard1978).
The Iconomachy (ca. 700–845) demonstrated how images could inspire protracted doctrinal and militarized conflict (Irmscher Reference Irmscher1980; Besançon Reference Besançon and Todd2000; Brubaker Reference Brubaker2010). Iconoclasts destroyed and banned other representations of the sacred in favour of the cross as Christianity’s universal symbol. Iconodules resisted and re-established iconography. The Iconomachy was a precursor of modern and postmodern competition over regional and global orders. In these later contexts the term is understood not as a war against images, as in its original meaning, but a war of or between images. Propaganda and psy-ops replaced direct military confrontation between the Cold War’s main rivals. Political imagery was examined in contemporaneous scholarship, from structural theory to psychological accounts and case studies. Williams (Reference Williams2018) summarized that “Images pervade international politics” (880). Forms and effects multiply as new devices enable mass access to technical means (Bleiker Reference Bleiker2018).
Much earlier, Plato discerned that images appealed “to passions rather than reason” (Carnes Reference Carnes2017, 3; Crawford Reference Crawford2000; Mercer Reference Mercer2006; Bleiker and Hutchinson Reference Roland and Hutchison2008; Koschut Reference Koschut2017; Koschut et al. Reference Koschut, Hall, Wolf, Solomon, Hutchison and Bleiker2017). Passion or affect induced by images interacts with cognition and calculation, most consequentially in politics (Herrmann and Fischerkeller Reference Hermann and Fisherkeller1995; Hall and Ross Reference Hall and Ross2015). Rose McDermott (Reference McDermott2004) elucidated that “a general mood of fear or anger, triggered by vivid image or rhetoric, can influence decision making. The leader’s mood may then affect which lessons from history are drawn on [ … ] history can thus be driven by affect as well as by rational thought” (696). Thomas Lindemann (Reference Lindemann2011) informed that “state decision makers seek to cultivate a certain image of themselves and of their community (homo symbolicus) for “strategic” (internal and international legitimacy) as well as “emotional” reasons” (68). With public diplomacy and nation branding (Melissen Reference Melissen2005; Cull Reference Cull2008; Gregory Reference Gregory2008), state agencies practice image refinement, dissemination and (re)creation. Ratings and rankings (Cooley and Snyder Reference Cooley and Snyder2015) resonate in the social psychology of international affairs (Pouliot Reference Pouliot2016). National elites respond to assessments of reputation and desirability. Images perceived as underrating or disparaging their nations (and themselves) incite affront and the production of counter-images that seek to project their nations favourably and rivals unfavourably.
Images then promote confidence and stability or discontent and resentment. They convey status, prestige, honour (Lebow Reference Lebow2008; Larson and Shevchenko Reference Larson and Shevchenko2010; Wood Reference Wood2013; Onea Reference Onea2014; Wolf Reference Wolf2014; Wolf Reference Wolf2019), hierarchy and “standards of civilization” (Gong Reference Gong1984; Hobson and Sharman Reference Hobson and Sharman2005; Lake Reference Lake2009; Schulz Reference Schulz2019), and recognition (Honneth Reference Honneth1992). They impact on the ontological (in)security of state elites and populations (Mitzen Reference Mitzen2006; Steele Reference Steele2008; Steele and Homolar Reference Steele and Homolar2019). Negative instances stimulate the more powerful emotional force and the formation of resentful subjects and resented objects (Wolf Reference Wolf, Clément and Sanger2018).
Russian Image Politics
Images of the “West” were identity shapers in various “ideological iterations” of the “Russian World” (Figes Reference Figes2002; Trenin Reference Trenin2004; Suslov Reference Suslov2018). Putin governments tried to refashion images of Russia and its leader (Feklyunina Reference Feklyunina2008; Alekseyeva Reference Alekseyeva2014; Suslov Reference Suslov2014; Goscilo Reference Goscilo2014; Zygar Reference Zygar2016; Von Seth Reference Von Seth2018). Seen from outside the makeover has been unsuccessful (Simons Reference Simons2011; Simons Reference Simons2013; Shchelin Reference Shchelin2016; Transparency International 2018; Simons Reference Simons2019).Footnote 1 A residual Soviet aura is sustained by actions that diminish trust and acceptance (A. Wood Reference Wood2013; Sharafutdinova Reference Sharafutdinova2020), and inform an external image of a despotic, resentful, and dangerous state (Rutland and Kazantsev Reference Rutland and Kazantsev2016). Some commentators transmit an alternative image of an unfairly treated party, forced into a defensive posture from which it lashed out, and whose behaviour is understandable (Mearsheimer Reference Mearsheimer2014; Krone-Schmalz Reference Krone-Schmalz2015; Roberts Reference Roberts2017). Surveys suggest Russia is perceived unfavourably in western countries and favourably in parts of Asia and Africa. Some countries are indifferent (PEW 2014, Reference Stokes2015, 2017; Letterman and PEW Reference Letterman2018; Gallup 2014–2021).
