RSN Fundraising Banner
FB Share
Email This Page
add comment
Politics
Islamic State's Execution Videos Are Sly Propaganda Written in Blood Print
Wednesday, 03 September 2014 14:43

Crilly writes: "The condemned man kneels in an orange jumpsuit, just like before. Behind him stands an executioner dressed all in black, a leather holster over one shoulder. The killer's face is covered, and he holds a knife in his left hand, just like before. The message is clear: This is a ritual. We've done it before, and we'll do it again. And again."

Islamic State. (photo: Reuters)
Islamic State. (photo: Reuters)


Islamic State's Execution Videos Are Sly Propaganda Written in Blood

By Rob Crilly, Al Jazeera America

03 September 14

 

he condemned man kneels in an orange jumpsuit, just like before. Behind him stands an executioner dressed all in black, a leather holster over one shoulder. The killer’s face is covered, and he holds a knife in his left hand, just like before.

The message is clear: This is a ritual. We’ve done it before, and we’ll do it again. And again.

The video released on Tuesday by the Islamic State depicting the murder of American journalist Steven Sotloff bears startling similarities to the one released two weeks earlier that captured the last moments of James Foley, down to the London accent of the murderer.

He goes out of his way to make it clear that although U.S. and British intelligence agencies are using sophisticated voice recognition technology to trace his identity, he has returned to wield the knife.

“I’m back, Obama,” he tells the camera. “I’m back because of your arrogant foreign policy towards the Islamic State, because of your insistence in continuing your bombings in Amerli, Samarra and Mosul Dam, despite our serious warnings. You, Obama, have yet again, through your actions, killed yet another American citizen.”

A slick production

There will be plenty for the intelligence analysts to piece together as they search for clues that could lead to the identities of the perpetrators or their location.

But the video — which runs to two minutes and 47 seconds — is also dripping in symbolism and imagery promoting its underlying message: Here is an organization willing to taunt the commander in chief of the world’s most powerful military with a brazen act of symbolic violence designed to strike fear into their enemies and instill a sense of invincibility among followers and potential recruits.

It is a slickly produced affair, starting with a clip of President Barack Obama, then cutting to the stark desert location selected for the killing.

Despite the brutality of the act, this is not footage captured by a spectator on his wobbly cellphone; it’s the carefully constructed output of a professional propaganda unit.

Sotloff, like Foley before him, is shown wearing a clip-on microphone as he delivers the statement written for him by his captors condemning Obama’s foreign policy.

And the IS even uses some Hollywood techniques, cutting to a blank screen as the man with the knife sets to work.

‘Propaganda as deed’

The result, according to Shashank Joshi, senior research fellow at the Royal United Services Institute, a London think tank, is to turn a gruesome act into an invisible, implied horror, increasing its power as a tool of propaganda

“To see it clearly would make it almost unbelievable. It would numb us,” he said. “This way makes it an even more powerful form of propaganda as deed.”

The propaganda-of-the-deed concept has a long history in anarchist and revolutionary circles, using specific actions as exemplars for followers.

For the Islamic State, which has made beheading a staple of its authority, it also broadcasts a message to its enemies in Iraq and Syria. Who would want to go up against such a group, a group whose lust for bloodshed was too much even for Al-Qaeda’s leadership?

Focusing on the individual accentuates the impact, which spreads rapidly around the world on social media platforms — and when that individual is an American journalist, the gruesome act of propaganda inevitably crosses over from Twitter and Facebook onto mainstream TV news channels, exponentially multiplying the impact of the deed.

Fred Burton, vice president of intelligence at Stratfor, a consulting firm, said there was nothing new about such shock tactics.

“It is part of their theater, to take advantage of the news cycle, to show they are relevant,” he said.

In so doing, the Islamic State will fire up their supporters, bring in recruits and sow fear among their enemies, he added.

