Blacklist
Promoted by the Washington Post Has Apparent Ties to
Ukrainian Fascism and CIA Spying
Digging deeper into the PropOrNot controversy.
By Mark Ames
December 09,
2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- "AlterNet"
-
Last month, the Washington Post gave a glowing
front-page boost to an anonymous online blacklist of
hundreds of American websites, from marginal conspiracy
sites to flagship libertarian and progressive
publications. As Max Blumenthal reported for
AlterNet, the anonymous website argued that all of them
should be investigated by the federal government and
potentially prosecuted under the Espionage Act as
Russian spies, for wittingly or unwittingly spreading
Russian propaganda.
My own
satirical newspaper was raided
and closed down by the Kremlin in 2008, on charges
of “extremism”—akin to terrorism—which I took seriously
enough to leave for home for good. What the Washington
Post did in boosting an anonymous blacklist of American
journalists accused of criminal treason is one of the
sleaziest, and most disturbing (in a very familiar
Kremlin way) things I’ve seen in this country since I
fled for home. The WaPo is essentially an arm of the
American deep state; its owner, Jeff Bezos, is one
of the
three richest Americans, worth $67 billion, and his
cash cow, Amazon, is a major contractor with the
Central Intelligence Agency. In other words, this is
as close to an official US government blacklist of
journalists as we’ve seen—a dark ominous warning before
they take the next steps.
It’s now been a
few days, and the shock and disgust is turning to
questions about how to fight back—and who we should be
fighting against. Who were the Washington Post’s sources
for their journalism blacklist?
Smearing a progressive journalism icon
The WaPo smear
was authored by tech reporter Craig Timberg, a former
national security editor who displayed
embarrassing deference to the head of the world’s
largest private surveillance operation, billionaire Eric
Schmidt—in contrast to his treatment of his journalism
colleagues. There’s little in Timberg’s history to
suggest he’d lead one of the ugliest public smears of
his colleagues in decades. Timberg’s father, a
successful mainstream journalist who
recently died, wrote
hagiographies on his Naval Academy comrades
including
John McCain, the Senate’s leading Russophobic hawk,
and three Iran-Contra conspirators—Oliver North, John
Poindexter, and Robert McFarlane, whose crimes Timberg
blames on their love of country and sacrifices in
Vietnam.
WaPo’s key
source was an anonymous online group calling itself
PropOrNot (i.e., “Propaganda Or Not”). It was here that
the blacklist of American journalists allegedly working
with the Kremlin was posted. The Washington Post cited
PropOrNot as a credible source, and granted them the
right to anonymously accuse major American news outlets
of treason, recommending that the government investigate
and prosecute them under the Espionage Act for spreading
Russian propaganda.
Featured
alongside those anonymously accused of treason by
PropOrNot, among a long list of marginal conspiracy
sites and major news hubs, is Truthdig. This news and
opinion site was co-founded by Zuade Kaufman and the
veteran journalist Robert Scheer, who is a professor of
USC’s Annenberg School for Communication and Journalism
and former columnist for the LA Times. It would not be
the first time Scheer has come under attack from dark
forces. In the mid-late 1960s, Scheer made his fame as
editor and reporter for Ramparts, the fearless
investigative magazine that changed American journalism.
One of the biggest bombshell stories that Scheer’s
magazine exposed was the CIA’s
covert funding of the National Student Association,
then America’s largest college student organization,
which had chapters on 400 campuses and a major presence
internationally.
The CIA was not
pleased with Scheer’s magazine’s work, and shortly
afterwards launched a top-secret and
illegal domestic spying campaign against Scheer and
Ramparts, believing that they must be a Russian
Communist front. A secret team of CIA operatives—kept
secret even from the rest of Langley, the operation was
so blatantly illegal—spied on Scheer and his Ramparts
colleagues, dug through Ramparts’ funders lives and
harassed some of them into ditching the magazine, but in
all of that they couldn’t find a single piece of
evidence linking Scheer’s magazine to Kremlin agents.
This secret illegal CIA investigation into Scheer’s
magazine expanded its domestic spying project,
code-named MH-CHAOS, that grew into a monster targeting
hundreds of thousands of Americans, only to be
exposed by Seymour Hersh in late 1974, leading to
the creation of the Church Committee hearings and calls
by Congress for the abolition of the Central
Intelligence Agency.
It’s one of the
dark ugly ironies that 50 years later, Scheer has been
anonymously accused of working for Russian spies, only
this time the accusers have the full cooperation of the
Washington Post’s front page.
