The great Neil Clark writes:
The propaganda war waged against media that broadcast in the West
and that don’t toe the official pro-NATO line is unrelenting.
The latest salvo comes in the form of a paper entitled Russia’s
Information Warfare - Airbrushing Reality, authored by Ben Nimmo, a former NATO
Press Officer, and Dr Jonathan Eyal of the Royal United Services Institute.
The paper, submitted
recently to an inquiry of the House of Commons Defence Select
Committee, claims:
“Russia is conducting a coordinated but undeclared
information campaign against the United Kingdom, attempting to influence the
UK's domestic debate on key issues in order to produce an outcome of benefit to
Russia.”
Nimmo and Eyal say: “Russia's
information warfare in the UK can best be thought of as an attempt to airbrush
reality,” and that the “chief communicators of this airbrushed reality”
are RT and Sputnik.
The “Kremlin-funded” stations are accused of
giving disproportionate coverage to extremist politicians, experts of dubious
background, and mainstream politicians whose views chime with the Kremlin's
chosen narrative.
“The most notable and
frequently practised violation is the practice of allocating disproportionate
coverage to speakers who echo the Kremlin's preferred narratives on issues such
as Brexit (supported by the Kremlin), Scottish independence (supported),
Trident renewal (opposed) and the report on the murder of Alexander Litvinenko
(opposed),” the paper says.
Nimmo and Eyal further accuse RT of
giving “disproportionate coverage and air time” to UKIP, and affording
the democratic socialist Jeremy Corbyn “a prominence which eclipsed the
other three candidates” during last summer’s Labour Party leadership
campaign.
The report displays throughout what
my OpEdge colleague Bryan MacDonald has called “Russophrenia.” Russia
is both a “declining power” and one we all need to be scared of.
It
ridicules and denigrates what it terms “Kremlin-funded” media and its
“experts of dubious background.” At the same time, it tells us the
same media pose a threat to European security.
The report ends with a warning: “Notwithstanding
its often risible propaganda effort, Moscow has succeeded in getting across a
set of messages, which may well hobble European security and which need to be
urgently confronted.”
Where to begin in response?
The idea that RT and Sputnik pose a
threat to ‘European security’ is so laughable that if you were reading
Russia’s Information Warfare for the first time on April 1, you’ll
be forgiven for thinking it was an April Fool prank.
The threat to ‘European
security’ such as it is, doesn’t come from Russia or ‘Kremlin-funded’
media, but from the West’s own disastrous neocon foreign policies and the wars
of choice it waged in the Middle East.
It’s not Russian agents blowing up
innocent Europeans as they enter airports or sit at cafes, but members of a
terrorist death cult that Russia, together with the Syrian Army, has been
fighting successfully in Syria.
When it comes to Islamic State (IS, formerly
ISIS/ISIL), and the terror the group is bringing to Europe, we must never forget
the declassified secret US intelligence document from August 2012, which declared the “possibility
of establishing a declared or undeclared Salafist principality” in Syria
was “exactly what the supporting powers to the opposition want, in order to
isolate the Syrian regime.”
‘Russia’s Information Warfare’
purports there is a Kremlin plot to use RT and Sputnik “to influence the
UK's domestic debate on key issues in order to produce an outcome of benefit to
Russia.”
Well, if you’re a Western establishment conspiracy theorist you might
well think that.
Are we really expected to believe that Moscow pushes John
Wight to come on RT to discuss Trident renewal, or that Alex Salmond chooses to
appear on Going Underground at the behest of the Kremlin?
A more plausible explanation is surely that RT, as an
ambitious media enterprise keen to expand its market share, has been reacting
to audience demand.
It has seen a gap in the market and realized that voices
outside the ‘extreme center’, whether they’re right-wing libertarians, Scottish
or Welsh nationalists, genuine leftists and socialists, Greens, or
paleo-conservatives, don’t get much hearing in the UK, despite the fact that
these viewpoints are shared by large numbers of people.
I call RT ‘the zeitgeist
channel’ because more than any other station it’s cottoned on to the fact
that people across the West are fed up with long-established, discredited
elites and want real, meaningful change.
The phoney elite consensus, which
stands for more wars and ‘liberal interventionism’, more transference
of wealth to the one percent and more corporate welfare, most certainly does
not reflect where majority public opinion in the West is in 2016.
In Britain, the Iraq war, and the
blatant lies that were told to promote it, the bankers bailout, and the
revelations of paedophile sex scandals involving prominent and protected
Establishment figures, which had earlier been dismissed by media gatekeepers as
“conspiracy theories,” have all contributed to a new wave of
anti-elite populism.
Here’s the rub: established channels filled with cautious,
elite-friendly commissioning editors who are anxious not to rock the boat too
much, have taken much longer to react to this radical change in the public mood
than the new kid on the block - RT.
So while BBC’s flagship current
affairs programme Newsnight continues to wheel out discredited neocon grandees
and Blairite liberal interventionists in its discussions on Syria, as if the
Iraq war and the non-show of WMDs never happened (and its editors wonder why
its ratings continue
to fall), RT is putting forward pundits who actually exposed the conflict right
from the beginning.
In fact, on important foreign policy stories, it’s been the
Western broadcast media, which is invariably playing catch-up with RT.
