Soviet Union and Russia Although the term whataboutism spread recently,
Edward Lucas's 2008
Economist article states that "Soviet propagandists during the cold war were trained in a tactic that their western interlocutors nicknamed 'whataboutism. Any criticism of the Soviet Union (Afghanistan, martial law in Poland, imprisonment of dissidents, censorship) was met with a 'What about...' (apartheid South Africa, jailed trade-unionists, the Contras in Nicaragua, and so forth)." Lucas recommended two methods of properly countering whataboutism: to "use points made by Russian leaders themselves" so that they cannot be applied to the West, and for Western nations to engage in more
self-criticism of their own media and government. Following the publication of Lucas's 2007 and 2008 articles and his book, Juhan Kivirähk and colleagues called it a "polittechnological" strategy. Writing in
The National Interest in 2013, Samuel Charap was critical of the tactic, commenting, "Russian policy makers, meanwhile, gain little from petulant bouts of 'whataboutism. National security journalist
Julia Ioffe commented in a 2014 article, "Anyone who has ever studied the Soviet Union knows about a phenomenon called 'whataboutism'."
Garry Kasparov discussed the Soviet tactic in his 2015 book
Winter Is Coming, calling it a form of "Soviet propaganda" and a way for Russian bureaucrats to "respond to criticism of Soviet massacres, forced deportations, and gulags". Mark Adomanis commented for
The Moscow Times in 2015 that "Whataboutism was employed by the Communist Party with such frequency and shamelessness that a sort of pseudo mythology grew up around it." Adomanis observed, "Any student of Soviet history will recognize parts of the whataboutist canon." while
The National called the tactic "an effective rhetorical weapon". In their book
The European Union and Russia (2016), Forsberg and Haukkala characterized whataboutism as an "old Soviet practice", and they observed that the strategy "has been gaining in prominence in the Russian attempts at deflecting Western criticism". In her 2016 book,
Security Threats and Public Perception, author Elizaveta Gaufman called the whataboutism technique "A Soviet/Russian spin on liberal anti-Americanism", comparing it to the Soviet rejoinder, "And you are lynching negroes".
Foreign Policy supported this assessment. Daphne Skillen discussed the tactic in her 2016 book,
Freedom of Speech in Russia, identifying it as a "Soviet propagandist's technique" and "a common Soviet-era defence". Writing for
Bloomberg News,
Leonid Bershidsky called whataboutism a "Russian tradition", Russian journalist
Alexey Kovalev told
GlobalPost in 2017 that the tactic was "an old Soviet trick". Peter Conradi, author of
Who Lost Russia?, called whataboutism "a form of moral relativism that responds to criticism with the simple response: 'But you do it too. Conradi echoed Gaufman's comparison of the tactic to the Soviet response, "Over there they lynch Negroes". Kaylan commented upon a "suspicious similarity between Kremlin propaganda and Trump propaganda".
Eurasianet stated that "Moscow's geopolitical whataboutism skills are unmatched", while
Paste correlated whataboutism's rise with the increasing societal consumption of
fake news.
Notable examples Several articles connected whataboutism to the
Soviet era by pointing to the "
And you are lynching Negroes" example (as Lucas did) of the 1930s, in which the Soviets deflected any criticism by referencing racism in the
segregated American South. The tactic was extensively used even after the racial segregation in the South was
outlawed in the 1950s and 1960s. Ioffe, who has written about whataboutism in at least three separate outlets, called it a "classic" example of whataboutism, The Soviet government engaged in a major cover-up of the
Chernobyl nuclear disaster in 1986. When they finally acknowledged the disaster, although without any details, the
Telegraph Agency of the Soviet Union (TASS) then discussed the
Three Mile Island accident and other American nuclear accidents, which
Serge Schmemann of
The New York Times wrote was an example of the common Soviet tactic of whataboutism. The mention of a commission also indicated to observers the seriousness of the incident, and subsequent state radio broadcasts were replaced with classical music, which was a common method of preparing the public for an announcement of a tragedy in the USSR. In 2016, Canadian columnist
Terry Glavin asserted in the
Ottawa Citizen that
Noam Chomsky used the tactic in an October 2001 speech, delivered after the
September 11 attacks, that was critical of US foreign policy. In 2006,
Putin replied to
George W. Bush's criticism of Russia's human rights record by stating that he "did not want to head a democracy like Iraq's," referencing the
US intervention in Iraq. Some writers also identified examples in 2012 when Russian officials responded to critique by, for example, redirecting attention to the United Kingdom's anti-protest laws or Russians' difficulty obtaining a
visa to the United Kingdom. The term receives increased attention when controversies involving Russia are in the news. For example, writing for
Slate in 2014, Joshua Keating noted the use of "whataboutism" in a statement on Russia's 2014
annexation of Crimea, where Putin "listed a litany of complaints about Western intervention." In 2017, Ben Zimmer noted that Putin also used the tactic in an interview with
NBC News journalist
Megyn Kelly.