The IS also seeks to provoke more powerful enemies into rash actions as their publics demand that justice be done for a wanton act of violence against an innocent and that the perpetrators be prevented from repeating it. Thus the wave of pressure on Obama to come up with an Islamic State strategy on the fly, the complexities and challenges of combating the group in Syria and Iraq not withstanding. British Prime Minister David Cameron was forced to cut short his summer vacation to address the issue.

There was a time when terrorist outrages were met with promises that life would go on and that target societies would not allow small bands of extremists to disrupt business as usual. But saturation multiplatform media coverage and the legacy of 9/11 diminish the political space for such an approach.

And the perpetrators are well aware of this change. In the case of Sotloff, the deed — or more particularly, the manner in which it was conducted — carried another message.

Both Sotloff’s and Foley’s beheadings were preceded by a statement from the prisoner and a statement from the executioner. The similar poses and clothing were no coincidence.

The director — and there surely is a director — is showing that this is a ritual, following a carefully scripted quasi-judicial process, the twisted jurisprudence of the Islamic State, yet at the same time implying that other captives can be spared the same fate if the demands of the IS are heeded.

After Sotloff’s severed head is shown placed atop his body, the video ends by showing a British captive. That image comes with a warning to U.S. allies from the man in black to “back off and leave our people alone.”

The propaganda intent

But is that what the IS really wants? Does it want the U.S. and its allies to back off, or is the group’s real goal to provoke sufficient outrage to provoke Western powers to launch another war in a Muslim land and help sustain its warped vision of jihad?

The Foley video certainly provoked a huge reaction, being widely shared on social media and dominating the headlines of much of America’s print and electronic media. Suddenly the IS morphed in the national conversation from being just a particularly nasty player in a distant conflict to being an imminent threat to the United States.

Mindful of the propaganda intent of such videos, Twitter has deactivated accounts that disseminated images of Foley’s murder — sparking a debate about Internet freedom— and journalists have discussed whether viewing and discussing the video inadvertently does the publicity work that its makers intended.

As a result, the video of Sotloff’s beheading has been much more difficult to find on the Internet than Foley’s.

Even then, its very existence once again put Western leaders on the back foot as another American family grieves — and a British family waits for news.

e-max.it: your social media marketing partner
 
The Average Work Week Is Now 47 Hours Print
Wednesday, 03 September 2014 14:41

McGregor writes: "If there's anything good about Labor Day weekend being over, it's that we can all look forward to only four days the job. And that means the work week might actually just be the 40 hours it's supposed to be."

(illustration: OnlineMBA.com)
(illustration: OnlineMBA.com)


ALSO SEE: Wage Growth in the
U.S. is Stuck in the '70s

The Average Work Week Is Now 47 Hours

By Jena McGregor, The Washington Post

03 September 13

 

f there's anything good about Labor Day weekend being over, it's that we can all look forward to only four days the job. And that means the work week might actually just be the 40 hours it's supposed to be.

A report that Gallup released Friday showed the average time worked by full-time employees has ticked up to 46.7 hours a week, or nearly a full extra eight-hour day. Just 40 percent of Americans who work full time say they clock the standard 40 hours a week. Another 50 percent say they work more than that.

While that 46.7-hour average doesn't represent a significant jump, it is still the highest it has been since 2001-2002, when the average was 46.9 hours. Gallup's data is based on its annual Work and Education Survey, which combines data from 2013 and 2014 and includes 1,271 full-time employed adults.

 

 

The work week is even longer for salaried workers (an average of 49 hours), likely because employers don't have to worry about paying them overtime. According to the Gallup poll, half of salaried full-time employees said they work 50 or more hours each week.

If there's any comfort in this, it's that Gallup reminds us the long hours don't necessarily mean people are unhappy in their jobs. The firm, which also does consulting on employee engagement, reports their research also shows that "highly engaged workers who log well over 40 hours will still have better overall well-being than actively disengaged workers who clock out at 40 hours."

