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[[Image:SovNarPit200705.jpg|thumb|"Estonians and dogs no admittance". The background is the [[Ribbon of Saint George]], associated with the commemoration of World War II in Russia. This sign stood several days at a restaurant entrance in [[Yaroslavl]], Russia.<ref>[http://gtk.yar.ru/ Городской телеканал], 5 May 2007: [http://gtk.yar.ru/news/6169.ns В Ярославле эстонцев приравняли к собакам]</ref><ref>[[Trud_(newspaper)|Trud]], 5 May 2007: [http://www.trud.ru/issue/article.php?id=200705050770102 НЕ ЕДИМ, НЕ ПЬЕМ, НЕ ЕЗДИМ]</ref><ref>[[lenta.ru]], 17 May 2007: [http://www.lenta.ru/articles/2007/05/17/hack/ Без объявления войны]</ref>]]
{{Merge |Estonia–Russia relations|discuss=Talk:Estonia–Russia relations#Merge discussion |date=August 2010}}
'''Anti-Estonian sentiment''' generally describes dislike or hate of the [[Estonian people]] or the [[Republic of Estonia]]. According to [[Lilia Shevtsova]], Senior Associate at the Russian Domestic Politics and Political Institutions Program Chair of the [[Carnegie Moscow Center]], anti-Estonian sentiment is intentionally escalated by Kremlin in its "search for enemies".<ref>{{cite book |title=Russia--lost in Transition |last=Shevtsova |first=Lilia |authorlink= |coauthors= |year=2007 |publisher=Carnegie Endowment |location= |isbn=0870032364 |page=200 |pages= |url=http://books.google.com/?id=7giTPNSJx3cC&pg=PA200&dq }}</ref> The [[President of Estonia]] [[Toomas Hendrik Ilves]] has stated "We are witnesses to the information war against Estonia which already reminds of an ideological aggression".<ref>Statement made by the President of Estonia Toomas Hendrik Ilves, 30.04.2007 {{cite web | last=Sinisalu | first=Arnold | coauthors= | title=Propaganda, Information War and the Estonian-Russian Treaty Relations: Some Aspects of International Law | url=http://www.juridica.ee/international_en.php?document=en/international/2008/2/145397.ART.10.pub.php | date= | work=Juridica International | publisher= | accessdate=2009-04-04 }}</ref>
{{Multiple issues|context=August 2010|npov=August 2010|original research=August 2010|synthesis=August 2010|tone=August 2010}}
{{Expert-subject-multiple|Russia|Estonia|date=December 2010}}
{{Too few opinions|date=August 2010}}
[[Image:SovNarPit200705.jpg|thumb|"Estonians and dogs no admittance". The background is the [[Ribbon of Saint George]], associated with the commemoration of World War II in Russia. This sign stood several days at a restaurant entrance in [[Yaroslavl]], Russia.<ref>[http://gtk.yar.ru/ Городской телеканал], 5 May 2007: [http://gtk.yar.ru/news/6169.ns В Ярославле эстонцев приравняли к собакам]</ref><ref>[[Trud (newspaper)|Trud]], 5 May 2007: [http://www.trud.ru/issue/article.php?id=200705050770102 НЕ ЕДИМ, НЕ ПЬЕМ, НЕ ЕЗДИМ]</ref><ref>[[lenta.ru]], 17 May 2007: [http://www.lenta.ru/articles/2007/05/17/hack/ Без объявления войны]</ref>]]
'''Anti-Estonian sentiment''' generally describes dislike or hate of the [[Estonian people]] or the [[Republic of Estonia]].