Russophobia allegation The practice of labelling whataboutism as typically Russian or Soviet is sometimes rejected as
russophobic.
Glenn Diesen sees this usage as an attempt to delegitimize Russian politics. As early as 1985,
Ronald Reagan had introduced the construct of "
false ethical balance" to "
denounce" any attempt at comparison between the US and other countries.
Jeane Kirkpatrick, in her essay
The Myth of Moral Equivalence (1986) saw the Soviet Union's whataboutism as an attempt to use moral reasoning to present themselves as a legitimate superpower on an equal footing with the United States. The comparison was inadmissible in principle, since there was only one legitimate superpower, the USA, and it did not stand up for power interests but for values. Glenn Diesen sees this as a framing of American politics, with the aim of defining the relationship of countries to each other analogously to a teacher-pupil relationship, whereby in the political framework the USA is the teacher. Kirkpatrick invoked
Harold Lasswell's understanding of the enforcement of an ideological framework using political dominance to analyze the semantic manipulations of the Soviet Union. According to Lasswell, every country tries to impose its interpretive framework on others, even by the means of revolution and war. For Kirkpatrick, however, these interpretive frameworks of different states are not equivalent.
China A synonymous
Chinese-language metaphor is the "stinky bug argument" ({{CJKV|order=ts|t=臭蟲論|s=臭虫论 In response to tweets from Donald Trump's administration criticizing the Chinese government's mistreatment of ethnic minorities and the
pro-democracy protests in Hong Kong,
Chinese Foreign Ministry officials began using Twitter to point out racial inequalities and social unrest in the United States which led
Politico to accuse China of engaging in whataboutism.
Donald Trump , president Trump replies "What about the alt-left?" Writing for
The Washington Post, former
United States Ambassador to Russia,
Michael McFaul wrote critically of Trump's use of the tactic and compared him to Putin. McFaul commented, "That's exactly the kind of argument that Russian propagandists have used for years to justify some of Putin's most brutal policies."
Mother Jones called the tactic "a traditional Russian propaganda strategy", and observed, "The whataboutism strategy has made a comeback and evolved in President Vladimir Putin's Russia." In early 2017, amid coverage of
interference in the 2016 election and the lead up to the
Mueller Investigation into Donald Trump, several people, including Edward Lucas, wrote opinion pieces associating whataboutism with both Trump and Russia. When, in a widely viewed television interview that aired before the
Super Bowl in 2017, Fox News host
Bill O'Reilly called Putin a "killer", Trump responded by saying that the US government was also guilty of killing people. He responded, "There are a lot of killers. We've got a lot of killers. What do you think — our country's so innocent?" This episode prompted commentators to accuse Trump of whataboutism, including Chuck Todd on the television show
Meet the Press and political advisor
Jake Sullivan.
Use by other states Europe The term "whataboutery" has been used by
Loyalists and
Republicans since the period of
the Troubles in
Northern Ireland.
Asia The tactic was employed by
Azerbaijan, which responded to criticism of its human rights record by holding parliamentary hearings on issues in the United States. Simultaneously, pro-Azerbaijan
Internet trolls used whataboutism to draw attention away from criticism of the country. The
Turkish government engaged in whataboutism by publishing an official document listing criticisms of other governments that had criticized Turkey for its
dramatic purge of state institutions and civil society in the wake of a failed coup attempt in July of that year. The tactic was also employed by
Saudi Arabia and
Israel. In 2018, Israeli Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu said that "Israeli-occupied territories|the [Israeli] occupation is nonsense, there are plenty of big countries that occupied and replaced populations and no one talks about them." In July 2022, the
Crown Prince of Saudi Arabia Mohammad bin Salman engaged in this tactic by raising the killing of Palestinian-American journalist
Shireen Abu Akleh, and the
torture and abuse of Iraqi prisoners by US soldiers during the
Iraq War, after
US President Joe Biden raised the
killing of Saudi journalist
Jamal Khashoggi at the Saudi consulate in
Istanbul on 2 October 2018 by agents of the Saudi government, during a conversation with Mohammed as part of Biden's state visit to Saudi Arabia.
Iran's foreign minister
Mohammad Javad Zarif used the tactic in the Zurich Security Conference on February 17, 2019. When pressed by BBC's
Lyse Doucet about eight environmentalists imprisoned in his country, he mentioned the killing of Jamal Khashoggi. Doucet picked up the fallacy and said "let's leave that aside." The
Indian prime minister
Narendra Modi has been accused of using whataboutism, especially in regard to the 2015
Indian writers protest and the nomination of former Chief Justice
Ranjan Gogoi to parliament. ==See also==