Greatness
Russian political and military figures divulge an infatuation with “greatness” that has persisted through centuries, ideologies, and state forms. Even the “new thinking” of the Gorbachev era envisaged a greatness based on “soft power” (Larson and Shevchenko Reference Deborah and Shevchenko2003). Adomeit (Reference Adomeit1995) offered a prescient account of early post-Soviet Russia and a return to traditional understandings. Symbolic demotion in an imagined international hierarchy distresses those who believe Russia to be equal if not superior to others that preoccupy it (Neumann and Pouliot Reference Neumann and Pouliot2011; Neumann Reference Neumann2016). Anger is one reaction: an emotional episode and an instrumentalized energy (Hall Reference Hall2011; Forsberg and Pursiainen Reference Forsberg and Pursiainen2017; Heller Reference Heller, Clément and Sanger2018). It was displayed in Putin’s speech at the 2007 Munich Security Conference, about which he had informed insiders the night before (Teltschik Reference Teltschik2019). A few years later the thought image of Russia as a “regional power,” elicited by Barack Obama’s description, was infuriating. Putin felt “disrespect.”Footnote 2
Most states craft idealized accounts of their pasts. For the contemporary Russian state, “history” is a domain from which details are harvested, retrospectively projected, airbrushed out, or otherwise politicized (Gjerde Reference Gjerde2015; Pearce Reference Pearce2020). Censorship was well advanced when it was announced that a “Commission to Counteract Attempts to Harm Russia’s Interests by Falsifying History” would “analyze information […] aimed at diminishing the international prestige of the Russian Federation and report such incidents to the president” (President of Russia 2010). Other laws against political criticism were introduced. Old symbols and motifs, “the Soviet anthem but with new words, the coat of arms from the pre-imperial era and the flag from the imperial period,” returned (Bacon Reference Bacon2012, 779). “New” Russia is disassociated from crimes and failings of predecessors (Chatterje-Doody Reference Chatterje-Doody2014; Petrov Reference Petrov2018) while asserting inheritance of the Soviet or Tsarist empire’s rights, privileges, and fame. The “Russian Federation” is selectively interchangeable with these defunct entities.
Sport is a well tried and generally acceptable means to achieve and broadcast national greatness.Footnote 3 Persson and Petersson (Reference Persson and Petersson2014) consider the 2014 Winter Olympics, an event “intimately bound up with the international image of Russia” (192). The authors distinguish states “with disputable democratic credentials” from others that also have prestige goals. They note that “cognitively oriented literature on images does not do full justice to the emotive components propelling political action” (Persson and Petersson Reference Persson and Petersson2014, 192–194). Anna Alekseyeva (Reference Alekseyeva2014, 159) emphasizes Olympics images as intended to promote “diffuse notions of affective loyalty to one’s political system and the desire for national greatness.” Orttung and Zhemukov (Reference Orttung and Zhemukhov2014, 177) impress “intangible goals of image-building” alongside material aims. Success in gaining hosting rights for the 2014 Olympics and the 2018 football World Cup, gestures of goodwill from others, coincided with anti-government protests, the possibility of a color revolution (Horvath Reference Horvath2013), competitors in the field of nationalist ideology, one calling itself “Russian Image” (Horvath Reference Horvath2014), and the Ukraine crisis. A new public relations campaign appealed to sentiment and status ambitions, asserted in self-referential homage (Malinkova Reference Malinkova2014; Forsberg, Heller, and Wolf Reference Tuomas, Wolf and Heller2014). The regime’s “machine politics” (Hale Reference Hale, Kolstø and Blakkisrud2016) incorporated a more nationalistic posture and intensified discourses of internal resolve and external enemies.
The Adversary
Nikolai Ostapenko (Reference Ostapenko2010, 62) argued that “many Russian official attempts to change and improve” a “grand, mysterious, and unfortunately dark” image, “have been politicized and rejected by influential individuals and governments worldwide” (62). The chief perpetrator, according to Andrei Tsygankov (Reference Tsygankov2009), is a Russophobic lobby in the USA. This group, and others it guided, affronted Russia’s sense of honour (Tsygankov Reference Tsygankov2012). Tsygankov (Reference Tsygankov2014) later contended “Russia has been responsive to the behavior of the West and prepared to pursue cooperation” (26). Whenever it moved “toward its significant other, Moscow has only continued so long as it felt a sufficiently progressive recognition.” Without such recognition, “the reform-minded leadership in the Kremlin [ … ] runs into opposition.” In works covering the Medvedev interval and first years of Putin’s third term, Tsygankov (Reference Tsygankov2017, Reference Prokopenko2019) maintained that US’ politics and media concocted and spread an image of Russia as a “dark double.”