Yet given how miserably few people like their jobs (Gallup's own data has found that only 13 percent of people actually enjoy going to work), that's not exactly encouraging.

e-max.it: your social media marketing partner
 
99 Percent of Net Neutrality Comments Wanted Stronger FCC Rules Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=26886"><span class="small">Brian Fung, The Washington Post</span></a>   
Wednesday, 03 September 2014 14:40

Fung writes: "The Sunlight Foundation has just wrapped its weeks-long study of the more than 1 million initial comments filed to federal regulators on net neutrality. The top-line results are unsurprising, with less than 1 percent of 800,000 commenters calling for Internet providers to be regulated more lightly."

Tom Wheeler. (photo: Alex Wong/Getty Images)
Tom Wheeler. (photo: Alex Wong/Getty Images)


99 Percent of Net Neutrality Comments Wanted Stronger FCC Rules

By Brian Fung, The Washington Post

03 September 13

 

he Sunlight Foundation has just wrapped its weeks-long study of the more than 1 million initial comments filed to federal regulators on net neutrality. The top-line results are unsurprising, with less than 1 percent of 800,000 commenters calling for Internet providers to be regulated more lightly. That's consistent with a major push by consumer advocates to convince FCC Chairman Tom Wheeler to adopt stronger rules on ISPs.

The study, published in a blog post Tuesday, comes with some important caveats. Out of the 1.1 million comments the FCC said it received, Sunlight was only able to process 800,000 because some comments were mailed in to the agency and weren't available online when Sunlight began looking at the comments. Others came bundled together in packs that Sunlight had to break apart to make sense of.

Despite the incomplete analysis, the research is the most credible one we've seen to date and shows an overwhelming bias toward stronger regulation. About two-thirds of the studied comments called for reclassifying broadband providers under Title II of the Communications Act — a move that would allow the FCC to regulate ISPs more heavily but would likely provoke a strong political backlash.

The study sheds crucial new light on other important questions raised by the FCC in its proposed net neutrality rules, such as whether the policy should be applied to wireless carriers or the middle-mile of the Web, where companies send traffic to one another over the backbone. Even though these are slightly more esoteric issues, both promise to change the economics of the Web at a basic level. According to Jenn Topper, a Sunlight Foundation spokeswoman, the comments contained just 2,300 mentions of the wireless issue and 300 mentions of interconnection.

Another interesting finding: Some 60 percent of comments came in the form of letters pre-written by advocacy campaigns. This suggests a heavy role for "clicktivists," or members of the public who weighed in by doing nothing more than clicking a button in an e-mail or on a Web site.

Should this type of engagement count for anything? Here's one way of looking at it: If you took out all the form letters, you'd wind up with around half a million comments that people cared enough to write themselves. That's nowhere near the staggering 1.1 million figure reported by the FCC, and it could conceivably change the debate in a measurable way. Skeptics worry that clicktivism cheapens the business of civics; when the barrier to entry is so low, numbers alone fail to capture the strength of public opinion with any degree of accuracy.

But here's the case for clicktivism: The act of participation matters more than the reasons behind it. We have bigger problems on our hands if the only vote that counts is the one you feel strongly about. We would never force people to invalidate their votes for political candidates they weren't experts on. Why would we apply that standard to online politics?

The risk with this approach, of course, is that it turns politics into a battle over which issue advocacy organizations are better at nudging their followers into clicking on things. Then again, the fact that nobody got more than a handful of people to click on things supporting the other side says something in itself about net neutrality.

e-max.it: your social media marketing partner
 
FOCUS | Obama Makes Bushism the New Normal Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=29754"><span class="small">Dan Froomkin, The Intercept</span></a>   
Wednesday, 03 September 2014 13:00

Froomkin writes: "In a lot of ways, we're worse off today than we were under George W. Bush. Back then, Bush's extremist assault on civil liberties, human rights and other core American values in the name of fighting terror felt like an aberration."

George W. Bush hugging Barack Obama. (photo: Ron Edmonds/AP)
George W. Bush hugging Barack Obama. (photo: Ron Edmonds/AP)


Obama Makes Bushism the New Normal

By Dan Froomkin, The Intercept

03 September 14

 

n a lot of ways, we’re worse off today than we were under George W. Bush.

