Tara McCormack writes:
It is extraordinary to look back at Western Cold War
propaganda; the scaremongering posters and films in which America is under
attack from a vast alien force abroad and undercover agents at home.
Very few
intelligent people today would accept this propaganda as an accurate
representation of reality.
It is easy to see in hindsight that much Cold War
propaganda was designed to create a climate of fear domestically and drum up
support for overseas militarism.
Nevertheless, one of the most
profoundly depressing things about the British press today is how uncritically
it parrots the official line when it comes to foreign policy.
Since the
Ukrainian crisis, the British media seem to have killed off their critical
faculties and burned the remains for good measure.
Even intelligent analysts
and commentators have forgotten the lessons of the Cold War and have so easily
slipped back into a pale imitation of a Cold War narrative.
When it comes to the coverage of
Russian bombing in Syria, however, the British media have surpassed themselves. The reporting on Russian airstrikes in Syria has ranged from the idiotic to the
dishonest to the frankly astonishing.
A headline in The Times a few weeks ago read ‘Putin defies the
West!’. Clearly, Putin didn’t get the memo that Russian foreign policy is now
controlled in Brussels and Washington.
Putin has been presented as a cross
between Professor Moriarty, Fu Manchu and Joseph Goebbels – a master strategist
and evil genius using smoke and mirrors to befuddle the West as he carries out
his inscrutable campaign. ‘What is he up to in Syria?’ is the constant refrain.
Recently, I debated journalist and former US diplomat James Rubin at the
Cheltenham Literature Festival, and he kept remarking on how inscrutable Putin
was. No wonder a kind of grudging admiration for Putin occasionally creeps into
the commentary.
The problem is that this is utter
nonsense.
First of all, consider the claim that we have no idea what Russia is
up to. This has been a running theme since the Ukraine crisis, but this is an
outright lie. Russia’s motives in Ukraine and in Syria are well known.
They are
well known not because we’ve got a team of Kremlinologists scrutinising Russia’s
obscure statements and mysterious behaviour, but because, as a representative
of his government, President Putin has consistently told the West his intentions.
Now, we may not agree with Russia’s motives, but that is an
entirely different point. The fact of the matter is that Putin is not hiding
his intentions. And yet the media have never reported on it.
Noam Chomsky once
argued that, in a democracy, things are often hidden in plain sight – this is a
very good example.
Similarly, it is simply not true that
we do not know what Russia’s aims are in Syria.
Russia is a long-term supporter
of Syrian leader Bashar al-Assad, but is by no means averse to a post-Assad
Syria; its main aim is to stop Syria from collapsing.
This has all been
openly stated by Putin – at the UN, for example, that little known secret
forum, in an interview with CBS.
We may not agree with it, but to present
Russian intervention as some kind of fiendish, unfathomable plot is simply
laughable.
What’s more, consider the heated
debate about the impact of Russia’s intervention on Syria. Who knew the British
media were so concerned about the malign effects of bombing a foreign
country?
You certainly wouldn’t have guessed it from the coverage of the
US and its allies’ own year-long bombardment of Syria.
Nor do you get this
impression from the media discussion of the British government’s desire to join
in on the Western bombing.
The British media have completely
ignored the disastrous effects of Western intervention in Syria.
The West has
been attempting to bomb Islamic State positions while, at the same time,
supporting jihadi groups such as the al-Nusra Front.
Our new ‘allies’ in Syria
have links to al-Qaeda. Have we totally taken leave of our senses? More to the
point, why isn’t this frontpage news?
And let’s not forget the US’s $500million
plan to train up fighters – of whom about four or five remain. The Free Syrian
Army is more or less a fiction, with little existence outside of the
imagination of the State Department and the Foreign Office.
At the same time,
the West is allowing one of the most disgusting and shameful acts of this
crisis to go on unchallenged – that is, Turkey’s bombing of the truly heroic
Kurdish forces, the only coherent, pro-West political and military force in
Syria and Iraq that is attacking IS.
Where is all the coverage of the
utterly useless, dishonest and misguided Western campaign in Syria? If this had
a tenth of the coverage given to Russian bombing I think the public and
political discussion in Britain would be very different.
The British media
present Russian political elites as out of control and crazy, but anyone
looking at Western foreign policy over the past 20 years would see that the
West has been the single most destabilising force in world affairs since the
Cold War.
We hear an awful lot about the biases of Russian state media, but the
Western media have little self-awareness of their own failings.
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