If parts of the US policy elite and media are preoccupied with Russia, it is more than reciprocated. In an existential mega-drama, Russia is under siege, dependent on Putin to defend it and assert a rightful place in a world where America strives for hegemony. The Russian armed forces and defence industry are central to a branding strategy around the “symbolic value of safety,” and its counterpoint, fear (Danilova Reference Danilova2017). The show runs simultaneous to a contrary storyline propounding the terminal decline of the “liberal order” and its (until Donald Trump’s partial revisions) main proponent. Russia grows stronger and a shift to a “multipolar/polycentric world” proceeds inexorably, the narrative suggests. These ideas inform a unique “geo-imagery” (Omelicheva Reference Omelicheva2016). A passage from Tsygankov (Reference Tsygankov2019, xii) is instructive. It describes a Q&A where that author asked Putin “whether the growing polarization between the Russian image of the West as spiritually corrupt and the Western image of Russia as the oppressive neo-Soviet autocracy reflect the inevitable struggle between culturally distinct entities.” Putin responded that “Russia’s worldview”
is based on good and evil, higher forces, and God’s will [ … ] the Western worldview – and I don’t mean it in a derogatory way – is based upon individual interest, pragmatism, and pragmatic accommodation. [ … ] It is hard for us to conduct a dialogue with those who are guided by ideas of messianism and exceptionalism because this means a radical departure from our common traditional values [ … ].
The exchange concluded with Putin declaring that US society and “those who make political decisions” should treat Russia “with respect.” Personal respect conflates with that for the nation and state (Wolf Reference Wolf2011). Breslauer (Reference Breslauer2017) notes that “a demand to be treated with ‘dignity’ is driven by a sense of ‘indignation’” (148). At the Valdai Club (2018), Putin declared that “Stirring up emotions is not our approach” before expounding on Russia’s destiny, posited against “post-heroic” nations (Münkler Reference Münkler2007). A few years after a friendly bear mascot welcomed Olympic visitors, Putin was prompted on the metaphor of a (different) bear protecting his/our taiga:
Fyodor Lukyanov: You once coined a wonderful phrase … The bear will not ask anyone for permission. He is the master of the taiga … he will not give up his taiga to anyone, either. And everyone should be clear about that … .” Is anyone encroaching on our taiga today … ?
Vladimir Putin: Look, we live in a world where security relies on nuclear capability … we are improving our attack systems as an answer to the United States building its missile defence system … we have overtaken all our, so to speak, partners and competitors in this sphere … No one has a high-precision hypersonic weapon. Some plan to begin testing it in one or two years, while we have this high-tech modern weapon in service. So, we feel confident in this sense. (Valdai Club 2018)
The “bear” transforms into an offensive/defensive nuclear weapons system, fused with nation and leader in an ontological and physical security complex:
We are not afraid of anything. Given our territory, our defence system, and our people that are ready to fight for independence and sovereignty — the willingness of our men and women to give up their lives for their country is not common among all nations. Nobody can change these things, and this makes us certain that we can feel secure. (Valdai Club 2018)
Credible foreign media coverage does not blame or threaten the Russian population. It critiques the regime, which is not a “mirror image” of the USA (cf. Greene and Robertson Reference Greene and Robertson2019). On Russian state television, anti-American sentiment fueled in Rossiya 1’s Vesti Nedeli reaches a large audience (Figure 1). The USA and NATO (Figure 2) were castigated even as censure of Trump intermittently halted when he adopted a more accommodating stance. The EU is not immune. Samoilenko and Laruelle (Reference Samoilenko, Laruelle and Pashentsev2020) “typologize attacks on the EU’s image into three main categories: [ … ] decadent values [ … ] puppet of the US [ … ] supporting the revival of fascism” (149).
When it began as Russia Today, RT’s goal was to “change the image of Russia in the world.” It is now a “weapon in the war of images” (Bidder Reference Bidder2013), specializing in fabrication, distortion, and performativity (Stewart Reference Stewart2017, 18–23). Pomerantzev and Weiss (Reference Pomerantsev and Weiss2014) argued that “feeling itself relatively weak, the Kremlin has systematically learnt to use the principles of liberal democracies against them” (4). The ruling clique rebels against and heeds a “standard of civilization” (Kaczmarska Reference Kaczmarska2016). It imitates the West while asserting distinctiveness (Wood and Cox Reference Wood and Cox2021). RT and Sputnik rely on western journalists and producers to help fashion, subtly or crudely, a Kremlin view (Rutland and Kazantsev Reference Rutland and Kazantsev2016). Former German “Commissioner for Russia,” Gernot Erler, described the output as “fakes from A to Z” and “propaganda without end” (Erler Reference Erler2015). Foot soldiers fight on print, television, and Internet battlefields. Ridicule, sarcasm, and mimicry are used to provoke the West, techniques that the regime cannot abide being applied to itself. Satires like The Death of Stalin film and other “denigrations” are banned. Spectacle, censorship, and a personality cult strive to camouflage decision-making processes and yet betray the regime’s anxiety.
The rise of populism in some western polities was a windfall for the Kremlin, enabling specifically targeted and trans-ideological appeals to a mélange of discontents and into the political centre (Braghiroli and Makarychev Reference Braghiroli and Makarychev2016, 2018). These appeals market cordial relations with a peaceful though fearless and alert Russia (Sarembo Reference Sarembo2019), which is contrasted with depictions of the USA as a warmongering menace. The Internet Research Agency (IRA) also aims at god-fearing America, staging “tests of allegiance” (Shane Reference Shane2018). Dawson and Innes (Reference Dawson and Innes2019) detail the IRA’s agenda and methods: “one would function as ‘the villain’ criticising the authorities; then the others would enter a debate with him/her. One would post an image/meme in support of their argument, the other posting a link to a supportive source. [ … ] Operators wrote Twitter bots to amplify visibility” (4).
