Clinton’s
Defeat and the ‘Fake News’ Conspiracy
By Jonathan Cook
December 19,
2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- There is an astounding double standard being
applied to the US presidential election result.
A few weeks ago
the corporate media were appalled that Donald Trump
demurred on whether he would accept the vote if it went
against him. It was proof of his anti-democratic,
authoritarian instincts.
But now he has
won, the same media outlets are cheerleading the
establishment’s full-frontal assault on the legitimacy
of a Trump presidency. That campaign is being headed by
the failed candidate, Hillary Clinton, after a lengthy
softening-up operation by US intelligence agencies, led
by the CIA.
According to
the prevailing claim, Russian president Vladimir Putin
stole the election on behalf of Trump (apparently by
resorting to the US playbook on psy-ops). Trump is not
truly a US president, it seems. He’s Russia’s placeman
in the White House – a Moscovian candidate.
An assessment
of the losing side’s claims should be considered
separately from the issue of who won the popular
mandate. It is irrelevant that Clinton gained more votes
than Trump. For good or bad, the US has operated an
inherently unrepresentative electoral college since the
18th century. That has provided plenty of time to demand
electoral reform. Concern about the electoral college
now, only because it elected Trump, is simply ugly
partisan politics, not political principle.
Launching last
week what looked like a potential comeback, Clinton
stepped up the establishment’s attack on the result. She
argued that Putin had personally directed the hacking
operation that lost her the presidency. He had sought to
foil the wishes of the US electorate in revenge for her
claims in 2011, when Secretary of State, that Russia’s
parliamentary elections had been rigged.
"Putin publicly
blamed me for the outpouring of outrage by his own
people, and that is the direct line between what he said
back then and what he did in this election," Clinton
told campaign donors at meeting in New York.
CIA’s
evidence-free claims
Clinton’s
allegations, of course, did not arrive in a vacuum. For
weeks the CIA and other intelligence agencies have been
making evidence-free claims that Russia was behind the
release of embarrassing emails from the Democratic party
leadership. The last holdout against this campaign,
James Comey, the head of the FBI, was reported late last
week to have caved in and joined the anti-Putin camp.
The Washington
Post quoted CIA director John Brennan saying: "Earlier
this week, I met separately with [the FBI’s] James Comey
and [director of national intelligence] Jim Clapper, and
there is strong consensus among us on the scope, nature,
and intent of Russian interference in our presidential
election."
Craig Murray, a
former British ambassador turned whistleblower on
British government collusion in torture, has said he
personally received the leaked emails on behalf of
WikiLeaks. The data came, he said, not from Russian
security agencies, or even from freelance Russian
hackers, but from a disillusioned Democratic party
insider. Russia experts in the US have similarly
discounted the anti-Putin claims, as have former US
intelligence agents.
But either way,
what is being overlooked in the furor is that none of
the information that has come to light about the
Democratic party was false. (Though the US intelligence
services did indeed try to make that claim initially).
The emails are real and provide an accurate account of
the Democratic party’s anti-democratic machinations,
including efforts to undermine the campaign of Bernie
Sanders, Clinton’s challenger.
If Russia did
indeed seek to influence the election by releasing
truthful information that made Clinton and her allies
look bad that would be far more legitimate interference
than the US has engaged in against countless countries
around the globe. For decades the US has been actively
involved in using its military might to overthrow
regimes in Latin America and the Middle East. It has
also compromised the sovereignty of innumerable states,
by sending killer-drones into their airspace,
manipulating their media and funding color revolutions.
The NSA is not
archiving every bit of digital information it can lay
its hands on for no reason. The US seeks global
dominance, whether the rest of the globe wants it or
not.
The ‘fake news’
threat
The corporate
media have been lapping up the CIA’s evidence-free
allegations as hungrily as an underfed kitten. Not only
have they been credulously regurgitating the dubious
claims of the same US intelligence agencies that
knowingly spread lies about Iraq’s WMD, but they have
added their own dangerous spin to them.
The media have
suddenly woken up to the supposed threat to western
democracies posed by "fake news". The implication is
that it was "fake news" that swept Trump to power. A
properly informed electorate, on this view, would never
have made such a patently ridiculous choice as Trump.
Instead, Clinton would have been rightfully crowned
president.
"Fake news", of
course, does not concern the systematic deceptions
promoted by the corporate media. It does not include the
demonstrable lies – like those Iraqi WMDs – spread by
western governments and intelligence agencies through
the corporate media. It does not even refer to the press
corps’ habitual reports – demonstrating a seemingly
gargantuan gullibility – that take at face value the
endless state propaganda against Official Enemies,
whether Cuba, Venezuela, Libya or Syria. Or Russia and
now Trump.
No, "fake news"
is produced only by bloggers and independent websites,
and is promoted on social media. Those peddling “fake
news” are writers, journalists and activists whose pay
packets do not depend on continuing employment by
western state-run media like the BBC, billionaire
proprietors like Rupert Murdoch, or global corporations
like Times-Warner.
It is worth
noting that the leaked Democratic emails, whether the
leaking was done by Russia or not, were certainly not
“fake news”. They were documented truth. But the leaks
are being actively conflated with “fake news”.
Shutting down
dissent
There have
always been patently ridiculous stories in marginal, and
not so marginal, mainstream media, whether it was
reports of Elvis coming back from the dead or the
millennium computer bug that was going to bring
civilization to an end when we entered the year 2000.
That problem has not substantially changed, it has
simply moved on to new platforms like social media.
Much more
significantly, the systematic deceptions perpetrated by
corporate media for many decades have left swaths of
western publics distrustful and cynical. Social media
has only added to widespread alienation because it has
made it easier to expose to readers these mainstream
deceptions. Trump, like Brexit, is a symptom of the
growing disorientation and estrangement felt by western
electorates.
But the claim
of “fake news” does usefully offer western security
agencies, establishment politicians and the corporate
media a powerful weapon to silence their critics. After
all, these critics have no platform other than
independent websites and social media. Shut down the
sites and you shut up your opponents.
The campaign
against a Trump presidency will exploit claims of
foreign, hostile interference in the US election as a
pretext to crack down on homegrown dissent. Putin is not
waging a war on US democracy. Rather, US democracy is
proving itself increasingly inconvenient to those who
expect to dictate electoral outcomes.
Jonathan
Cook is a Nazareth- based journalist and winner of
the Martha Gellhorn Special Prize for Journalism -
See more at: http://www.jonathan-cook.net/blog/2016-12-18/its-clinton-who-rejects-the-democratic-vote/#sthash.jg7OlAhq.dpuf
Jonathan
Cook is a Nazareth- based journalist and winner of
the Martha Gellhorn Special Prize for Journalism -
See more at: http://www.jonathan-cook.net/blog/2016-12-18/its-clinton-who-rejects-the-democratic-vote/#sthash.jg7OlAhq.dpuf
Jonathan Cook
is a Nazareth- based journalist and winner of the Martha
Gellhorn Special Prize for Journalism.
http://www.jonathan-cook.net
The views
expressed in this article are the author's own and do
not necessarily reflect Information Clearing House
editorial policy. |