The Danger of Demonization
May 17, 2016
Instead of facts, the West’s mainstream media trafficks in demonization.
Exclusive: As the West is sucked deeper into the
Syrian conflict and starts a new Cold War with Russia, the mainstream news
media has collapsed as a vehicle for reliable information, creating a danger
for the world, writes Robert Parry.
By Robert Parry
Does any intelligent person look at a New York
Times article about Russia or Vladimir Putin these days and expect to read an
objective, balanced account? Or will it be laced with a predictable blend of
contempt and ridicule? And is it any different at The Washington Post, NPR,
MSNBC, CNN or almost any mainstream U.S. news outlet?
And it’s not just Russia. The same trend holds
true for Iran, Syria, Venezuela, Nicaragua and other countries and movements
that have fallen onto the U.S. government’s “enemies list.” We saw the same pattern
with Saddam Hussein and Iraq before the 2003 U.S. invasion; with Muammar
Gaddafi and Libya before the U.S.-orchestrated bombing campaign in 2011;
and with President Viktor Yanukovych and Ukraine before the U.S.-backed coup in
2014.
Russian President Vladimir Putin. (Russian
government photo)
That is not to say that these countries and
leaders don’t deserve criticism; they do. But the proper role of the press corps
– at least as I was taught during my early years at The Associated Press – was
to treat all evidence objectively and all sides fairly. Just because you might
not like someone doesn’t mean your feelings should show through or the facts
should be forced through a prism of bias.
In those “old days,” that sort of behavior was
deemed unprofessional and you would expect a senior editor to come down hard on
you. Now, however, it seems that you’d only get punished if you quoted some
dissident or allowed such a person onto an op-ed page or a talk
show, someone who didn’t share Official Washington’s “group think” about
the “enemy.” Deviation from “group think” has become the real
disqualifier.
Yet, this conformity should be shocking and
unacceptable in a country that prides itself on freedom of thought and speech.
Indeed, much of the criticism of “enemy” states is that they supposedly
practice various forms of censorship and permit only regime-friendly propaganda
to reach the public.
But when was the last time you heard anyone in
the U.S. mainstream say anything positive or even nuanced about Russian
President Putin. He can only be portrayed as some shirtless buffoon or the
devil incarnate. Former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton got widespread
praise in 2014 when she likened him to Hitler.
Or when has anyone in the U.S. media been
allowed to suggest that Syria’s President Bashar al-Assad and his supporters
might actually have reason to fear what the U.S. press lovingly calls the
“moderate” rebels – though they often operate under the military command
of Sunni extremist groups, such as Al Qaeda’s Nusra Front. [See
Consortiumnews.com’s “Obama’s ‘Moderate’ Syrian
Deception.“]
For the first three years of the Syrian civil
war, the only permissible U.S. narrative was how the brutal Assad was
slaughtering peaceful “moderates,” even though Defense Intelligence Agency
analysts and other insiders had long been warning about the involvement of
violent jihadists in the movement from the uprising’s beginning in 2011.
But that story was kept from the American
people until the Islamic State started chopping off the heads of Western
hostages in 2014 – and since then, the mainstream U.S. media has only reported
the fuller story in a half-hearted and garbled way. [See
Consortiumnews.com’s “Hidden Origins of Syria’s Civil War.” ]
Reason for Conformity
The reason for this conformity among
journalists is simple: If you repeat the conventional wisdom, you might find
yourself with a lucrative gig as a big-shot foreign correspondent, a regular TV
talking head, or a “visiting scholar” at a major think tank. However, if you
don’t say what’s expected, your career prospects aren’t very bright.
Syrian President Bashar al-Assad.
If you somehow were to find yourself in a mainstream
setting and even mildly challenged the “group think,” you should expect to be
denounced as a fill-in-the-blank “apologist” or “stooge.” A well-paid
avatar of the conventional wisdom might even accuse you of being on the payroll
of the despised leader. And, you wouldn’t likely get invited back.
But the West’s demonization of foreign
“enemies” is not only an affront to free speech and meaningful democracy, it is
also dangerous because it empowers unscrupulous American and European leaders
to undertake violent and ill-considered actions that get lots of people killed
and that spread hatred against the West.
The most obvious recent example was the Iraq
War, which was justified by a barrage of false and misleading claims about Iraq
which were mostly swallowed whole by a passive and complicit Western press
corps.
Key to that disaster was the demonization of
Saddam Hussein, who was subjected to such unrelenting propaganda that almost no
one dared question the baseless charges hurled at him about hiding WMD and
collaborating with Al Qaeda. To do so would have made you a “Saddam apologist”
or worse.
The few who did dare raise their voices faced
accusations of treason or were subjected to character assassination. Yet, even
after their skepticism was vindicated as the pre-invasion accusations
collapsed, there was very little reappraisal. Most of the skeptics remained
marginalized and virtually everyone who got the WMD story wrong escaped
accountability.
No Accountability
For instance, Washington Post editorial-page
editor Fred Hiatt, who repeatedly reported Iraq’s WMD as “flat fact,” suffered
not a whit and remains in the same prestigious job, still enforcing one-sided
“group thinks” about “enemies.”
Carl Gershman, president of the National
Endowment for Democracy.
An example of how Hiatt and the Post continue to
play the same role as neocon propagandists was on display last year in an
editorial condemning Putin’s government for shutting down Russian activities of
the U.S.-funded National Endowment for Democracy and requiring foreign-funded
groups seeking to influence Russian politics to register as foreign agents.