Back then, Bush’s extremist assault on civil liberties, human rights and other core American values in the name of fighting terror felt like an aberration.

The expectation was that those policies would be quickly reversed, discredited — and explicitly outlawed — once he was no longer in power.

Instead, under President Barack Obama, they’ve become institutionalized.

There will be no snapping back to a pre-Bush-era respect for basic human dignity and civil rights. Thanks to Obama, it’s going to be a hard, long fight.

In some cases, Obama has set even darker precedents than his predecessor. Massively invasive bulk surveillance of Americans and others has been expanded, not constrained. This president secretly condemns people to death without any checks or balances, and shrugs as his errant drones massacre innocent civilians. Whistleblowers and journalists who expose national security wrongdoing face unprecedented criminal prosecution.

In a few cases, Obama publicly distanced himself from Bush/Cheney excesses, but to little effect. He forswore torture, and promised to close the prison at Guantanamo Bay. But by actively covering up what happened in the U.S.’s torture chambers, and by refusing to hold the torturers and their political masters in any way accountable, he has done nothing to make sure that the next time a perceived emergency comes up, it won’t all happen again. And Gitmo, which he treated as a political rather than moral issue, is still very much open for business.

To his credit, Obama is not driven, like Bush and Dick Cheney were, to involve us in massive land wars. And he inherited a mess full of no-win scenarios. But he chose to extend a dead-end war in Afghanistan for two years — and 1,300 American lives — based on political optics rather than military strategy. And he is blind to reality in the Middle East; cleaving to the belief that airstrikes and fealty to Israel are viable long-term strategies, and ignoring the fact that his counter-terrorism policies actually create more terrorists than they destroy.

In retrospect, what the country needed was a radical break from the Bush/Cheney national security policies: A reestablishment of American moral integrity; a rejection of decision-making based on fear (of terrorism, or of political blowback); a reassertion of the international laws of war; and a national reckoning.

Instead, the hopes for any change are slim. Obama has eroded the credibility of any future promises of expansive reform in the area of national security. And, in any case, no such promises are forthcoming: Congressional response to the recent disclosures has been narrowly focused and prone to loopholes; the current leadership of both political parties — and their likeliest standard-bearers in 2016 — aren’t expressing any outrage at all.

As surely — if not as enthusiastically — as his predecessor, Obama has succumbed to the powerful systemic pressures that serve the needs of the military-intelligence-industrial complex. Secrecy is rampant. Politics drives policy. There is no accountability. Congressional and judicial oversight have become a bitter joke. And the elite press gets tighter and tighter with those to whom it should be adversarial.

That, in short, is where I find myself today, as I take up my blogging cudgel again, at The Intercept.

Those of you familiar with my White House Watch column on washingtonpost.com (it ran from early 2004 to mid-2009) may remember my attempt to organize the data stream about the White House, with intelligence and voice.

Reading copiously is one approach. Even in a flawed press climate, a pretty compelling picture emerges when you connect the dots. I’ll be doing that relentlessly, and with a particular focus on the areas that concern me the most. Among them: National security issues and whistleblowing; the collapse of oversight; media failure; political exploitation of fear; torture; the corrupting influence of money; and the moral bankruptcy of the major political parties.

I also want to spend a lot of time exploring issues related to privacy policy in an era of ubiquitous data. NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden’s primary and most admirable goal was to spark a national conversation about surveillance and privacy. But the conversations that have ensued have been relatively narrow and muted.

I’ll be doing original reporting — from the Snowden archive, and elsewhere. I’ll be asking lots of questions. And I intend to serve as a megaphone for sometimes insufficiently heard people who have great ideas — and who have a track record of being proven correct over time, rather than, say, consistently wrong. (Nominees welcome!)

And I’ll be depending on readers to do it all. There’s so much more to keep track of than there was even five years ago — heck, keeping abreast of Twitter lately has been nearly a full-time job — so I’ll need help finding the newest, the most intriguing, the best and the worst. There will be new ways for informed readers to make important contributions to the discussion.