PropOrNot’s Ukrainian fascist salute
Still the
question lingers: Who is behind PropOrNot? Who are they?
We may have to await the defamation lawsuits that are
almost certainly coming from those smeared by the Post
and by PropOrNot. Their description sounds like the
“About” tab on any number of Washington front groups
that journalists and researchers are used to coming
across:
“PropOrNot is
an independent team of concerned American citizens with
a wide range of backgrounds and expertise, including
professional experience in computer science, statistics,
public policy, and national security affairs.”
The only
specific clues given were an admission that at least one
of its members with access to its Twitter handle is
“Ukrainian-American”. They had given this away in a
handful of early Ukrainian-language tweets, parroting
Ukrainian ultranationalist slogans, before the group was
known.
One PropOrNot
tweet, dated November 17, invokes a 1940s Ukrainian
fascist salute “Heroiam
Slava!!” to cheer a news item on Ukrainian hackers
fighting Russians. The phrase means “Glory to the
heroes” and it was formally introduced by the fascist
Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists (OUN) at their
March-April 1941 congress in Nazi occupied Cracow, as
they prepared to serve as Nazi auxiliaries in Operation
Barbarossa. As historian Grzgorz Rossoliński-Liebe,
author of the
definitive biography on Ukraine’s wartime fascist
leader and
Nazi collaborator Stepan Bandera,
explained:
“the OUN-B
introduced another Ukrainian fascist salute at the
Second Great Congress of the Ukrainian Nationalists in
Cracow in March and April 1941. This was the most
popular Ukrainian fascist salute and had to be performed
according to the instructions of the OUN-B leadership by
raising the right arm ‘slightly to the right, slightly
above the peak of the head’ while calling ‘Glory to
Ukraine!’ (Slava Ukraїni!) and responding ‘Glory to the
Heroes!’ (Heroiam Slava!).”
Two months
after formalizing this salute, Nazi forces allowed
Bandera’s Ukrainian fascists to briefly take control
of Lvov, at the time a predominantly Jewish and
Polish city—whereupon the Ukrainian “patriots” murdered,
tortured and raped thousands
of Jews, in one of the most barbaric and
bloodiest pogroms ever.
Since the 2014
Maidan Revolution brought Ukrainian
neo-fascists back into the
highest rungs of power, Ukraine’s Nazi collaborators
and wartime fascists have been
rehabilitated as
heroes, with major highways and roads
named after them, and public commemorations. The
speaker of Ukraine’s parliament,
Andriy Parubiy, founded Ukraine’s
neo-Nazi “Social-National Party of Ukraine” and
published a white supremacist manifesto, “View
From the Right” featuring the parliament speaker in
full neo-Nazi uniform in front of fascist flags with the
Nazi Wolfsangel symbol. Ukraine’s powerful Interior
Minister, Arsen Avakov,
sponsors several ultranationalist and neo-Nazi
militia groups like the
Azov Battalion, and last month he helped appoint
another
neo-Nazi, Vadym
Troyan, as
head of Ukraine’s National Police. (Earlier this
year, when Troyan was still police chief of the capital
Kiev, he was widely accused of
having ordered an illegal surveillance operation on
investigative journalist Pavel Sheremet just before his assassination
by car bomb.)
A
Ukrainian intelligence service blacklist as PropOrNot’s
model
Since
coming to power in the 2014 Maidan Revolution, Ukraine’s
US-backed regime has waged an increasingly surreal war
on journalists who don’t toe the Ukrainian
ultranationalist line, and against treacherous Kremlin
propagandists, real and imagined. Two years ago, Ukraine
established a
“Ministry of Truth”. This year the war has gone from
surreal paranoia to an increasingly
deadly kind of
“terror.”
One of the more
frightening policies enacted by the current
oligarch-nationalist regime in Kiev is an online
blacklist of journalists accused of collaborating
with pro-Russian “terrorists.” The
website, “Myrotvorets” or
“Peacemaker”—was set up by Ukrainian hackers working
with state intelligence and police, all of which tend to
share the same ultranationalist ideologies as Parubiy
and the newly-appointed neo-Nazi chief of the National
Police.
Condemned by the
Committee to Protect Journalists and numerous news
organizations in the West and in Ukraine, the online
blacklist includes the names and personal private
information on some 4,500
journalists, including several western
journalists and Ukrainians working for western
media. The website is designed to frighten and muzzle
journalists from reporting anything but the
pro-nationalist party line, and it has the backing of
government officials, spies and police—including the SBU
(Ukraine’s successor to the KGB), the powerful Interior
Minister Avakov and his notorious far-right deputy,
Anton Geraschenko.