==Media accounts==
== Allegations of anti-Estonian sentiment in Russia ==
The controversy over [[Estonia–Russia relations]] has featured in numerous media accounts.<ref>[[International Centre for Defence Studies]]: [http://www.icds.ee/index.php?id=73&L=1&tx_ttnews[tt_news&#93;=4&tx_ttnews[backPid&#93;=71&cHash=f1a5f211bc Russia’s Involvement in the Tallinn Disturbances]</ref><ref>[[Helsingin Sanomat]] May 6, 2007: [http://www.hs.fi/english/article/Virtual+harassment+but+for+real+/1135227099868 Virtual harassment, but for real] by [[Miska Rantanen]]</ref><ref>[[The Moscow News]]: [http://english.mn.ru/english/issue.php?2007-17-28 Russian Retailers Boycott Estonian Goods] by [[Sergei Dmitriyev]]</ref><ref>[[China Worker]] June 16, 2007: [http://www.chinaworker.org/en/content/news/208/ US-Russia tensions escalate] by [[Rob Jones]]</ref><ref>[[Information Centre of Fenno-Ugric People]] August 2, 2005: [http://www.suri.ee/press/eng/050802.html Estonian students caught in the wheels of Russia's internal politics]</ref><ref>[[Pravda]] April 7, 2007: [http://english.pravda.ru/world/20/91/365/15251_estonia.html Estonian Neo-Nazis regret Hitler's defeat in WWII]</ref><ref>[[Jewish Times]] June 21, 2007: [http://www.jewishtimes.com/scripts/edition.pl?now=6/23/2007&SubSectionID=87&ID=6674 Estonian Jews Silent Over Statue Dispute] by [[Matt Siegel]]</ref><ref>[[Johnson's Russia List]]/[[Interfax]] May 16, 2007: [http://www.cdi.org/russia/johnson/2007-112-47.cfm Removal Of War Monument Was Estonia's Way To Show Independence&nbsp;— Premier]</ref><ref>[[Reason Magazine]] May 14, 2007: [http://www.reason.com/news/show/120167.html Who Liberates the Liberators? The power struggle over an old Soviet war memorial] by [[Cathy Young]]</ref><ref>[[The U.S.–Baltic Foundation]]: [http://www.usbaltic.org/usbf_voices.html USBF voices concern over the Russian bullying of Estonia]</ref><ref>[[NCSJ]]/[[New York Times]] May 5, 2007: [http://www.ncsj.org/AuxPages/050307NYTimes_Estonia.shtml Friction Between Estonia and Russia Ignites Protests in Moscow] by [[Steven Lee Myers]]</ref>
The seeds of a number of recent incidents in Estonian-Russian relations can be traced back to exaggerated anti-Estonian discourse in some Russian-language [[mass media]].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.jamestown.org/programs/edm/single/?tx_ttnews[tt_news]=32427&tx_ttnews[backPid]=171&no_cache=1|title=Moscow stung by Estonian ban on totalitarianism's symbols|last=Socor|first=Vladimir|date=26 January 2007|publisher=[[Jamestown Foundation]]|accessdate=2009-02-12}}</ref> The controversy over relations has featured in numerous media accounts.<ref>[[International Centre for Defence Studies]]: [http://www.icds.ee/index.php?id=73&L=1&tx_ttnews[tt_news&#93;=4&tx_ttnews[backPid&#93;=71&cHash=f1a5f211bc Russia’s Involvement in the Tallinn Disturbances]</ref><ref>[[Helsingin Sanomat]] May 6, 2007: [http://www.hs.fi/english/article/Virtual+harassment+but+for+real+/1135227099868 Virtual harassment, but for real] by [[Miska Rantanen]]</ref><ref>[[The Moscow News]]: [http://english.mn.ru/english/issue.php?2007-17-28 Russian Retailers Boycott Estonian Goods] by [[Sergei Dmitriyev]]</ref><ref>[[China Worker]] June 16, 2007: [http://www.chinaworker.org/en/content/news/208/ US-Russia tensions escalate] by [[Rob Jones]]</ref><ref>[[Information Centre of Fenno-Ugric People]] August 2, 2005: [http://www.suri.ee/press/eng/050802.html Estonian students caught in the wheels of Russia's internal politics]</ref><ref>[[Pravda]] April 7, 2007: [http://english.pravda.ru/world/20/91/365/15251_estonia.html Estonian Neo-Nazis regret Hitler's defeat in WWII]</ref><ref>[[Jewish Times]] June 21, 2007: [http://www.jewishtimes.com/scripts/edition.pl?now=6/23/2007&SubSectionID=87&ID=6674 Estonian Jews Silent Over Statue Dispute] by [[Matt Siegel]]</ref><ref>[[Johnson's Russia List]]/[[Interfax]] May 16, 2007: [http://www.cdi.org/russia/johnson/2007-112-47.cfm Removal Of War Monument Was Estonia's Way To Show Independence — Premier]</ref><ref>[[Reason Magazine]] May 14, 2007: [http://www.reason.com/news/show/120167.html Who Liberates the Liberators? The power struggle over an old Soviet war memorial] by [[Cathy Young]]</ref><ref>[[The U.S.–Baltic Foundation]]: [http://www.usbaltic.org/usbf_voices.html USBF voices concern over the Russian bullying of Estonia]</ref><ref>[[NCSJ]]/[[New York Times]] May 5, 2007: [http://www.ncsj.org/AuxPages/050307NYTimes_Estonia.shtml Friction Between Estonia and Russia Ignites Protests in Moscow] by [[Steven Lee Myers]]</ref>