Most significantly, this is a work in progress. The principal goal that seems to be emerging at First Look Media — the umbrella organization financed by Pierre Omidyar that publishes The Intercept — is experimentation in the pursuit of accountability.

If you have ideas on how I can do any of this better (from the micro to the macro; story topics to software) I want to hear them. Post a comment; email me at This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it ; or use our open-source whistleblower submission system, SecureDrop. I’ll try to be transparent about what I’m thinking, and what I’m doing.

The blog will have a handful of regular features — at least one of which will be familiar to White House Watch readers. Cartoon Watch will be back, because political cartoonists, as a group, remain our most incisive truth-tellers. I’ll also have an Open Book feature, to call attention to great accountability reporting books; and we’ll play around with the concept of Frequently Unanswered Questions (FUQ).

e-max.it: your social media marketing partner
 
FOCUS | Who's Telling the 'Big Lie' on Ukraine? Print
Wednesday, 03 September 2014 11:30

Parry writes: "If you wonder how the world could stumble into World War III - much as it did into World War I a century ago - all you need to do is look at the madness that has enveloped virtually the entire U.S. political/media structure over Ukraine where a false narrative of white hats vs. black hats took hold early and has proved impervious to facts or reason."

A woman in Eastern Ukraine stands guard. (photo: Pierre Crom/Le Journal/Sipa)
A woman in Eastern Ukraine stands guard. (photo: Pierre Crom/Le Journal/Sipa)


Who's Telling the 'Big Lie' on Ukraine?

By Robert Parry, Consortium News

03 September 13

 

f you wonder how the world could stumble into World War III – much as it did into World War I a century ago – all you need to do is look at the madness that has enveloped virtually the entire U.S. political/media structure over Ukraine where a false narrative of white hats vs. black hats took hold early and has proved impervious to facts or reason.

The original lie behind Official Washington’s latest “group think” was that Russian President Vladimir Putin instigated the crisis in Ukraine as part of some diabolical scheme to reclaim the territory of the defunct Soviet Union, including Estonia and other Baltic states. Though not a shred of U.S. intelligence supported this scenario, all the “smart people” of Washington just “knew” it to be true.

Yet, the once-acknowledged – though soon forgotten – reality was that the crisis was provoked last year by the European Union proposing an association agreement with Ukraine while U.S. neocons and other hawkish politicos and pundits envisioned using the Ukraine gambit as a way to undermine Putin inside Russia.

The plan was even announced by U.S. neocons such as National Endowment for Democracy President Carl Gershman who took to the op-ed page of the Washington Post nearly a year ago to call Ukraine “the biggest prize” and an important interim step toward eventually toppling Putin in Russia.

Gershman, whose NED is funded by the U.S. Congress, wrote: “Ukraine’s choice to join Europe will accelerate the demise of the ideology of Russian imperialism that Putin represents. … Russians, too, face a choice, and Putin may find himself on the losing end not just in the near abroad but within Russia itself.”

In other words, from the start, Putin was the target of the Ukraine initiative, not the instigator. But even if you choose to ignore Gershman’s clear intent, you would have to concoct a bizarre conspiracy theory to support the conventional wisdom about Putin’s grand plan.

To believe that Putin was indeed the mastermind of the crisis, you would have to think that he somehow arranged to have the EU offer the association agreement last year, then got the International Monetary Fund to attach such draconian “reforms” that Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych backed away from the deal.

Then, Putin had to organize mass demonstrations at Kiev’s Maidan square against Yanukovych while readying neo-Nazi militias to act as the muscle to finally overthrow the elected president and replace him with a regime dominated by far-right Ukrainian nationalists and U.S.-favored technocrats. Next, Putin had to get the new government to take provocative actions against ethnic Russians in the east, including threatening to outlaw Russian as an official language.

And throw into this storyline that Putin – all the while – was acting like he was trying to help Yanukovych defuse the crisis and even acquiesced to Yanukovych agreeing on Feb. 21 to accept an agreement brokered by three European countries calling for early Ukrainian elections that could vote him out of office. Instead, Putin was supposedly ordering neo-Nazi militias to oust Yanukovych in a Feb. 22 putsch, all the better to create the current crisis.