Ukraine’s
journalist blacklist website—operated by Ukrainian
hackers working with state intelligence—led to a rash of
death threats against the doxxed journalists, whose
email addresses, phone numbers and other private
information was posted anonymously to the website. Many
of these threats came with the wartime Ukrainian fascist
salute: “Slava Ukraini!” [Glory to Ukraine!] So when
PropOrNot’s anonymous “researchers” reveal only their
Ukrainian(s) identity, it’s hard not to think about the
spy-linked hackers who posted the deadly “Myrotvorets”
blacklist of “treasonous” journalists.
The
DNC’s Ukrainian ultra-nationalist researcher cries
treason
Because the
PropOrNot blacklist of American journalist “traitors” is
anonymous, and the Washington Post front-page article
protects their anonymity, we can only speculate on their
identity with what little information they’ve given us.
And that little bit of information reveals only a
Ukrainian ultranationalist thread—the salute, the same
obsessively violent paranoia towards Russia, and towards
journalists, who in the eyes of Ukrainian nationalists
have always been dupes and stooges, if not outright
collaborators, of Russian evil.
One of the key
media sources who blamed the DNC hacks on Russia,
ramping up fears of crypto-Putinist infiltration, is a
Ukrainian-American lobbyist working for the DNC. She is
Alexandra Chalupa—described as the head of the
Democratic National Committee’s opposition research on
Russia and on Trump, and founder and president of the
Ukrainian lobby group “US
United With Ukraine Coalition”, which lobbied hard
to pass a 2014 bill increasing loans and military aid to
Ukraine, imposing sanctions on Russians, and tightly
aligning US and Ukraine geostrategic interests.
In October of
this year, Yahoo News named Chalupa one
of “16
People Who Shaped the 2016 Election” for her role in
pinning the DNC leaks on Russian hackers, and for making
the case that the Trump campaign was under Kremlin
control. “As a Democratic Party consultant and proud
Ukrainian-American, Alexandra Chalupa was outraged last
spring when Donald Trump named Paul Manafort as his
campaign manager,” the Yahoo profile began. “As she saw
it, Manafort was a key figure in advancing Russian
President Vladimir Putin’s agenda inside her ancestral
homeland — and she was determined to expose it.”
Chalupa worked
with veteran reporter Michael Isikoff of Yahoo News to
publicize her opposition research on Trump, Russia and
Paul Manafort, as well as her many Ukrainian sources. In
one
leaked DNC email earlier this year, Chalupa boasts
to DNC Communications Director Luis Miranda that she
brought Isikoff to a US-government sponsored Washington
event featuring 68 Ukrainian journalists, where Chalupa
was invited “to speak specifically about Paul Manafort.”
In turn, Isikoff named her as the
key inside source “proving” that the Russians were
behind the hacks, and that Trump’s campaign was under
the spell of Kremlin spies and sorcerers.
(In 2008, when I
broke the story about the Manafort-Kremlin ties in
The Nation with Ari Berman, I did not go on to to accuse
him or John McCain, whose campaign was being run by
Manafort’s partner, of being Manchurian Candidates under
the spell of Vladimir Putin. Because they weren’t;
instead, they were sleazy, corrupt, hypocritical
politicians who followed money and power rather than
principle. A media hack feeding frenzy turned Manafort
from what he was—a sleazy scumbag—into a
fantastical Kremlin mole, forcing Manafort to resign
from the Trump campaign, thanks in part to kompromat
material
leaked by the Ukrainian SBU, successor to the KGB.)
Meanwhile,
Chalupa’s Twitter feed went wild accusing Trump of
treason—a crime that carries the death penalty. Along
with well over 100 tweets hashtagged
#TreasonousTrump Chalupa repeatedly asked powerful
government officials and bodies like the
Department of Justice to investigate Trump for the
capital crime of treason. In the weeks since the
election, Chalupa has repeatedly accused both
the Trump campaign and Russia of rigging the elections,
demanding further investigations. According to The
Guardian, Chalupa recently sent a report to Congress
proving Russian hacked into the vote count, hoping to
initiate a Congressional investigation. In an interview
with Gothamist,
Chalupa described alleged Russian interference in the
election result as “an act of war.”
To be clear, I
am not arguing that Chalupa is behind PropOrNot. But it
is important to provide context to the boasts by
PropOrNot about its Ukrainian nationalist links—within
the larger context of the Clinton campaign’s
anti-Kremlin hysteria, which crossed the line into Cold
War xenophobia time and time again, an anti-Russian
xenophobia shared by Clinton’s Ukrainian nationalist
allies. To me, it looks like a classic case of blowback:
A hyper-nationalist group whose extremism happens to be
useful to American geopolitical ambitions, and is
therefore nurtured to create problems for our
competitor. Indeed, the US has cultivated extreme
Ukrainian nationalists as
proxies for
decades, since the Cold War began.