=== Accusations of sympathies with Nazism ===
==Accusations of discrimination of minorities==

{{See also|Fascist (epithet)}}
{{seealso|Russians in Estonia}}
{{See also|Finnish Anti-Fascist Committee}}

{{See also|20th Waffen Grenadier Division of the SS (1st Estonian)#Modern controversy}}
Most claims of anti-Russian sentiment in Estonia and [[Latvia]] regarding supposed political or economic discrimination against the large Russian minorities in these countries are made by Russian authorities, media and activists. Such accusations have become more frequent during times of political disagreements between Russia and these countries, and waned when the disagreements have been resolved.<ref>[http://eng.globalaffairs.ru/numbers/12/946.html Russia and the Baltic States: Not a Case of "Flawed" History]</ref><ref>[[Postimees]] 25 July 2007: [http://www.postimees.ee/250707/esileht/siseuudised/273947.php Naši suvelaagrit «ehib» Hitleri vuntsidega Paeti kujutav plakat]</ref><ref>"Law Assembly": [http://www.dol.ru/users/lawass/hr2_e.htm The policy of discrimination of the national minorities in Latvia and Estonia]</ref><ref>[http://eng.globalaffairs.ru/numbers/12/946.html Russia and the Baltic States: Not a Case of "Flawed" History] by [[Mikhail Demurin]], a long-time [[diplomat]] of [[USSR]] and later [[Russian Federation]], printed in [[Russia in Global Affairs]]</ref>

==Accusations of sympathies with Nazism==
{{see also|Fascist (epithet)}}
{{see also|Finnish Anti-Fascist Committee}}


