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The “Hidden Hand” of External Enemies
THE USE OF CONSPIRACY THEORIES BY PUTIN’S REGIME
PONARS Eurasia Policy Memo No. 192
June 2012
Serghei Golunov
Volgograd State University
Deploying and seeking to capitalize on conspiracy theories is fairly common among
political actors worldwide. Explaining some events as the result of an internal or
external opponent’s sinister plans can empower theorists and disempower adversaries.
With their actions, conspiracy theorists can mobilize supporters, reduce their own
responsibility for failures, create scapegoats , sharpen popular negative sentiments, and
provide easy explanations for social problems (particularly at times of crisis).
Furthermore, such theories can serve as a means of entertainment, thereby raising their
popularity and extending their reach.
Various conspiracy theories play an important role in contemporary Russian
politics. The substance of such theories focuses on the threatening plans of “foreign
enemies,” among which the United States and its allies take pride of place. In the Yeltsin
era, the authorities rarely resorted to conspiracy theories. However, President Vladimir
Putin’s regime has increasingly employed them in order to sideline the opposition.
This memo examines the use of conspiracy theories by supporters of Putin’s
regime by exploring the following issues. First, it examines the nature of conspiracy
theories in Russia before Putin came to power. It then looks at two major outbreaks of
government-inspired anti-opposition conspiracy theorizing: after the color revolutions
of the mid-2000s and during the Russian election campaigns of 2011-12. Finally, it
analyzes the means by which opposition members have responded to conspiracies
directed against them.
The Legacy of the 1990s
In the Soviet period, conspiracy theories were a substantial part of official ideology—
that the USSR was surrounded by malicious enemies. During the Cold War, the main
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