As
investigative journalist Russ Bellant documented in his
classic exposé, “Old Nazis, New Right,” Ukrainian Nazi
collaborators were brought into the United States and
weaponized for use against Russia during the Cold
War, despite whatever role they may have played in the
Holocaust and in the mass slaughter of Ukraine’s ethnic
Poles. After spending so many years encouraging extreme
Ukrainian nationalism, it’s no surprise that the whole
policy is beginning to blow back.
WaPo’s
other source: A loony, far-right eugenicist think tank
Besides
PropOrNot, the Washington Post’s Craig Timberg relied on
only one other source to demonstrate the influence of
Russian propaganda: the Foreign Policy Research
Institute (FPRI), whose “fellow” Clint Watts is cited by
name, along with a report he co-authored, “Trolling for
Trump: How Russia is Trying to Destroy Our Democracy.”
Somehow, in the
pushback and outrage over the WaPo blacklist story, the
FPRI has managed to fly under the radar. So much so that
when Fortune’s Matthew Ingram correctly described the
FPRI as “proponents of the Cold War” he was compelled to
issue a clarification, changing the description to “a
conservative think tank known for its hawkish stance on
relations between the US and Russia.”
In fact,
historically the Foreign Policy Research Institute has
been one of the looniest (and spookiest) extreme-right
think tanks since the early Cold War days, promoting
“winnable” nuclear war, maximum confrontation with
Russia, and attacking anti-colonialism as dangerously
unworkable. One of the key brains behind the FPRI’s
extreme-right Cold War views also happened to be a
former Austrian fascist official who, upon emigrating to
America, became one of this country’s leading proponents
of racial eugenics and white supremacy.
The Foreign
Policy Research Institute was founded by Robert
Strausz-Hupé and set up on the University of
Pennsylvania campus, with backing from the Vick’s
chemical company, funder of numerous reactionary
rightwing causes since the New Deal began. And, as the
New York Times
reported, the FPRI also was covertly
funded by the CIA, a revelation that would lead to
student protests and the FPRI removing itself from
Penn’s campus in 1970.
The FPRI’s
founder, Strausz-Hupe, emigrated to the US from Austria
in the 1920s. In the early Cold War years, he became
known as an advocate of aggressive confrontation with
the Soviet Union, openly advocating total nuclear war
rather than anything like surrender or cohabitation. In
a 1961 treatise “A Forward Strategy for America” that
Strausz-Hupe co-authored with his frequent FPRI
collaborator, the former Austrian fascist official and
racial eugenics advocate Stefan Possony,
they wrote:
“Even at a
moment when the United States faces defeat because, for
example, Europe, Asia and Africa have fallen to
communist domination, a sudden nuclear attack against
the Soviet Union could at least avenge the disaster and
deprive the opponent of the ultimate triumph. While such
a reversal at the last moment almost certainly would
result in severe American casualties, it might still
nullify all previous Soviet conquests.”
But it was
Russian propaganda that most concerned Strausz-Hupe and
his FPRI. In 1959, for example, he published a
three-page spread in the New York Times, headlined
“Why Russia Is Ahead in Propaganda,” that has odd
echoes of last month’s paranoid Washington Post article
alleging a vast conspiracy of American journalists
secretly poisoning the public’s mind with Russian
propaganda. The article argued, as
many do today, that America and the West were
dangerously behind the Russians in the propaganda arms
race—and dangerously disadvantaged by our open and free
society, where propaganda is allegedly sniffed out by
our ever-vigilant and fearless media.
The only way
for America to protect itself from Russian propaganda,
he wrote, was to massively increase its propaganda
warfare budgets, and close the alleged “propaganda
gap”—echoing again the same solutions being
peddled today in
Washington and London:
“[W]ithin the
limitations of our society, we can take steps to expand
and improve our existing programs.
“These programs
have been far from generous. It has been estimated, for
example, that the Communists in one single propaganda
offensive—the germ-warfare campaign during the Korean
conflict—spent nearly as much as the entire annual
allocation to the United States Information Agency. We
should increase the austere budget of the U.S.I.A. We
should give our information specialists a greater voice
in policy-making councils. We should attempt to
coordinate more fully and effectively the propaganda
programs of the Western alliance.”