In 2007, as a response to the possibility of removal of WWII graves (in the context of the [[Bronze Soldier]] controversy) Russian [[State Duma]] issued a statement accusing "the Estonian government's intention to continue its course of representing Nazism in a heroic light and justifying its ideology".<ref>[http://www.rawstory.com/news/2006/Estonia_ignores_Russian_accusations_01182007.html "Estonia "ignores" Russian accusations as graves row grows"]</ref><ref>[http://en.rian.ru/world/20070730/69968600.html "Estonia dismisses Russian charge it glorifies Nazism"]</ref>
In 2007, as a response to the possibility of removal of WWII graves (in the context of the [[Bronze Soldier]] controversy) Russian [[State Duma]] issued a statement accusing "the Estonian government's intention to continue its course of representing Nazism in a heroic light and justifying its ideology".<ref>[http://www.rawstory.com/news/2006/Estonia_ignores_Russian_accusations_01182007.html "Estonia "ignores" Russian accusations as graves row grows"]</ref><ref>[http://en.rian.ru/world/20070730/69968600.html "Estonia dismisses Russian charge it glorifies Nazism"]</ref>
In Russia, the youth movement [[Nashi (youth movement)|Nashi]] has been noted for anti-Estonian sentiments among its members; often, it is [[framing (social sciences)|framed]] as anti-fascism activities.<ref>[http://paber.ekspress.ee/viewdoc/CB6B8795DD740079C225733700664730 ekspress.ee]</ref> Within this context, according to [[Lilia Shevtsova]], Senior Associate at the Russian Domestic Politics and Political Institutions Program Chair of the [[Carnegie Moscow Center]], anti-Estonian sentiment was intentionally escalated by Kremlin in its "search for enemies", however she also notes that even Russian ''democrats'' took Estonia's removal of the statue immediately before one of the most respected and cherished dates in the Russian calendar, to be an affront to the Russian national honour.<ref>{{cite book |title=Russia--lost in Transition |last=Shevtsova |first=Lilia |authorlink= |coauthors= |year=2007 |publisher=Carnegie Endowment |location= |isbn=0870032364 |page=200 |pages= |url=http://books.google.com/?id=7giTPNSJx3cC&pg=PA200&dq }}</ref>
In Russia, the youth movement [[Nashi (youth movement)|Nashi]] has been noted for anti-Estonian sentiments among its members; often, it is [[framing (social sciences)|framed]] as anti-fascism activities.<ref>[http://paber.ekspress.ee/viewdoc/CB6B8795DD740079C225733700664730 ekspress.ee]</ref>


==== eSStonia ====
===eSStonia===
An anti-Estonian [[pejorative]] [[neologism]], ''eSStonia'', appeared in the [[Russia]]n media, on [[Runet]], and at the street protests in the midst of the [[Bronze Soldier]] controversy in 2007. The term, a [[portmanteau]] of [[Estonia]] and [[SS]], is intended to portray Estonia as a [[neo-Nazi]] state.<ref name="baltic">{{cite news | url = http://www.baltictimes.com/news/articles/19265/ | title = If you're a real Russian, don't have any fun in Tallinn | publisher = [[Baltic Times]] | location = [[Tallinn]] | date = 13 November 2007 | accessdate = 2008-01-26 }}</ref>
An anti-Estonian [[pejorative]] [[neologism]], ''eSStonia'', appeared in the [[Russia]]n media, on [[Runet]], and at the street protests in the midst of the [[Bronze Soldier]] controversy in 2007. The term, a [[portmanteau]] of [[Estonia]] and [[SS]], is intended to portray Estonia as a [[neo-Nazi]] state.<ref name="baltic">{{cite news | url = http://www.baltictimes.com/news/articles/19265/ | title = If you're a real Russian, don't have any fun in Tallinn | publisher = [[Baltic Times]] | location = [[Tallinn]] | date = 13 November 2007 | accessdate = 2008-01-26 }}</ref>.


