Using a mixture of distraction and whataboutism, Russian President Vladimir Putin used his recent meeting with French President Emmanuel Macron as an opportunity to deflect attention away from the ongoing protests in Moscow and to justify the city’s police in using force against the protesters.

During an August 19 meeting with Macron, Putin criticized his counterpart’s handling of recent protests in France, saying that he did not want a “yellow vests” situation to develop in Russia. Putin’s comments came after Macron confronted him on the Russian government’s brutal crackdown on ongoing pro-democracy protests in Moscow. In what was his first public comment on the Moscow protests, Putin stated that his government would ensure the Moscow demonstrations would evolve “strictly in the framework of the law,” a likely attempt to criticize the French government’s handling of the yellow vest movement.

The comment adhered to a cardinal Kremlin disinformation tactic, which the DFRLab identified before: the appeal to hypocrisy, or “whataboutism.” When faced with criticism in its handling of domestic as well as foreign affairs, the Kremlin employs this logical fallacy to divert attention to wrongdoing by the accusing party, in an effort to highlight the latter’s alleged hypocrisy.

Similarly, by drawing attention to the unrest in France, Putin diverted attention from both the Russian governments violent crackdown and the legitimate grievances expressed by Moscow’s pro-democracy protesters. In doing so, he was deploying one of the pillars of the DFRLab’s “4 Ds of Disinformation” framework: distraction.

Pro-Kremlin and Kremlin-owned outlets subsequently took Putin’s retort and ran with it, devoting an increased amount of attention to the yellow vest movement gripping France.

A Tale of Two Protests

The DFRLab has been covering the Moscow protests since they began in July 2019, when tens of thousands of demonstrators flooded the streets of the Russian capital after officials disqualified opposition candidates from Moscow’s September municipal elections. The Kremlin media has mobilized disinformation narratives regarding the protests, such as downplaying their size, diverting attention from them, and justifying the brutality of Russian police against the demonstrators.

The French “yellow vest” protests are older, having begun in Fall 2018, and have primarily attracted France’s white working and middle-class. The immediate catalyst was the French government’s decision to institute a green tax on fuel, but the underlying cause was a brewing frustration in living standards and dwindling economic opportunity across France.

While most of the protests were peaceful, some turned violent, as a minority of protesters looted shops, vandalized buildings and historical sites, and violently clashed with police. The French government’s uneven response to the protests, from harsh crackdowns to over-correcting to a too lax approach, engendered criticism from both the media and the public.

But in his comparison of the two governments’ responses to domestic unrest, Putin omits a critical distinction between the Moscow and Paris protests: the latter attracted a small, but vocal, contingent of more radical activists who engaged in property destruction, looting, and violence. Those rogue elements were largely absent from the Moscow protests, but the Russian government nonetheless responded with brutal force.

Pro-Kremlin Outlets Spread Putin’s Narrative

Putin’s use of whataboutism and distraction enabled his allies in pro-Kremlin and Kremlin-owned media to pick up his narrative and disseminate it. When a sympathetic media entity wishes to protect a political leader, official statements that are already distorted in some form enables the outlet to claim impartiality, that it is merely conveying what the official said. These claims of unbiased reporting are not normally accompanied by fact-checking of the official statements and often distort the narrative further.

Such was the case for many in the Kremlin’s media ecosystem following the meeting between the presidents, as Putin-friendly outlets ran headlines, among other things, reading “Macron was not happy about the comparison of the Moscow protests with the ‘yellow vests’” and “Macron argued with Putin about the protests in France and Russia.”