While such a fanciful scenario would make the most extreme conspiracy theorist blush, this narrative was embraced by prominent U.S. politicians, including ex-Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, and “journalists” from the New York Times to CNN. They all agreed that Putin was a madman on a mission of unchecked aggression against his neighbors with the goal of reconstituting the Russian Empire. Clinton even compared him to Adolf Hitler.

This founding false narrative was then embroidered by a consistent pattern of distorted U.S. reporting as the crisis unfolded. Indeed, for the past eight months, we have seen arguably the most one-sided coverage of a major international crisis in memory, although there were other crazed MSM stampedes, such as Iraq’s non-existent WMD in 2002-03, Iran’s supposed nuclear bomb project for most of the past decade, Libya’s “humanitarian crisis” of 2011, and Syria’s sarin gas attack in 2013.

But the hysteria over Ukraine – with U.S. officials and editorialists now trying to rally a NATO military response to Russia’s alleged “invasion” of Ukraine – raises the prospect of a nuclear confrontation that could end all life on the planet.

The ‘Big Lie’ of the ‘Big Lie’

This madness reached new heights with a Sept. 1 editorial in the neoconservative Washington Post, which led many of the earlier misguided stampedes and was famously wrong in asserting that Iraq’s concealment of WMD was a “flat fact.” In its new editorial, the Post reprised many of the key elements of the false Ukraine narrative in the Orwellian context of accusing Russia of deceiving its own people.

The “through-the-looking-glass” quality of the Post’s editorial was to tell the “Big Lie” while accusing Putin of telling the “Big Lie.” The editorial began with the original myth about the aggression waged by Putin whose “bitter resentment at the Soviet empire’s collapse metastasized into seething Russian nationalism. …

“In prosecuting his widening war in Ukraine, he has also resurrected the tyranny of the Big Lie, using state-controlled media to twist the truth so grotesquely that most Russians are in the dark — or profoundly misinformed — about events in their neighbor to the west. …

“In support of those Russian-sponsored militias in eastern Ukraine, now backed by growing ranks of Russian troops and weapons, Moscow has created a fantasy that plays on Russian victimization. By this rendering, the forces backing Ukraine’s government in Kiev are fascists and neo-Nazis, a portrayal that Mr. Putin personally advanced on Friday, when he likened the Ukrainian army’s attempts to regain its own territory to the Nazi siege of Leningrad in World War II, an appeal meant to inflame Russians’ already overheated nationalist emotions.”

The Post continued: “Against the extensive propaganda instruments available to Mr. Putin’s authoritarian regime, the West can promote a fair and factual version of events, but there’s little it can do to make ordinary Russians believe it. Even in a country with relatively unfettered access to the Internet, the monopolistic power of state-controlled media is a potent weapon in the hands of a tyrant.

“Mr. Putin’s Big Lie shows why it is important to support a free press where it still exists and outlets like Radio Free Europe that bring the truth to people who need it.”

Yet the truth is that the U.S. mainstream news media’s distortion of the Ukraine crisis is something that a real totalitarian could only dream about. Virtually absent from major U.S. news outlets – across the political spectrum – has been any significant effort to tell the other side of the story or to point out the many times when the West’s “fair and factual version of events” has been false or deceptive, starting with the issue of who started this crisis.

Blinded to Neo-Nazis

In another example, the Post and other mainstream U.S. outlets have ridiculed the idea that neo-Nazis played any significant role in the putsch that ousted Yanukovych on Feb. 22 or in the Kiev regime’s brutal offensive against the ethnic Russians of eastern Ukraine.

However, occasionally, the inconvenient truth has slipped through. For instance, shortly after the February coup, the BBC described how the neo-Nazis spearheaded the violent seizure of government buildings to drive Yanukovych from power and were then rewarded with four ministries in the regime that was cobbled together in the coup’s aftermath.