In April 2007, some participants in the protested outside the [[Embassy of Estonia in Moscow]] organized by the Russian youth organisation [[Nashi (youth movement)|Nashi]] carried signs stating "''Wanted. The Ambassador of the Fascist State of eSStonia''" ({{lang-ru|''«Разыскивается посол фашистского государства эSSтония»''}}), referring to the then-[[Russian-Estonian relations|Ambassador of Estonia to Russia]] [[Marina Kaljurand]].<ref name="kommersant"/> In May 2007, members of the [[Young Guard of United Russia]] picketed the Consulate-General of Estonia in [[Saint Petersburg]] holding up pickets with slogans such as "''eSStonia–the shame of Europe!''" ({{lang-ru|''«эSSтония&nbsp;— позор Европы!»''}}).<ref>{{Ru icon}} {{cite news
In April 2007, some participants in the protested outside the [[Embassy of Estonia in Moscow]] organized by the Russian youth organisation [[Nashi (youth movement)|Nashi]] carried signs stating "''Wanted. The Ambassador of the Fascist State of eSStonia''" ({{lang-ru|''«Разыскивается посол фашистского государства эSSтония»''}}), referring to the then-[[Russian-Estonian relations|Ambassador of Estonia to Russia]] [[Marina Kaljurand]].<ref name="kommersant"/> In May 2007, members of the [[Young Guard of United Russia]] picketed the Consulate-General of Estonia in [[Saint Petersburg]] holding up pickets with slogans such as "''eSStonia–the shame of Europe!''" ({{lang-ru|''«эSSтония&nbsp;— позор Европы!»''}}).<ref>{{Ru icon}} {{cite news
Line 64: Line 65:
| accessdate = 2008-12-27 }}</ref>
| accessdate = 2008-12-27 }}</ref>


=== 2007 Bronze Soldier issue ===
==2007 Bronze Soldier issue==
Christopher Walker and Robert Orttung allege that [[Government of Russia|Kremlin]]-controlled sectors of the [[Russian media]] took advantage of anti-Estonian sentiment during Estonia's 2007 relocation of the [[Bronze Soldier]], a Soviet-era statue "Monument to the Liberators of Tallinn"<ref>{{cite book|last=Eiki|first=Berg|coauthors=Piret Ehin|title=Identity and foreign policy: Baltic-Russian relations and European integration|publisher=Ashgate Publishing|year=2009|pages=56|isbn=978-0-7546-7329-3}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal|last=Wertsch|first=James V.|year=2008|title=Collective Memory and Narrative Templates|journal=Social Research: an International Quarterly |volume=75|issue=1|pages=133–156}}</ref><ref name="Wertsch">{{cite journal|last=James V.|first=Wertsch|title=A Clash of Deep Memories|journal=Profession|publisher=MLA Journals|issue=8|pages=46–53|issn=0740-6959}}</ref> during the [[Second World War]].<ref>Christopher Walker and Robert Orttung, [http://www.rferl.org/content/article/1079468.html "Russia: Putinism's Impact On The Neighbors"]. RFE/RL, February 12, 2008</ref> According to the [[President of Estonia]] [[Toomas Hendrik Ilves]] "We are witnesses to the information war against Estonia which already reminds of an ideological aggression".<ref>Statement made by the President of Estonia Toomas Hendrik Ilves, 30.04.2007 {{cite web | last=Sinisalu | first=Arnold | coauthors= | title=Propaganda, Information War and the Estonian-Russian Treaty Relations: Some Aspects of International Law | url=http://www.juridicainternational.eu/?id=12741 | date= | work=Juridica International | publisher= | accessdate=2009-04-04 }}</ref>
Christopher Walker and Robert Orttung allege that [[Government of Russia|Kremlin]]-controlled sectors of the [[Russian media]] took advantage of anti-Estonian sentiment during Estonia's 2007 relocation of the [[Bronze Soldier]], a Soviet-era statue "Monument to the Liberators of Tallinn"<ref>{{cite book|last=Eiki|first=Berg|coauthors=Piret Ehin|title=Identity and foreign policy: Baltic-Russian relations and European integration|publisher=Ashgate Publishing|date=2009|pages=56|isbn=978-0-7546-7329-3}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal|last=Wertsch|first=James V.|date=2008|title=Collective Memory and Narrative Templates|journal=Social Research: an International Quarterly |volume=75|issue=1|pages=133–156}}</ref><ref name="Wertsch">{{cite journal|last=James V.|first=Wertsch|title=A Clash of Deep Memories|journal=Profession|publisher=MLA Journals|issue=8|pages=46–53|issn=0740-6959}}</ref> during the [[Second World War]].<ref>Christopher Walker and Robert Orttung, [http://www.rferl.org/content/article/1079468.html "Russia: Putinism's Impact On The Neighbors"]. RFE/RL, February 12, 2008</ref>