Hyperspace helps to relativize a disparity of resources between Russia and the West. Their production and distribution of disinformation demonstrates the skill and “malign influence” of Russian “political technologists” (US official representation, Germany 2019). Although “sovereign morality” (Sharafutdinova Reference Sharafutdinova2014) emerged to accompany “sovereign democracy,” there is scope for diversions beyond these quasi-official concepts if they serve the state’s purposes. Fedor and Fredheim (Reference Fedor and Fredheim2017) show that it was prepared to draw on “young creatives” who supply “outlandish” Internet imagery that could complement traditional material and messages. Domination of the agenda is more important than specific content. But the Internet is a two-edged sword and not entirely controllable. The regime tried to disconnect the “Russian Internet” from the global to stop the wrong sort of imagery entering or leaving Russia (Szostek Reference Szostek2018; Gaufman Reference Gaufman2019; Prokopenko Reference Prokopenko2019). For example, Google was embroiled in a dispute with Russian officialdom over maps showing Crimea as disputed or foreign territory. Google was also fined for not obeying the Russian censor (Luxmoore Reference Luxmoore2019a).
Putin: Cult, Hero, Image
Putin’s crafted persona synthesizes imperial-orthodox and Soviet elements with narcissism, new media, and literary representations. He is the model for a “Chosen One” character in a novel released shortly after he became president. Another portrays him engaged in battle against Chechen militants, whom he disposes of and is wounded in the process (Rogatchevski Reference Rogatchevski2008). The “West” is charged with excessive attention on Putin and its reportage reflects a strange liaison of autocrat and media icon. But Russian sources industriously broadcast images of Putin superimposed over nation and land, tailored for the occasion and target group: action man, paragon of “Russian glamour” (Menzel Reference Menzel2013), caring father figure, respecter of religion, international statesman, military expert. Putin’s qualities merge with those of a heroic nation. His praise for Russia is praise for himself. The President’s hospital visits and appearances at televised gatherings of young people convey his popularity and provide an irenic contrast to the apocalyptic scenarios said to threaten Russia (Figure 3).
Public support is not explainable by sustained economic performance, competent governance, or Russia’s reputation and friendships. It could be apprehended via the concept of “charisma” and Putin as projecting something “quintessentially Russian” (Ioffe Reference Ioffe2014; Goscilo Reference Goscilo2014; Gloger Reference Gloger2017b; Sharafutdinova Reference Sharafutdinova2020). Other observers offer different views. Richard Sakwa (Reference Sakwa2020) opined that Putin has “contempt for demagogic populism other than his own formulation” (20). A German official noted, “when you are in charge for 20 years you get used to giving the orders, and you take everything personally” (Office of the German Federal President 2019).
There is an uncanny resemblance to the Kremlin’s representation of Putin and Russia’s fate in Sangar et al.’s (Reference Sangar, Clément, Lindemann, Clément and Sanger2018) analysis of a “coward and hero-protector” dichotomy in “modern cultural products” (183–184). In this type of scenario, bold and righteous action overcomes the “intellect” and “rhetorical skill” of nefarious cowards whose “emotional function [ … ] is to exploit the audiences’ self-esteem.” These “morally shameful” characters are contrasted with a modest, brave, selfless hero, who protects innocent victims and a wider community. Emphasis on the hero’s “legitimate cause” denies “moral integrity and redemption capacity” for the aggressor-coward. Moral anger incited in the audience facilitates “need for the hero’s intervention, even if this involves the use of force.” The hero-protector is associated with “virile qualities” (Sangar et al. Reference Sangar, Clément, Lindemann, Clément and Sanger2018, 183–184). As it proceeds, “a dramatized story of conflict features escalating sequences of illegitimate wrong-doings committed by a fundamentally unchanging ‘aggressor’ against the ‘victim’” (Sangar et al. Reference Sangar, Clément, Lindemann, Clément and Sanger2018, 185). These tales style the present as
a potentially cathartic turning point: the reactions to past aggressions were too “weak” and thus enabled the aggressor to renew the aggression – yet it is still possible to do the right thing and confront the aggressor head-on.
(Sangar et al. Reference Sangar, Clément, Lindemann, Clément and Sanger2018, 185)Religion
A Russian past of Christianity and atheist totalitarianism presents difficulties for a regime seeking to justify and extract political capital from both (Bogumił and Łukaszewicz Reference Bogumił and Łukaszewicz2018; Smith Reference Smith2019). The incongruities did not go unnoticed. Though there is no record of Putin as a devout person before 2000 (Cf. Gloger Reference Gloger2017b: 87–92), he is now an Iconodule, wearing a crucifix, visiting hallowed sites, and meeting Patriarch Kirill, who “equips” him with an “army of metaphors” (Suslov Reference Suslov2014, 588; Figure 4), blending church, military, and “sacralisation of territory” (Pavkovic Reference Aleksandar2017). The presidential website is full of references to religion. Proclamations about sovereignty and vigilance against threats are flanked by appeals to “traditional values” (Horvath Reference Horvath2016) fusing religion and patriotism (Halbach Reference Halbach2019). A holy Russia/distinctive civilization discourse (Tsygankov Reference Tsygankov2016) repeats staple tropes. Victory in the war increases in spiritual and political meaning the more it recedes chronologically.