When ethnic Russians in the south and east resisted the edicts from the new powers in Kiev, some neo-Nazi militias were incorporated into the National Guard and dispatched to the front lines as storm troopers eager to fight and kill people whom some considered “Untermenschen” or sub-human.

Even the New York Times, which has been among the most egregious violators of journalistic ethics in covering the Ukraine crisis, took note of Kiev’s neo-Nazi militias carrying Nazi banners while leading attacks on eastern cities – albeit with this embarrassing reality consigned to the last three paragraphs of a long Times story on a different topic. [See Consortiumnews.com’s “NYT Discovers Ukraine’s Neo-Nazis at War.”]

Later, the conservative London Telegraph wrote a much more detailed story about how the Kiev regime had consciously recruited these dedicated storm troopers, who carried the Wolfsangel symbol favored by Hitler’s SS, to lead street fighting in eastern cities that were first softened up by army artillery. [See Consortiumnews.com’s “Ignoring Ukraine’s Neo-Nazi Storm Troopers.”]

You might think that unleashing Nazi storm troopers on a European population for the first time since World War II would be a big story – given how much coverage is given to far less significant eruptions of neo-Nazi sentiment in Europe – but this ugly reality in Ukraine disappeared quickly into the U.S. media’s memory hole. It didn’t fit the preferred good guy/bad guy narrative, with the Kiev regime the good guys and Putin the bad guy.

Now, the Washington Post has gone a step further dismissing Putin’s reference to the nasty violence inflicted by Kiev’s neo-Nazi battalions as part of Putin’s “Big Lie.” The Post is telling its readers that any reference to these neo-Nazis is just a “fantasy.”

Even more disturbing, the mainstream U.S. news media and Washington’s entire political class continue to ignore the Kiev government’s killing of thousands of ethnic Russians, including children and other non-combatants. The “responsibility to protect” crowd has suddenly lost its voice. Or, all the deaths are somehow blamed on Putin for supposedly having provoked the Ukraine crisis in the first place.

A Mysterious ‘Invasion’

And now there’s the curious case of Russia’s alleged “invasion” of Ukraine, another alarmist claim trumpeted by the Kiev regime and echoed by NATO hardliners and the MSM.

While I’m told that Russia did provide some light weapons to the rebels early in the struggle so they could defend themselves and their territory – and a number of Russian nationalists have crossed the border to join the fight – the claims of an overt “invasion” with tanks, artillery and truck convoys have been backed up by scant intelligence.

One former U.S. intelligence official who has examined the evidence said the intelligence to support the claims of a significant Russian invasion amounted to “virtually nothing.” Instead, it appears that the ethnic Russian rebels may have evolved into a more effective fighting force than many in the West thought. They are, after all, fighting on their home turf for their futures.

Concerned about the latest rush to judgment about the “invasion,” the Veteran Intelligence Professionals for Sanity, a group of former U.S. intelligence officials and analysts, took the unusual step of sending a memo to German Chancellor Angela Merkel warning her of a possible replay of the false claims that led to the Iraq War.

“You need to know,” the group wrote, “that accusations of a major Russian ‘invasion’ of Ukraine appear not to be supported by reliable intelligence. Rather, the ‘intelligence’ seems to be of the same dubious, politically ‘fixed’ kind used 12 years ago to ‘justify’ the U.S.-led attack on Iraq.”

But these doubts and concerns are not reflected in the Post’s editorial or other MSM accounts of the dangerous Ukraine crisis. Indeed, Americans who rely on these powerful news outlets for their information are as sheltered from reality as anyone living in a totalitarian society.

e-max.it: your social media marketing partner
 
<< Start < Prev 2731 2732 2733 2734 2735 2736 2737 2738 2739 2740 Next > End >>

Page 2733 of 3432

THE NEW STREAMLINED RSN LOGIN PROCESS: Register once, then login and you are ready to comment. All you need is a Username and a Password of your choosing and you are free to comment whenever you like! Welcome to the Reader Supported News community.

RSNRSN