The Conspiracy of the Lie

When the Soviet Union was implicated in an Olympic doping scandal this spring, it brought up my pent- up indignation from the Cold War.  During the regime of Nikita Krushchev Russians would deny any charge, from silencing dissent to aerial spying to expanding nuclear arsenals to manipulating East European governments to aiding guerilla forces in Vietnam, Cuba, the Congo, Angola and most corners of the earth. And like all good liars they accused the United States of conducting a propaganda campaign against them. At the time I never considered that my country would lie, so Krushchev’s blatant lies sounded all the more offensive. I knew that Russians were lying when their mouths were moving.

The recent Soviet admission that the doping charges in May were true has added fuel to my fire:

Russian sports officials had vehemently denied the doping operation’s existence despite a detailed confession by the nation’s former antidoping lab chief, Dr. Grigory Rodchenkov, in a New York Times article last May that was subsequently confirmed by global antidoping regulators.

An investigator appointed by the World Anti-Doping Agency, Richard McLaren, published more extensive evidence this month that prompted the International Olympic Committee to open disciplinary proceedings against dozens of additional Russian athletes.

Russia’s drastic shift in tone may be motivated by a desire to reconcile with the regulators, who have stipulated that the nation accept the findings of the recent investigation before the country is recertified to conduct drug testing and be a host again of Olympic competitions. (NY Times, December 27)

It feels wrong to assume that Russian officials are chronic liars, but there is not much evidence to the contrary. That they have confessed to systematic doping to give their athletes an advantage in the 2014 Olympics in Sochi suggests that they have cheated their way through many other Olympics, who knows how many? That they initially denied the charges outright and only confirmed them when they had something to gain suggests that their steadfast denials of most charges are suspect. That they lie whenever it gives them advantage. For example, when they were accused of sending in troops to take Crimea and managed to deny it for months.

That we have always contended they were liars seems to support our credibility and the Soviets lack thereof. So whenever they deny charges of aggression or spying they are probably lying. They are so contemptuous of the truth, they are barely able to recognize it, when they stumble across it. In short, they are pathological liars.

Here is where I should point out that the United States lies as well. However, the U.S. also confesses when necessary and has a free press that often makes it necessary.  Probably the worst offenses come in time of war, as a U.S. statesman pointed out in World War I: “The first casualty when war comes is truth” (Hiram W Johnson, staunchly isolationist senator for California, to the US Senate in 1917).  But even here we can hear exposure and transparency.  There is an implicit standard of truth that mocks us if we lie and do not confess.

We would not expect these admissions from Soviet statesmen. Maybe from powerful dissenters who are not silenced by the state, but not from those who represent the state or its organs of power. Lying is an accepted norm, a necessary mode of defense. Lying is a reflex that allows the nation to maintain its illusions of world leadership and power.

The Conspiracy of the Lie may be actually what draws President Vladmir Putin to other liars, such as Hafiz Assad and Donald Trump. All three men will make counter-factual statements with fiery resolve. If their lies are ultimately proven false, they quietly withhold their assertions and ultimately act as if they had never made them.  They may indignantly deny having made them.  There are no retractions, confessions or setting the record straight. The lies drift off into the ether. They perpetuate the myth that the liars are never wrong.

It still raises my hackles, whether it be strategy, pathology or personality. It seems so abusive of the listener, so arrogant, so contemptuous that the only appropriate response would be a slap in the face. Because accusing a liar is what the liar expects. The liar thrives on accusations; it deepens his resolve; it fortifies him.  Maybe if we beat him senseless, he would blink or make a small concession. Maybe if we water-boarded him.

Yes, it’s till there. That Cold War indignation.  The kid’s heightened sense of justice. It burns deep and sears the trust I should have of Russian adults. But I won’t trust them. I only hear the rage of betrayal, when voices of Soviet power speak.  But only when their lips are moving.

 

Liar! Liar!

I really like UN representative Samantha Power for standing before the Security Council and calling Vladimir Putin what he is. A Liar! Not a revisionist or an apologist or a publicist. A Liar! In her words,

Russia has come before this Council to say everything but the truth. It has manipulated. It has obfuscated. It has outright lied. So we have learned to measure Russia by its actions not by its words. In the last 48 hours Russia’s actions have spoken volumes. (New York Times, August 29, 2014)

Having grown up in the throes of the Cold War, when Soviet leaders were lying only when their mouths were moving, I have a little pent-up resentment about falsehoods going unchallenged from our side of the Atlantic. The UN was the site of some whoppers, and the home country was not direct in challenging what was plainly contradicted by facts.  We questioned, we disagreed and we objected, but the “L-word” was used sparingly. You don’t call someone a liar without conviction.

Because “a lie is a false statement with deliberate intent to deceive” (Random House). A lie is not inadvertent or erroneous. It is calculated. So you aren’t equivocating when you call someone “a liar.”  At the same time you are clearing the air of disinformation by flatly contradicting what lingers as a manipulation of the truth. So the accusation of “liar” is needed to set the record straight.

Unlike many other names you can call somebody, this one is productive, because it changes how we see events. There is no residual question of whether Russia is really “peacekeeping” when it sends armored personnel carriers into the Ukraine.  And no question about whether there are good intentions behind providing sophisticated weapons to the separatists in the east. It is military aggression pushing toward war.

So if “Liar!” is accusatory, so be it. Better that than to allow the lie to stand and undermine the facts. No better place to go on record than the United Nations for all the world to hear. If you buy this fellow’s whoppers, then I have some PAC’s on our native soil you can support.

Well done, Ambassador Powers! I wish you had been here in the 1960’s. In those days we called it “propaganda.”