The imposing physical and symbolic qualities of architecture are also drawn on. Having erected a giant statue of his namesake in Moscow in 2016 (“A tale of two Vladimirs,” Economist, November 5, 2016), Putin contributed his “own money” for an icon to adorn a Cathedral of the Armed Forces built where the Red Army had repelled the Wehrmacht in December 1941. The phantasmagorical project combines titanic visual imagery with endorsed historiography and partisan spirituality. Church, military, and leader merge as a holy troika. The cathedral, located in Patriot Park, was due to open on May 9, 2020, the 75th anniversary of victory in the Great Patriotic War, replete with steps made from melted German military material (Kremlin 2018; Figure 5 and Figure 6). The park will include a “Multimedia Museum and Exhibition Complex dedicated to the Russian Spiritual Army” and “house unique expositions dedicated to various episodes of heroic history of Russian army” [sic]:Footnote 4
Guests will enter three-dimensional historical reenactment displayed on the walls in the halls. Incredible VR technologies will place visitors on the ice of the Lake Peipus in the middle of the Battle on the ice, inside an aircraft cockpit, at the heart of the naval Battle of Kerch Strait. Guest will walk along the Mercy hero gallery, and watch a movie in 360-degree movie theater [sic]. (CAF/HRAM 2019)
After Defence Minister, Sergei Shoigu, initiated the venture (Russian Ministry of Defence 2020), some clergy were dubious about a secular takeover of the divine. The cathedral’s scheduled consecration was thwarted by the pandemic and a reaction against the inclusion of mosaics representing Stalin, Putin, and Shoigu (Bennetts Reference Bennetts2020). These were removed and the consecration occurred on June 14. Putin visited on June 22, the “Day of Memory and Sorrow,” accompanied by Shoigu and Kirill. The crypt is named after Saint Vladimir (Kremlin 2020).
Crimea and Other Parts of Ukraine are Ours
Discourses of Russia’s greatness, a threatening adversary, vigilance, and the godsend of a saintly warrior, are incorporated into the Ukraine crisis. In speeches justifying the seizure of Crimea, Putin (Reference Putin2014) and Lavrov (Reference Lavrov2014) expressed plaintive anger at how history had unfolded and the asymmetry in global influence between Russia and the USA. They extolled a balance of power as inviolable. Suslov (Reference Suslov2014) interpreted the annexation as “linked to the reshuffling of the mental landscape” (588). He vividly elucidates the interplay of historical thought images with topical visuals in film, cartoons, and social media. Putin (Reference Putin2020; Figure 7) explained to a public audience that he had congratulated “builders of the Crimean Bridge [ … ] a landmark that ‘visualises’ the reunification of Crimea and Sevastopol with the rest of Russia. In addition to ‘visualising’, it has created good conditions for the steady and sound development” (1–2). He outlined material benefits that would complement the spiritual connection conveyed by the bridge’s physical presence. The “sacred character of Crimea” was reprised in a history lesson:Footnote 5
Chersonese is the birthplace of both our faith and the Russian [ … ] Ukrainian and Belarusian peoples [ … ] this place is sacred [ … ]. After Vladimir was christened here, he christened his troops, and the Conversion of Rus’ got underway. As our outstanding historians write, it was based on [ … ] the power of the prince, a single market, and a common language joined by the same faith. This united isolated Slavic group resided closely together on that territory [ … ] this is how the Russian people came into being. (Putin Reference Putin2020, 6)
Beyond Crimea, the creation Novorossiya, a “Delightful and Unique State,” aspired to subsume Ukraine’s Donetsk and Luhansk regions in a union of “Russian republics” (Hosaka Reference Hosaka2019).
The Frenemy
Russian politicians often use the term “Western partners” to avoid direct reference to the USA and sometimes its “lackey” EUrope. Russia’s diplomatic and propaganda effort is concentrated on Germany, its most important interlocutor. Bilateral relations are a unique complex of empathy, friction, anxiety, recognition-seeking, business interests, and intense historical reference points. Atrocities and oppression that former regimes inflicted on the other population and their own endure in intergenerational memory. Their savage conflicts did not prevent Russians and Germans resuming cooperation. Post-Cold War optimism was greatest in Germany. It was envisaged that Russia would develop as a liberal democracy, with Western help. Germans upheld this ideal as chaos and decline became signatures of the Yeltsin era.