== See also ==
== See also ==
* [[Anti-Russian sentiment]]
* [[Anti-Russian sentiment]]
* [[Estonia–Russia relations]]
* [[Estonia–Russia relations]]
* [[Russian influence operations in Estonia]]


== References ==
== References ==
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* 'Ethnic relations in Estonia, 1991' by [[Rein Taagepera]] of [[University of California]], published in [[Journal of Baltic Studies]], Volume 23, Issue 2 (Summer 1992), pages 121–132
* 'Ethnic relations in Estonia, 1991' by [[Rein Taagepera]] of [[University of California]], published in [[Journal of Baltic Studies]], Volume 23, Issue 2 (Summer 1992), pages 121–132
* 'Ethnic Conflict in the Post-Soviet World: Case Studies and Analysis' by [[Leokadia M Drobizheva]] et al.: chapter 5, 'Ethnopolitical Conflict in Estonia' by [[Klara Hallik]]
* 'Ethnic Conflict in the Post-Soviet World: Case Studies and Analysis' by [[Leokadia M Drobizheva]] et al.: chapter 5, 'Ethnopolitical Conflict in Estonia' by [[Klara Hallik]]

== External links ==

* [[The Raw Story]]/[[Agence France-Presse|AFP]] April 28, 2007: [http://rawstory.com/news/afp/Putin_anger_as_Estonia_row_boils_04282007.html Putin anger as Estonia row boils]
* [[Sveriges Radio]]/[[Komsomolskaya Pravda]] May 11, 2007: [http://www.sr.se/cgi-bin/isidorpub/PrinterFriendlyArticle.asp?artikel=1362457&ProgramID=2460 Anti Estonian hysteria in northwest Russia] (article contains incorrect translation from Russian)


{{Cultural criticism}}
{{Cultural criticism}}


{{DEFAULTSORT:Anti-Estonian Sentiment}}
[[Category:Anti-national sentiment|Estonia]]
[[Category:Anti-national sentiment|Estonia]]
[[Category:Estonia–Russia relations]]
[[Category:Estonia–Russia relations]]

Revision as of 09:00, 17 June 2011

File:SovNarPit200705.jpg
"Estonians and dogs no admittance". The background is the Ribbon of Saint George, associated with the commemoration of World War II in Russia. This sign stood several days at a restaurant entrance in Yaroslavl, Russia.[1][2][3]

Anti-Estonian sentiment generally describes dislike or hate of the Estonian people or the Republic of Estonia. According to Lilia Shevtsova, Senior Associate at the Russian Domestic Politics and Political Institutions Program Chair of the Carnegie Moscow Center, anti-Estonian sentiment is intentionally escalated by Kremlin in its "search for enemies".[4] The President of Estonia Toomas Hendrik Ilves has stated "We are witnesses to the information war against Estonia which already reminds of an ideological aggression".[5]

Media accounts

The seeds of a number of recent incidents in Estonian-Russian relations can be traced back to exaggerated anti-Estonian discourse in some Russian-language mass media.[6] The controversy over relations has featured in numerous media accounts.[7][8][9][10][11][12][13][14][15][16][17]

Accusations of discrimination of minorities

Most claims of anti-Russian sentiment in Estonia and Latvia regarding supposed political or economic discrimination against the large Russian minorities in these countries are made by Russian authorities, media and activists. Such accusations have become more frequent during times of political disagreements between Russia and these countries, and waned when the disagreements have been resolved.[18][19][20][21]

Accusations of sympathies with Nazism

In 2007, as a response to the possibility of removal of WWII graves (in the context of the Bronze Soldier controversy) Russian State Duma issued a statement accusing "the Estonian government's intention to continue its course of representing Nazism in a heroic light and justifying its ideology".[22][23] In Russia, the youth movement Nashi has been noted for anti-Estonian sentiments among its members; often, it is framed as anti-fascism activities.[24]

eSStonia

An anti-Estonian pejorative neologism, eSStonia, appeared in the Russian media, on Runet, and at the street protests in the midst of the Bronze Soldier controversy in 2007. The term, a portmanteau of Estonia and SS, is intended to portray Estonia as a neo-Nazi state.[25].