The neocon-gatekeeper and officially approved ‘experts’ told us in 2011
and 2012 on neocon-gatekeeper, officially approved media networks that the
‘Official Enemy’, the government of President Assad, had minimal public support
in Syria and would imminently fall.
By contrast, it was the much-maligned “dodgy pundits” on RT
who were telling us that Assad wasn’t going anywhere anytime soon and that
radical jihadists and not “moderate rebels” were at the forefront of the rebellion against
him. Of course, such claims were dismissed at the time as “Kremlin propaganda.”
You can judge for yourself who was really “airbrushing
reality.”
RT is criticized for its choice of
experts and pundits, but it’s important to remember that booking people to
appear on television is a two-way process.
You can observe on Twitter (and its
not a very edifying spectacle) how people are urged to boycott RT, by the same
little gang of neocon gatekeepers who urged people to boycott Iran’s Press TV,
which was taken off air in the UK in 2012.
Regarding the “prominence”
given to Jeremy Corbyn, it shows how RT is the zeitgeist channel.
Corbyn was
THE big political news story in Britain in the summer of 2015: the 100-1
outsider who came from nowhere to run away with the Labour leadership contest.
RT’s coverage of the battle reflected Corbyn’s popularity, unlike other
channels that gave disproportionate airtime to his much less popular Blairite
critics.
RT’s coverage of UKIP can be seen
in the same light.
Whatever your opinion of them, Nigel Farage’s Eurosceptic
party did top the poll in the UK’s 2014 elections to the European Parliament -
the first time in over 100 years that a party other than the Conservatives or
Labour had done this.
The Guardian, quite rightly, called it a “political earthquake,” but
RT is criticized for reflecting this major shift in British politics in its
coverage.
The claim that “Kremlin-funded”
media is pushing Brexit because Dr Evil aka Vladimir Putin wants it, is one
that has been made regularly in recent weeks by pro-EU establishment figures,
but what actual evidence do we have for this assertion?
Again, isn’t it more likely that RT is giving Brexiters a
fair crack of the whip because around half of the British people want ‘Out’ of
the EU, and their views have not always been adequately heard on other
channels?
We’re being told in establishment
media that we must vote to “Remain”, because Putin wants us out, but what about
the US urging Britain to stay in, as the State
Department believes this suits US interests?
Why is this not deemed
controversial and an unwarranted interference in internal UK affairs?
And even if we agree that Brexit is in Russia’s interests,
why does this mean that it is not in Britain’s best interests too?
After all,
Russia wants to defeat IS in Syria. Does this by neocon logic mean that it’s
not in Britain’s interests too?
The charges against “Kremlin-funded”
media, made not only in Russia’s Information War - Airbrushing the Reality,
but also in other publications, don’t really stand up to any serious scrutiny.
It begs the question: why do they keep being made?
The problem is that the West’s
endless war lobby no longer has control of the narrative.
They worry that
ordinary members of the public, thanks to channels such as RT and Sputnik, are
being exposed to information that they really shouldn’t be seeing or hearing.
Information such as the Hillary Rodham Clinton emails, which
showed Google and Al-Jazeera collaborating with the US State Department in
pursuance of regime change in Syria, or the discussion between
the State Department’s Victoria Nuland and US Ambassador Geoffrey Pyatt over
who should and shouldn’t be in Ukraine’s new ‘democratic’ government.
These very important revelations, which reveal the hidden
agendas behind world events, were ignored by most major news networks - but not
by RT.
It’s worth noting (as Glenn
Greenwald did here) just who are the “most
vocal among the anti-RT crowd on the ground” and that there is a very
strong overlap between these people and supporters of the Iraq war.
Now, why
should those who cheer led for an illegal war 13 years ago (and indeed also
pushed for Western military ‘interventions’ in Libya and Syria), be so keen for
the authorities to act against “Kremlin-funded media”?
Is it really
because said media poses a threat to European security, or is it because today
they make it much harder to sell to the public “Iraq has WMDs” style
pro-war propaganda?
It’s hardly a three-pipe problem, is it?
The idea that RT’s neocon critics are concerned about ‘truth’ and ‘media
impartiality’ is surely the funniest thing since the ‘Cheeky Monkey’ sketch on
The Alan Partridge Show.
If we had had ‘truth’ and ‘media impartiality’ in
2003, and had the neocon ideologues been properly challenged about their false
WMD claims, then we wouldn’t have had the Iraq war.
The great crime of RT for Western
foreign policy hawks is not that it “airbrushes reality,” but that it
doesn’t.
And that explains why RT and its contributors are under constant
attack from the Imperial Truth Enforcers.
Mr Clark should be delighted an anti-NATO candidate endorsed by Pat Buchanan no less, is now running for the U.S. Presidency.
ReplyDeleteThe times, they are a changing....
He isn't. Ask yourself why not.
DeleteThe aged Buchanan is utterly out of touch with today's paleoconservatives on this. Their sheer disgust and revulsion at Donald Trump is total.
He is everything wrong with America and the Republican Party as far as they are concerned, money without class and all that. They don't like Cruz, either.
DeleteTry and imagine either of those two having a conversation with any of the paleo boys. I mean, about what? T S Eliot?
Delete