A few years
later, the FPRI’s Strausz-Hupe published a deranged
attack in the New York Times against Stanley
Kubrick’s film Dr. Strangelove, calling it “the most
vicious attack to date launched by way of our mass media
against the American military profession”. The FPRI’s
founding director went further, accusing Kubrick of
being, if not a conscious Russian agent of propaganda,
then a Soviet dupe undermining American democracy and
stability—the same sort of paranoid accusations that
FPRI is leveling again today. As Strausz-Hupe wrote:
“Anyone who
cares to scan the Soviet press and the Communist press
in other lands will note that it is one of the principal
Communist objectives to drive a wedge between the
American people and their military leaders. Mr.
Kubrick’s creation certainly serves this purpose.”
Reading that
then, knowing how the Soviet Union eventually collapsed
on itself without firing a shot—and seeing the same
paranoid, sleazy lies being peddled again today, one is
dumbstruck by just how stagnant our intellectual culture
is. We’ve never thawed ourselves out from our Cold War
pathologies; we’re still trapped in the same structures
that nurture these pathologies. Too many careers and
salaries depend on it...
But
Strausz-Hupe was the voice of reason compared to his
chief collaborator and co-author at the Foreign Policy
Research Institute, Stefan Possony. He too was an
Austrian emigre, although Possony didn’t leave his
homeland until 1938. Before then he served in the
Austrofascist governments of both Dollfuss and
Schuschnigg, but left after the Nazi Anschluss deposed
the native fascists and installed Hitler’s puppets in
their place.
Possony was a
director and fellow at the Foreign Policy Research
Institute, and according to historian Robert Vitalis’
recent book “White World Power” [Cornell University
Press], Possony co-authored nearly all of the FPRI’s
policy research material until he moved to Stanford’s
Hoover Institute in 1961, where he helped align the two
institutions. Possony continued publishing in the FPRI’s
journal Orbis throughout the 1960s and beyond. He was
also throughout this time one of the most prolific
contributors to Mankind Quarterly, the leading race
eugenics journal in the days before The Bell Curve—and
co-author race eugenics books with white supremacist
Nathaniel Weyl.
So even as he
was publishing aggressive Cold War propaganda for the
Foreign Policy Research Institute, Possony wrote elsewhere
that the “average African Negro functions as does the
European after a leucotomy [prefrontal lobotomy]
operation” In other articles, Possony described the
people of “the Middle East, Latin America and Southeast
Asia” as “genetically unpromising“ because they “lack
the innate brain power required for mastery and
operation of the tools of modern civilization[.] . . .”
For this reason he and Strausz-Hupe opposed the early
Cold War policy of de-colonization: “The accretion of
lethal power in the hands of nation states dominated by
populations incapable of rational thought could be a
harbinger of total disaster.” Instead, they argued that
white colonialism benefited the natives and raised them
up; western critics of colonialism, they
argued, were merely “fashionable” dupes who would be
responsible for a “genocide” of local whites.
As late as a
1974 article in Mankind
Quarterly, Possony was defending race eugenics loon
William Shockley’s theories on the inferiority of dark
skinned races, which he argued could prove that spending
money on welfare was in fact a “waste” since there was
no way to improve genetically inferior races. Around the
same time, Possony emerged as the earliest and most
effective advocate of the “Star Wars” anti-ballistic
missile system adopted by President Reagan. The way
Possony saw it, the Star Wars weapon was entirely
offensive, and would give the United States sufficient
first strike capability to win a nuclear war with
Russia.
It was this
history, and a 1967 New York Times exposé on how the
Foreign Policy Research Institute had been covertly
funded by the CIA, that led US Senator Fulbright in 1969
to reject Nixon’s nomination of Strausz-Hupe as
ambassador to Morocco. Fulbright denounced Strausz-Hupe
as a Cold War extremist and a threat to world peace:
''the very epitome of a hard-line, no compromise.”
However, he gave in a couple of years later when Nixon
named him to the post of ambassador in Sri Lanka.
Today, the
Foreign Policy Research Institute proudly
honors its founder Strausz-Hupe, and honors his
legacy with blacklists of allegedly treasonous
journalists and allegedly all-powerful Russian
propaganda threatening our freedoms.
This is the
world the Washington Post is bringing back to its front
pages. And the timing is incredible—as if Bezos’ rag has
taken upon itself to soften up the American media before
Trump moves in for the kill. And it’s all being done in
the name of fighting “fake news” ...and fascism.
The views
expressed in this article are the author's own and do
not necessarily reflect Information Clearing House
editorial policy. |