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Commentary
Moscow’s new chief ideologist:
Ivan Demidov
By Andreas
Umland
Online Journal Guest Writer
Mar 25, 2008
Reposted from:
http://globalfire.tv/nj/

Ivan
Demidov (l) und Alexander Dugin (r),
ideological campaigners for a White Europe under the umbrella of
the Kremlin-Power.
Russia, the New "New World Order", no place for the Hebrew
Destroyers.
Recent
attention by Russian and Western commentators was focused on the
presidential elections of March 2, 2008, and the personality of
Dmitry Medvedev. Therefore, the appointment of 44-year old Ivan
Demidov as head of the Ideological Directorate of the Political
Department of United Russia’s Central Executive Committee in late
February 2008 went largely unnoticed.
Demidov is a
colorful Russian politician who became a cult figure among the young
in the 1990s when he was a popular moderator and producer of
youth-related programs for various TV stations. His new post as
official chief ideologist of Russia’s ruling party had to be freed
by another prolific politician, Leonid Goryainov, for Demidov. As
Russia has recently returned to a de facto single-party system,
Demidov occupies a unique position in Putin’s "vertical of power."
His office has the explicit purpose of formulating and spreading
the ideology of the party that controls most of Russia’s
federal, regional and local parliaments, and which (together with
some minor parties) officially nominated Medvedev as candidate for
president.
Demidov
had already before his recent advance been working as an advisor for
United Russia. In addition, he was editor of the party’s
nationalist "Russian Project" website, and head of the Coordination
Council of United Russia’s rabidly anti-Western youth wing called
"The Young Guard." He also worked as director of the small
religious TV channel "Spas" (Savior) which transmits a variety of
programs infused with strong anti-Americanism.
Demidov had
become famous, however, before these political appointments. In the
1990s, he was known as a non-conformist journalist coming out of a
group of young anti-Soviet TV men who, with their widely watched
talk shows, had their share in the delegitimization of the late
USSR’s social-political system. Demidov was then seen as somebody
linked to Russia’s liberal or, at least, anti-totalitarian movement.
Yet, in recent years, he developed along the lines of a
number of other Russian prominent figures of his age, including
Sergei Markov or Mikhail Leont’ev -- two of the Kremlin’s preferred
political commentators whom one can see on prime time TV shows
several times per week. Like Markov or Leonte’v, Demidov went
from being a symbol of Russia’s new post-communist generation to
becoming a part of Moscow’s neo-traditionalist establishment.
He is now an advocate of Russia as a unique world civilization as
well as self-sufficient great power, and participates in the
Kremlin’s increasingly successful spread of such attitudes among
teenagers and students.
His recent
promotion follows general trends in the Kremlin cadre's policies
expressing itself in the appointment, earlier this year, of the
prolific Russian nationalist Dmitry Rogozin as Russia’s new envoy to
NATO Headquarters in Brussels.
This might have
been the reason why Demidov’s rise has, so far, caused little
attention in Russia and the West. It needs to be added, however,
that Demidov has professed to be under the influence of a
particularly extreme brand of Russian imperialism, known under the
label of "neo-Eurasianism." This ideology has been principally
developed, in hundreds of articles and books, by the neo-fascist
Russian theoretician Alexander Dugin (b. 1962), and
constitutes perhaps the most radical anti-democratic ideology that
has gained acceptance within Russia’s political establishment
today.
In a November
2007 interview for Dugin’s website, Evrazia.org, Demidov stated that
"doubtlessly, a crucial factor, a certain breaking point, in my
life, was the appearance of Alexander Dugin."
The two men
have been cooperating for a while now within Demidov’s "Spas" TV
channel, where Dugin has his own show called "Vekhi" (Signposts).
To be sure, Demidov has repeatedly stated that his various patriotic
propaganda projects are designed to deprive Russophile
ultra-nationalists of their control of the nationalist agenda and
thus aim to fight the increase of xenophobia and hate crimes in
Russia. He announced that "the words ‘Russian’ and ‘fascism’ are
antonyms," and that he and his associates will "fight against the
infusion of the term ‘Russian fascism’ into mass consciousness."
However, in
2007, Demidov, with explicit reference to Dugin, also
acknowledged being a "convinced Eurasian." This is oddly the
same phrase that Dugin had used 15 years earlier to describe the
political beliefs of Reinhard Heydrich (1904-1942), the infamous
chief of the SS Security Service and one of the planners of the
Holocaust.
Dugin sees
his Eurasian movement as the follower of a secret "Eurasian Order"
that existed for centuries, and included, among others, various
German ultra-nationalists. While, at times, strongly distancing
himself from Hitler’s crimes, Dugin has, throughout the 1990s,
repeatedly expressed his admiration for certain aspects of the Nazi
movement. For instance, he called the theory sector of the
Waffen-SS an "intellectual oasis" within the Third Reich, and
admitted that National Socialism was "the fullest and most total
realization" of the Third Way that Dugin advocates to this day.
In one of
his numerous pro-fascist articles of the 1990s, Dugin gets excited
about the prospect that, after the failures of Germany and Italy,
there will, in Russia today, finally emerge a truly "fascist
fascism."
In the new
century, to be sure, Dugin’s rhetoric has become more cautious.
Now a frequent political commentator on various TV shows, he often
poses as an "anti-fascist" and describes himself as a "radical
centrist." Dugin tries to draw a line between the inter-war
right-wing intellectuals whom he admires and those who supported
Hitler. Yet, as late as 2006, Dugin admitted that among his
models are the ultra-nationalist German brothers Otto and Gregor
Strasser who got into personal conflicts with Hitler in the
early 1930s, yet had also played a crucial role in making the NSDAP
a mass party in the 1920s. In March 2008, his website,
Evrazia.org, confirmed that Dugin still has sympathies for the
Strasser brothers.
In spite of
many similar well-known statements by Dugin and his associates,
Demidov enthusiastically expressed his admiration for Russia’s
chief "neo-Eurasianist." Demidov stated, among others, that
"doubtlessly, a crucial factor, a certain breaking point, in my
life, was the appearance of Alexander Dugin." Moreover, Demidov
proclaimed that "it is high time to start realizing the ideas, as
formulated by Alexander Dugin, of the radical center, through
projects."
In his new
position as chief ideologist of Russia’s ruling United Russia Party,
Demidov will have ample opportunity and the necessary resources to
do so.
Dr. Andreas
Umland teaches at the National Taras Shevchenko University of Kyiv,
edits the book series "Soviet and Post-Soviet Politics and Society,"
and compiles the biweekly "Russian Nationalism Bulletin."
http://globalfire.tv/nj/08en/politics/redemption_from_russia.htm
Moscow's new chief ideologist:
Ivan Demidov
By Andreas Umland
March 25, 2008
Same Article as the one above but with more pictures
and more commentary.
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