In April 2007, some participants in the protested outside the Embassy of Estonia in Moscow organized by the Russian youth organisation Nashi carried signs stating "Wanted. The Ambassador of the Fascist State of eSStonia" ([«Разыскивается посол фашистского государства эSSтония»] Error: {{Lang-xx}}: text has italic markup (help)), referring to the then-Ambassador of Estonia to Russia Marina Kaljurand.[26] In May 2007, members of the Young Guard of United Russia picketed the Consulate-General of Estonia in Saint Petersburg holding up pickets with slogans such as "eSStonia–the shame of Europe!" ([«эSSтония — позор Европы!»] Error: {{Lang-xx}}: text has italic markup (help)).[27] The use of eSStonia in protests by Nashi and the Young Guard determined the head of the Saint Petersburg youth branch of Yabloko to file a complaint with Yury Chaika, the Prosecutor General of Russia, asking for an investigation into a possible breach of Article 282 Incitement of National, Racial, or Religious Enmity of the Criminal Code of Russia.[26][28]

In November 2007, Komsomolskaya Pravda, the biggest selling daily newspaper in Russia, ran a campaign asking readers to boycott travel to Estonia, Estonian goods and services. The campaign run under the slogan "I don't go to eSStonia" ([Я не еду в эSSтонию] Error: {{Lang-xx}}: text has italic markup (help)).[25][29][30] The Economist, in its editorial, called the term "a cheap jibe" by spelling the country's name eSStonia, President Ilves as IlveSS and Prime Minister Ansip as AnSSip, while noting the coining of the term Nashism to describe what they regard as the populist, pro-authoritarian and ultra-nationalist philosophy of Nashi, a pro-Kremlin youth movement, as an encouraging countermeasure.[31]

2007 Bronze Soldier issue

Christopher Walker and Robert Orttung allege that Kremlin-controlled sectors of the Russian media took advantage of anti-Estonian sentiment during Estonia's 2007 relocation of the Bronze Soldier, a Soviet-era statue "Monument to the Liberators of Tallinn"[32][33][34] during the Second World War.[35]

