
Putin uses a practice diagnosed by political author George Orwell as โdoublespeak,โ or the language of totalitarians.

By Dr. Mark Satta
Assistant Professor of Philosophy
Wayne State University
Introduction
If youโve been paying attention to how Russian President Vladimir Putin talks about the war in Ukraine, you may have noticed a pattern. Putin often uses words to mean exactly the opposite of what they normally do.
He labels acts of war โpeacekeeping duties.โ
He claims to be engaging in โdenazificationโ of Ukraine while seeking to overthrow or even kill Ukraineโs Jewish president, who is the grandson of a Holocaust survivor.
He claims that Ukraine is plotting to create nuclear weapons, while the greatest current threat of nuclear war appears to be Putin himself.
Putinโs brazen manipulation of language is drawing attention. Kira Rudik, a member of the Ukrainian Parliament, recently said of Putin in a CNN interview:
โWhen he says, โI want peace,โ this means, โIโm gathering my troops to kill you.โ If he says, โItโs not my troops,โ he means โItโs my troops and Iโm gathering them.โ And if he says, โOK, Iโm retreating,โ this means โIโm regrouping and gathering more troops to kill you.โโ
As a philosophy professor who studies the British author George Orwell, I am reminded by Rudikโs comments about Putin of another set of claims: โWar is peace. Freedom is slavery. Ignorance is strength.โ These are the words etched onto the side of the building for the government agency called the โMinistry of Truthโ in Orwellโs dystopian novel โ1984,โ published in 1949.
Orwell uses this feature of the novel to draw attention to how totalitarian regimes โ like the bookโs fictional state of Oceania โ perversely warp language to gain and retain political power. Orwellโs keen understanding of this phenomenon was the result of having witnessed it himself.
Lies More Frightening Than Bombs

In grappling with Putinโs lies and spin, itโs helpful to look at what previous thinkers and writers, like Orwell, have said about the relationship between language and political power.
Orwell, an Englishman who lived from 1903 to 1950, experienced war, imperialism and poverty during the first half of his life. These experiences led Orwell to identify as a socialist and member of the British political left.
It might seem inevitable, then, that Orwell would have favorably viewed Soviet Communism, a leading force on the political left in Europe at the time. But this was not so.
Instead, Orwell believed that Soviet Communism shared the same defects as Nazi Germany. Both were totalitarian states where the desire for total power and control crowded out any room for truth, individuality or freedom. Orwell did not think Soviet Communism was truly socialist, but rather that it only had a socialist faรงade.
At age 33, Orwell served as a volunteer soldier in the Spanish Civil War. He fought with a small militia as part of a larger left-leaning coalition that was trying to stop an insurrection from Spainโs Nationalist right. This left-leaning coalition was receiving military support from the Soviet Union.
But the small militia Orwell was fighting with ultimately became a target of Soviet propagandists, who leveled a range of accusations against the militia, including that its members were spies for the other side. This was a byproduct of the Soviet Unionโs attempts to use its involvement in Spain as a way of gaining political power.
Orwell observed how the militia he had fought with was maligned in the European press as part of this Soviet smear campaign. He explained in his book โHomage to Cataloniaโ that this smear campaign included telling demonstrable lies about concrete facts. This experience deeply troubled Orwell.
He later reflected on this experience, writing that he was frightened by the โfeeling that the very concept of objective truth is fading out of the world.โ That prospect, he claimed, frightened him โmuch more than bombs.โ
Language Shapes Politics – and Vice Versa

Such fears influenced much of Orwellโs most influential writing, including his novel โ1984โ and his essay โPolitics and the English Language.โ
In that essay, Orwell reflects on the relationship between language, thought and politics. For Orwell, language influences thought, which in turn influences politics. But politics also influences thought, which in turn influences language. Thus, Orwell โ like Putin โ saw how language shapes politics and vice versa.
Orwell argues in the essay that if one writes well, โone can think more clearly,โ and in turn that โto think clearly is a necessary first step toward political regeneration,โ which I believe meant to him that a political order could recover from destructive political influences like totalitarianism. This makes good writing a political task.
Orwellโs desire to avoid bad writing is not the desire to defend rigid rules of grammar. Rather, Orwellโs goal is for language users โto let the meaning choose the word, and not the other way about.โ Communicating clearly and precisely requires conscious thought. It takes work.
But just as language can illuminate thought and regenerate politics, so too language can be used to obscure thought and degenerate politics.
Putin sees this clearly and seeks to use this to his advantage.
‘Doublethink’, ‘Doublespeak’
Orwell warned against the kind of abuses of language Putin commits, writing that โif thought corrupts language, language can also corrupt thought.โ
Orwell explored what mutual corruption of language and politics in a totalitarian regime looks like in his dystopian โ1984.โ In the world of โ1984,โ the only crime is โthoughtcrime.โ The ruling class seeks to eliminate the possibility of thoughtcrime by eliminating the language needed to have the thoughts they had criminalized โ which included any thought that would undermine the partyโs totalitarian control. Limit language and you limit thought, or so the theory goes. Thus, the Russian Parliament passed, and Putin has signed, a law that could result in criminal charges for using the Russian word for โwarโ to describe the Ukraine war.
Orwell also uses โ1984โ to explore what happens when communication conforms to the desires of political power instead of demonstrable fact.
The result is โdoublethink,โ which occurs when a fractured mind simultaneously accepts two contradictory beliefs as true. The slogans โWar is peace,โ โFreedom is slaveryโ and โIgnorance is strengthโ are paradigmatic examples. This Orwellian idea has given rise to the concept of doublespeak, which occurs when one uses language to obscure meaning to manipulate others.
Doublespeak is a tool in the arsenal of tyranny. It is one of Putinโs weapons of choice, as it is for many authoritarians and would-be authoritarians around the world. As Orwell warned: โPower is in tearing human minds to pieces and putting them together again in new shapes of your own choosing.โ
Originally published by The Conversation, 03.14.2022, under the terms of a Creative Commons Attribution/No derivatives license.