The inauguration at the start of the millennium of a then non-descript Putin engendered new hope for transformation. Within months of becoming President, Putin visited Germany, making a private visit to the Spandau citadel where he was knighted in a mock ceremony (Figure 8). His 2001 speech to the Bundestag, delivered mostly in German, produced a special imagery (Figure 9) and encouraged anticipation that he would be a “German in the Kremlin” (Rahr Reference Rahr2000). It reinvigorated visions of programs, in EU frameworks, driving Russian modernization. German governments were deeply invested in this conception. It is now consigned to storage, superseded by effort to minimize further deterioration. Early perceptions of Putin were, for former German President Joachim Gauck, a “grotesque rejection of reality” (Gloger Reference Gloger2017a, 410). Conversely, Putin’s experience with Germany led him to believe “he could read us. But he understood us wrongly – as we have wrongly understood him,” said a German diplomat (Gloger Reference Gloger2017a, 419–420). According to another, Russia is not ready to become a normal European state (German Foreign Ministry, official of the Russia section 2019). Official relations are ritualized. German leaders emphasize negotiation and go through the motions of congratulating Putin on his electoral victories as overlapping images send contrasting signals: friend/enemy, cooperation/distrust, approval/censure, hope/trepidation.
Russian diplomacy and media peddle several narratives about Germany. A derisive refrain caricatures it as a vassal of the USA, taking instructions from Washington, and cajoles to assert independence and emancipation. This is sometimes combined with threats to sabotage the FRG’s intermittent attempts to become a permanent member of the UNSC (Kiku Reference Kiku2021). Another discourse invokes the German-Soviet war and transmits that the Kremlin is as reliant on a past Germany as it is on that of the present. Repetition of wartime references and associations with the FRG’s predecessor impart that Russia has expectations. Such statements aim to evoke certain images in the German mind in a time between “old and new world order” (Pomerantsev Reference Pomerantsev2015; Meister Reference Meister2018). The meta-signal is to condone Kremlin policy. Celebrating the Crimean annexation, Putin declared that “citizens of Germany will also support the aspiration of the Russians, of historical Russia, to restore unity” (Auer Reference Auer2015, 959). The message is that the Soviet Union/Russia allowed German reunification to happen. Germany should have paid a greater price, a point repeated by Russian diplomats (Russian Embassy 2015).
Demanding rhetoric contrasts with professions of love for German culture, often classical elements. Russian ambassador, Sergey Nechayev, accented personal and national ties:
I feel myself connected to Germany not least through many years of diplomatic service here. I am well acquainted with German culture, before all literature and music. I love Goethe, Schiller and Heine, also Eric Maria Remarque or Heinrich Böll. There is a strong interdependence between German literature and Russian, very old cultural links. I believe that Russians and Germans are closely connected intellectually. (Huth Reference Huth2019)
The projected meaning is of resemblance and camaraderie between two great culture nations, noble and authentic. These qualities contrast with a cultureless, consumerist America: the profound versus the superficial. But Russia’s “love” for Germany is unrequited by many among the German public and political class (Köcher Reference Köcher2014; Shevtsova Reference Shevtsova2015). Insufficient reciprocity incites displeasure. Cultural connections inevitably defer to politics. Germany’s failure to take Russia’s side on Ukraine and other disputes caused disappointment. The German government “threw the relationship on the heap” (Russian Embassy 2015). On the surface, official Germany responded in a measured manner, displaying “a political self-understanding that communicates neither loudly nor demonstratively” (Münkler Reference Münkler2009, 10). There is no exaggerated imagery. Chancellor Angela Merkel embodies a certain view of Germany: calm and sachlich. One survey found that “The German nation is led by a personality whom many see as the mirror image of its people” (GiZ 2015, 35). Most understand the FRG as a multilateral civilian power, stable and sensible. It “does not seek to promote the use of violence” and “can afford to tell less dichotomous, more ‘complicated’ stories that may involve perspectives for negotiation or de-escalation, and perhaps even self-criticism” (Sangar et al. Reference Sangar, Clément, Lindemann, Clément and Sanger2018, 186).
Maintaining and credibly projecting this international political self-image is becoming harder. The autobiographical narrative (Eberle and Handl Reference Eberle and Handl2020; Berenskötter and Stritzel Reference Berenskötter and Stritzel2021) vital to Germany’s ontological and conventional security is a discursive portrait. Only so many adjustments can be made (cf. Forsberg Reference Forsberg2016). Although the present government has not switched to prioritizing Russia over an afflicted “transatlantic community,” its policy stance is interposed with ambiguity and ambivalence (Wood and Henke Reference Wood and Henke2018). This is a reminder to avoid a unitary state trap. The FRG’s pluralism contrasts with a polarized USA and Russia’s “virtual” polity. But the current configuration of a multiparty system is straining a traditional consensus style in foreign policy. There are attitudinal and policy differences within the government, ministries, and the public. These reasons, and the constraints of a Grand Coalition, partly explain contradictory or vacillating behaviour. Clashing images of Russia correspond to conceptions of Russlandkritiker (critics) and Russlandversteher (empathizers) (von Beyme Reference Von Beyme2016; Wood 2020). A shifting mainstream contains a significant minority in the second category, mainly in the Social Democratic Party (SPD), and somewhat less in the Christian Democratic (CDU-CSU) and Free Democratic (FDP) parties. With a few aging exceptions, Greens are critical of Putin. A theatre production on Königsberg/Kaliningrad supported by the Green party foundation was attacked in Russian media as “unpatriotic,” “extremist,” and promoting a “re-Germanisation” of the exclave (Voswinkel Reference Voswinkel2019).
