Hypocrisy of Russia-Did-It Stories Is Hard
to Stomach
By
Janine Jackson
December 16, 2016 "Information
Clearing House"
-
"FAIR"
- It is, of course, worth knowing what
involvement any other country might have had
in the US election, but elite media’s
consumption with the Russia-did-it storyline
so far is discouraging to say the least.
The Intercept‘s
Sam Biddle (12/14/16)
has a breakdown of what public evidence
there is that Russia was behind hacks of DNC
email accounts. He concludes that while it’s
plausible that Russians or even Russia was
involved, it’s a very long way from proven,
different agencies dispute it, all the
sources we’re reading are anonymous and the
assessments themselves are secret.
It
should go without saying that the
repercussions of such an accusation are
serious. As Biddle writes:
What we’re looking at now is the
distinct possibility that the United
States will consider military
retaliation (digital or otherwise)
against Russia, based on nothing but
private sector consultants and secret
intelligence agency notes. If you care
about the country enough to be angry at
the prospect of election-meddling, you
should be terrified of the prospect of
military tensions with Russia based on
hidden evidence.
Apart from the slipperiness between the
possible and the proven, the gap between the
confidence of the headlines and the caution
buried deep inside, it’s weird to see media
skip over the story’s center: that the
alleged meddling consisted of revealing true
information about the Democratic Party and
Clinton campaign. As journalist Bob Parry (Consortium
News,
11/18/16) notes, a sort of hysteria in
official Washington is now clumsily
conflating such real—if embarrassing—news
with the phenomenon of “fake news,” though
reporting has tracked that phenomenon not to
the Kremlin but to
Millennials in Macedonia, for example,
who figured out how to make money with crazy
click-bait stories.
But
in back of it all, what makes the umbrage of
elite media so hard to stomach is the
hypocrisy. This is, after all, the same
elite media that supports outsider-induced
“regime change” anywhere and everywhere they
see an official enemy, from
Iraq to
Honduras to
Libya to
Syria—and wait, what’s this? A cover
from Time magazine (7/15/96):
a chipper Boris Yeltsin holding an American
flag, and the line “Yanks to the Rescue! The
Secret Story of How American Advisers Helped
Yeltsin Win.” You can make “one law for me,
another for thee” your credo, but you can’t
be too surprised when others are
unimpressed.
Whatever story there is to be told about
Russia and the 2016 election, corporate
media have squandered the credibility it
would take to tell it.
Janine Jackson is the program director
of FAIR and the producer and host of
CounterSpin.
©
2016 Fairness and Accuracy In Reporting
(FAIR)