See also

References

  1. ^ Городской телеканал, 5 May 2007: В Ярославле эстонцев приравняли к собакам
  2. ^ Trud, 5 May 2007: НЕ ЕДИМ, НЕ ПЬЕМ, НЕ ЕЗДИМ
  3. ^ lenta.ru, 17 May 2007: Без объявления войны
  4. ^ Shevtsova, Lilia (2007). Russia--lost in Transition. Carnegie Endowment. p. 200. ISBN 0870032364. {{cite book}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help)
  5. ^ Statement made by the President of Estonia Toomas Hendrik Ilves, 30.04.2007 Sinisalu, Arnold. "Propaganda, Information War and the Estonian-Russian Treaty Relations: Some Aspects of International Law". Juridica International. Retrieved 2009-04-04. {{cite web}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help)
  6. ^ Socor, Vladimir (26 January 2007). "Moscow stung by Estonian ban on totalitarianism's symbols". Jamestown Foundation. Retrieved 2009-02-12.
  7. ^ International Centre for Defence Studies: [tt_news]=4&tx_ttnews[backPid]=71&cHash=f1a5f211bc Russia’s Involvement in the Tallinn Disturbances
  8. ^ Helsingin Sanomat May 6, 2007: Virtual harassment, but for real by Miska Rantanen
  9. ^ The Moscow News: Russian Retailers Boycott Estonian Goods by Sergei Dmitriyev
  10. ^ China Worker June 16, 2007: US-Russia tensions escalate by Rob Jones
  11. ^ Information Centre of Fenno-Ugric People August 2, 2005: Estonian students caught in the wheels of Russia's internal politics
  12. ^ Pravda April 7, 2007: Estonian Neo-Nazis regret Hitler's defeat in WWII
  13. ^ Jewish Times June 21, 2007: Estonian Jews Silent Over Statue Dispute by Matt Siegel
  14. ^ Johnson's Russia List/Interfax May 16, 2007: Removal Of War Monument Was Estonia's Way To Show Independence — Premier
  15. ^ Reason Magazine May 14, 2007: Who Liberates the Liberators? The power struggle over an old Soviet war memorial by Cathy Young
  16. ^ The U.S.–Baltic Foundation: USBF voices concern over the Russian bullying of Estonia
  17. ^ NCSJ/New York Times May 5, 2007: Friction Between Estonia and Russia Ignites Protests in Moscow by Steven Lee Myers
  18. ^ Russia and the Baltic States: Not a Case of "Flawed" History
  19. ^ Postimees 25 July 2007: Naši suvelaagrit «ehib» Hitleri vuntsidega Paeti kujutav plakat
  20. ^ "Law Assembly": The policy of discrimination of the national minorities in Latvia and Estonia
  21. ^ Russia and the Baltic States: Not a Case of "Flawed" History by Mikhail Demurin, a long-time diplomat of USSR and later Russian Federation, printed in Russia in Global Affairs
  22. ^ "Estonia "ignores" Russian accusations as graves row grows"
  23. ^ "Estonia dismisses Russian charge it glorifies Nazism"
  24. ^ ekspress.ee
  25. ^ a b "If you're a real Russian, don't have any fun in Tallinn". Tallinn: Baltic Times. 13 November 2007. Retrieved 2008-01-26.
  26. ^ a b Template:Ru icon Boronov, Alexander (21 June 2007). "Между прокремлевскими движениями посеяли рознь". Saint Petersburg: Kommersant. Retrieved 2008-12-27. {{cite news}}: Unknown parameter |coauthors= ignored (|author= suggested) (help)
  27. ^ Template:Ru icon "«Молодая Гвардия» подсчитала ненужные эстонские товары". Saint Petersburg: Rosbalt. 7 May 2007. Retrieved 2008-12-27.
  28. ^ Template:Ru icon "Генпрокуратура проверяет «Наших» и «Молодую гвардию» на экстремизм". Novaya Gazeta. 21 June 2007. Retrieved 2009-01-23.
  29. ^ Template:Ru icon Krasnikov, Nikita (6 November 2007). "Бронзового Cолдата перенесли за счет русских туристов!". Komsomolskaya Pravda. Retrieved 2008-12-27. {{cite news}}: Unknown parameter |coauthors= ignored (|author= suggested) (help)
  30. ^ Hõbemägi, Toomas (19 December 2007). "Fewer Russian tourists to stay in Tallinn for New Year's Eve". Baltic Business News. Retrieved 2009-01-26.
  31. ^ "An ineffective bully". Economist. 10 May 2007. Retrieved 2008-12-27.
  32. ^ Eiki, Berg (2009). Identity and foreign policy: Baltic-Russian relations and European integration. Ashgate Publishing. p. 56. ISBN 978-0-7546-7329-3. {{cite book}}: Unknown parameter |coauthors= ignored (|author= suggested) (help)
  33. ^ Wertsch, James V. (2008). "Collective Memory and Narrative Templates". Social Research: an International Quarterly. 75 (1): 133–156.
  34. ^ James V., Wertsch. "A Clash of Deep Memories". Profession (8). MLA Journals: 46–53. ISSN 0740-6959.
  35. ^ Christopher Walker and Robert Orttung, "Russia: Putinism's Impact On The Neighbors". RFE/RL, February 12, 2008

Further reading

External links

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