There are various sources of direct or indirect support for the Russian state in Germany: a simple desire for peace; policy differences with the USA; anti-Americanism beyond policy; business interests; the refugee/immigration crisis (Stewart Reference Stewart2017; Pomerantsev Reference Pomerantsev2017; Braghiroli and Makarychev Reference Braghiroli and Makarychev2018); and feelings of guilt, repentance, or affection for ordinary Russians (Scherbakova and Schlögel Reference Scherbakova and Schlögel2015). These offer opportunities for the manipulation of images and emotions. Soon after the Crimea annexation, a group of Germans, largely drawn from the political and cultural establishment, published an appeal against war with Russia. Above the text was a photo of American and Polish soldiers engaged in a NATO exercise (Die Zeit 2014). The appeal was an example of German anxiety prompted by perceptions of Russian ruling elite anxiety and the consequences of offending it (cf. Eberle and Handl Reference Eberle and Handl2020; Siddi Reference Siddi2018). Outside establishment circles there is more vociferous “pro-Russia” expression. A plethora of recent books tells how western media constructed a negative and false image of Russia (Bröckers and Schreyer Reference Bröckers and Schreyer2014; Krone-Schmalz Reference Krone-Schmalz2015, Reference Krone-Schmalz2017; Schmidt Reference Schmidt2016; Bollinger Reference Bollinger2016; Bittner Reference Bittner2017; Bahr Reference Bahr2018). Anti-Spiegel caustically derides the news magazine, Der Spiegel. RT Deutsch (Hanfeld Reference Hanfeld2015), Junge Welt, and Compact propagandize for Moscow. These and other groups and individuals fulminate against, as they see it, German subordination to the USA. This is also a status issue with emotional motivation. Germany’s post-war transformation was accompanied by some residual ressentiment towards American liberators (Barclay and Glaser-Schmidt Reference Barclay and Glaser-Schmidt1997; Junker et al. Reference Junker, Gassert, Mausbach and Morris2004; Berman Reference Berman2004; Parkinson Reference Parkinson2015; Knappertbusch Reference Knappertbusch2016). Appeals to “profound German anti-Americanism” (Gloger Reference Gloger2017a, 410) and shared feelings of asymmetry vis-à-vis the USA have resonance (Voigt Reference Voigt2019). Russia is seen as defiant and honourable for resisting America. When the Kremlin taps into this reservoir it speaks to a faithful. It was easy to present Trump, ergo the USA, as a danger, despite the Trump agenda having more similarities with Putin’s or the Alternative für Deutschland’s (AfD) than with Obama’s or Joe Biden’s. It is, however, the image that counts (Cf. Simons Reference Simons2019).
The confluence of contemporary politics with history features a vast stock of imagery generated by the Second World War. Nazi Germany fought many states and nations. The Soviet Great Patriotic War was fought almost exclusively against that one antagonist. Institutionalized and personal memory of the period engendered deep introspection in the FRG. A poignant example was the Bundestag debate on the Wehrmacht Exhibition in 1997, filled with emotional speeches (Deutscher Bundestag 1997; Die Zeit 1997). That said much about the FRG and its contrite political center. The ongoing production of physical and digital imagesFootnote 6 inevitably influences German attitudes towards today’s Russia, regardless of its political system. By contrast, in that Russia, victory in war and the sacrifice of ordinary Russians are instrumentalized by a “cynical tactician of power” (Gloger Reference Gloger2017a, 413–4; Forsberg and Pursiainen Reference Forsberg and Pursiainen2017). The war justified state repression then and serves as a legitimation device in the present (E. Wood Reference Wood2011; Nelson Reference Nelson2015; Hebel Reference Hebel2018). Reference in this context to Stalinism, which endured much longer, prompts a charge of relativising the ignominy of Nazism.Footnote 7 Their nearly two-year alliance is dissimulated or unmentionable as are Soviet casualties up to June 1941 (Edele Reference Edele2017; Harrison Reference Harrison2019). Consistent with government discourses, Russian films, including co-productions with German companies, convey only one dictatorship in the confrontation.
Seen in historical context, German domestic politics entails some staggering incongruity. Today’s nominal far-left and far-right are opponents though their positive views of Putin’s Russia and negative views of the USA align, in parliamentary and extra-parliamentary forms (Laruelle and Rivera Reference Laruelle and Rivera2019). In the media world, Junge Welt and Compact are representative of these extremes. The Russian embassy and Die Linke (The Left) party, some of which wishfully identifies Putin’s Russia as the recrudescence of a communist state, organized a “call to peace” Stalingrad exhibition in the Bundestag while war raged in Ukraine (Figure 10). The German far-right honours the Nazi military. It had vehemently opposed the Wehrmacht exhibition, which focused on the war of annihilation against the Soviet Union. They now praise Putin and his Russia as a bulwark against the USA. The AfD depict Germany as a threatened nation. Russia is a proxy through which to express their version of national pride. AfD politician Markus Frohnmaier’s Facebook post of a wolf and a bear symbolized his hoped-for German-Russian partnership, with a caption, in English, “Never again against each other.”