In the Post’s editorial and a companion op-ed by NED President Carl
Gershman, you were led to believe that Putin was delusional, paranoid and “power
mad” in his concern that outside money funneled into non-governmental
organizations was a threat to Russian sovereignty.
However, the Post and Gershman left out a few
salient facts, such as the fact that NED is funded by the U.S. government and
was the brainchild of Ronald Reagan’s CIA Director William J. Casey in 1983 to
partially replace the CIA’s historic role in creating propaganda and political
fronts inside targeted nations.
Washington Post’s editorial page editor Fred
Hiatt.
Also missing was the fact that Gershman himself
announced in another Post op-ed that he saw Ukraine, prior to the 2014 coup, as
“the biggest prize” and a steppingstone toward achieving Putin’s ouster in Russia.
The Post also forgot to mention that the Russian law about “foreign agents” was
modeled after a U.S. statute entitled the Foreign Agent Registration Act. [See
Consortiumnews.com’s “Why Russia Shut Down NED Fronts.”]
All those points would have given the Post’s
readers a fuller and fairer understanding of why Putin and Russia acted as they
did, but that would have messed up the desired propaganda narrative seeking to
demonize Putin. The goal was not to inform the American people but to
manipulate them into a new Cold War hostility toward Russia.
We’ve seen a similar pattern with the U.S.
government’s “information warfare” around high-profile incidents. In the
“old days’ – at least when I arrived in Washington in the late 1970s – there
was much more skepticism among journalists about the official line from the
White House or State Department. Indeed, it was a point of pride among
journalists not to simply accept whatever the spokesmen or officials were
saying, but to check it out.
There was plenty of enough evidence – from the
Tonkin Gulf lies to the Watergate cover-up – to justify a critical examination
of government claims. But that tradition has been lost, too. Despite the costly
deceptions before the Iraq War, the Times, the Post and other mainstream
outlets simply accept whatever accusations the U.S. government hurls
against “enemies.” Beyond the gullibility, there is even hostility toward
those of us who insist on seeing real evidence.
Examples of this continuing pattern include the
acceptance of the U.S. government line on the sarin gas attack outside
Damascus, Syria, on Aug. 21, 2013, and the shoot-down of Malaysia Airlines
Flight 17 over eastern Ukraine on July 17, 2014. The first was blamed on
Syria’s Assad and the second on Russia’s Putin – quite convenient even
though U.S. officials refused to present any solid evidence to support their
claims.
Reasons for Doubt
In both cases, there were obvious reasons to
doubt the Official Story. Assad had just invited United Nations inspectors in
to examine what he claimed were rebel chemical attacks, so why would he pick
that time to launch a sarin attack just miles from where the inspectors were
staying? Putin was trying to maintain a low profile for Russian support to
Ukrainians resisting the U.S.-backed coup, but provision of a large,
sophisticated and powerful anti-aircraft battery lumbering around eastern
Ukraine would just have invited detection.
A photograph of a Russian BUK missile system
that U.S. Ambassador to Ukraine Geoffrey Pyatt published on Twitter in support
of a claim about Russia placing BUK missiles in eastern Ukraine, except that
the image appears to be an AP photo taken at an air show near Moscow two years
earlier.
Further, in both cases, there was dissent among
U.S. intelligence analysts, some of whom objected at least to the rushes
to judgment and offered different explanations for the incidents, pointing
the blame in other possible directions. The dissent caused the Obama
administration to resort to a new concoction called a “Government Assessment” –
essentially a propaganda document – rather than a classic “Intelligence
Assessment,” which would express the consensus views of the 16 intelligence
agencies and include areas of disagreement.
So, there were plenty of reasons for Washington
journalists to smell a rat or at least insist upon hard evidence to make the
case against Assad and Putin. Instead, given the demonized views of Assad and
Putin, mainstream journalists unanimously fell in line behind the Official
Story. They even ignored or buried evidence that undermined the government’s
tales.
Regarding the Syrian case, there was little
interest in the scientific discovery that the one sarin-laden rocket (recovered
by the U.N.) had a range of only about two kilometers (destroying Washington’s
claims about the Syrian government firing many rockets from eight or nine
kilometers away). [See Consortiumnews.com’s “Was Turkey Behind Syria-Sarin
Attack?”]
Regarding the MH-17 case, a blind eye was
turned to a Dutch intelligence report that concluded that there were several
operational Buk anti-aircraft missile batteries in eastern Ukraine but they
were all under the control of the Ukrainian military and that the rebels had no
weapon that could reach the 33,000-foot altitude where MH-17 was flying. [See
Consortiumnews.com’s “The Ever-Curiouser MH-17 Case.”]
Though both those cases remain open and one
cannot rule out new evidence emerging that bolsters the U.S. government’s
version of events, the fact that there are substantive reasons to doubt the
Official Story should be reflected in how the mainstream Western media deals
with these two sensitive issues, but the inconvenient facts are instead brushed
aside or ignored (much as happened with Iraq’s WMD).
In short, there has been a system-wide collapse
of the Western news media as a professional entity in dealing with foreign crises.
So, as the world plunges deeper into crises inside Syria and on Russia’s
border, the West’s citizens are going in almost blind without the eyes and ears
of independent journalists on the ground and with major news outlets delivering
incessant propaganda from Washington and other capitals.
Instead of facts, the West’s mainstream media
trafficks in demonization.
Investigative reporter Robert Parry broke many
of the Iran-Contra stories for The Associated Press and Newsweek in the 1980s.
You can buy his latest book, America’s Stolen Narrative, either
in print here or as an e-book (from Amazon andbarnesandnoble.com).
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