The centrist German government’s inconsistency is exhibited by sanctions on Russia fortifying an image of the FRG as a defender of a liberal democratic order while simultaneous support for the Nord Stream 2 gas pipeline project impairs that image (Meister Reference Meister2019; Wood and Henke Reference Wood and Henke2021). US sanctions on companies associated with the project incited outrage among some sections of the polity. Germany’s “sovereignty,” usually represented as embedded or “pooled” in the EU, had been infringed. The controversy illustrates a “dividual actor” (Eberle Reference Eberle2021) in an awkward balancing act. Despite protestations about Russian cyber-attacks, violations of international law and other provocations, poisonings of former spy Sergei Skripal and political challenger Alexei Navalny, and the latter’s imprisonment after returning to Russia following medical treatment in Germany, the German political establishment shows a remarkable degree of toleration. When asked about the Nord Stream 2 project and German relations with Russia and the USA, the German President Frank-Walter Steinmeier claimed that dialogue with the new American government had not yet begun and that energy was almost the last remaining “bridge” between Russia and Europe. He continued:
For us Germans, there also is a very different dimension: We look back at a very eventful history with Russia … The 22nd of June is the 80th anniversary of the German invasion of the Soviet Union. More than 20 million people of the former Soviet Union were victims in the war. That does not justify any wrongdoing in Russian policy today, but we cannot lose sight of the bigger picture … . (Steinmeier Reference Steinmeier2021, 5)
Conclusion
This article has examined the Putin regime’s use of and response to political imagery. It identifies a critical international triangle in which affective and emotive impulses interact with instrumental purposes. Each of three bilateral relationships in the triangle comprises its own type of estrangement and each dyad is aware of the respective third party and its impact. That factor pervades a 21st century image and information war between Russia and the “West” that is fought “with all means.” This was the “new reality,” said a Russian diplomat; state and private media in western countries, including Germany, were also selective in their reporting (Russian Embassy 2015). The Kremlin has intermittently held the initiative in this contest without a sustained strategy. It improvises political theatre and its version of public diplomacy, combining pre-modern, modern, and postmodern elements. The Russian national persona projected at home and abroad is pious, defiant, and loyal to the leader. The struggle of everyday life for the majority is rewarded with a trinity of compensatory images: military, from past glory to new hypersonic weapons systems; the supernatural powers of religion dwelling in state-funded architecture and icons; and the celebrity figure of Putin presiding, in public fora, television, and hyperspace, over a common destiny. Actions in Ukraine aimed to demonstrate Russia’s regional potency, and in Syria, its global impact. A “travelling exhibition” of trophies reprised history in the present, passing through cities and towns with iconic wartime status, including Sevastopol, Kursk, Moscow, and Murmansk (Luxmoore Reference Luxmoore2019b).
Concurrently, the USA is fabricated as a threat to Russia and all peace-loving states and peoples. The Great Patriotic War resonates in a scenario of Russia confronting a coercive USA and NATO, combined as a proxy image for Nazi Germany (cf. Forsberg and Herd Reference Forsberg and Herd2015, 55). Russian agencies and supporters appeal to or provoke German political elites, business, and the public/electorate, evoking images of the FRG’s Nazi predecessor, subordination to the USA, and European political crises. Mutual benefit through partnership with Russia is portrayed as a route to prosperity, security, and atonement. An uneasy German political center, tensions with US administrations, structural anti-Americanism, and economic-financial relations provide opportunities for the Putin regime.
While domestic media controlFootnote 8 and the Internet enable some consoling expression of the regime’s resentments, a coveted self-image of equal standing vis-à-vis the USA or Germany remains, according to one German foreign policy expert, illusory (Voigt Reference Voigt2019). The Russian people cannot live on an image of greatness alone (Levada 2019). More than the USA or NATO, it is they who cannot be trusted (Hans Reference Hans2014) and are the reason for a national guard subordinate to Putin himself (Klein Reference Klein2016). Filmed demises of Saddam and Gaddafi (Meister Reference Meister2018, 3), Navalny’s popularity and positive international image, anti-corruption protests, and the 2020 uprising in Belarus, intensify apprehension about coups or assassination attempts. The potential of “counter-regime imagery” (Placek Reference Placek2019; Ryabovolova and Hemment Reference Ryabovolova and Hemment2020) was displayed when dissident group Agit Rossija mourned Putin’s “virtual death” and installed bereavement posters outside a real cathedral (Holm Reference Holm2019; Figure 11). This ironic reverse iconography was an intimation of the president for life’s mortality.
Acknowledgments
The author thanks the Alexander von Humboldt Foundation, Professor Dr. Reinhard Wolf, and the Goethe Universität Frankfurt for valuable assistance.
Financial Support
Alexander von Humboldt Foundation.
Disclosures
None.