Exclusive: A documentary debunking the Magnitsky
myth, which was an opening salvo in the New Cold
War, was largely blocked from viewing in the
West but has now become a factor in Russia-gate,
reports Robert Parry.
By Robert Parry
July 16,
2017 "Information
Clearing House"
- Near the center of the current furor over
Donald Trump Jr.’s meeting with a Russian lawyer
in June 2016 is a documentary that almost no one
in the West has been allowed to see, a film that
flips the script on the story of the late Sergei
Magnitsky and his employer, hedge-fund operator
William Browder.
The
Russian lawyer, Natalie Veselnitskaya, who met
with Trump Jr. and other advisers to Donald
Trump Sr.’s campaign, represented a company that
had run afoul of a U.S. investigation into
money-laundering allegedly connected to the
Magnitsky case and his death in a Russian prison
in 2009. His death sparked a campaign
spearheaded by Browder, who used his wealth and
clout to lobby the U.S. Congress in 2012 to
enact the Magnitsky Act to punish alleged human
rights abusers in Russia. The law became what
might be called the first shot in the New Cold
War.
According to Browder’s narrative, companies
ostensibly under his control had been hijacked
by corrupt Russian officials in furtherance of a
$230 million tax-fraud scheme; he then
dispatched his “lawyer” Magnitsky to investigate
and – after supposedly uncovering evidence of
the fraud – Magnitsky blew the whistle only to
be arrested by the same corrupt officials who
then had him locked up in prison where he died
of heart failure from physical abuse.
Despite
Russian denials – and the “dog ate my homework”
quality of Browder’s self-serving narrative –
the dramatic tale became a cause celebre in the
West. The story eventually attracted the
attention of Russian filmmaker Andrei Nekrasov,
a known critic of President Vladimir Putin.
Nekrasov decided to produce a docu-drama that
would present Browder’s narrative to a wider
public. Nekrasov even said he hoped that he
might recruit Browder as the narrator of the
tale.
However,
the project took an unexpected turn
when Nekrasov’s research kept turning up
contradictions to Browder’s storyline, which
began to look more and more like a corporate
cover story. Nekrasov discovered that a woman
working in Browder’s company was the actual
whistleblower and that Magnitsky – rather than a
crusading lawyer – was an accountant who was
implicated in the scheme.
So, the
planned docudrama suddenly was transformed into
a documentary with a dramatic reversal as
Nekrasov struggles with what he knows will be a
dangerous decision to confront Browder with what
appear to be deceptions. In the film, you see
Browder go from a friendly collaborator into an
angry adversary who tries to bully Nekrasov into
backing down.
Blocked
Premiere
Ultimately, Nekrasov completes his extraordinary
film – entitled “The Magnitsky Act: Behind the
Scenes” – and it was set for a premiere at the
European Parliament in Brussels in April 2016.
However, at the last moment – faced with
Browder’s legal threats – the parliamentarians
pulled the plug. Nekrasov encountered similar
resistance in the United States, a situation
that, in part, brought Natalie Veselnitskaya
into this controversy.
As a lawyer defending Prevezon, a real-estate
company registered in Cyprus, on a
money-laundering charge, she
was dealing with U.S. prosecutors
in New York City and, in that role, became an
advocate for lifting the U.S. sanctions, The
Washington Post reported.
That
was when she turned to promoter Rob Goldstone to
set up a meeting at Trump Tower with Donald
Trump Jr. To secure the sit-down on June 9,
2016, Goldstone dangled the prospect that
Veselnitskaya had some derogatory financial
information from the Russian government about
Russians supporting the Democratic National
Committee. Trump Jr. jumped at the possibility
and brought senior Trump campaign advisers, Paul
Manafort and Jared Kushner, along.
By all
accounts, Veselnitskaya had little or nothing to
offer about the DNC and turned the conversation
instead to the Magnitsky Act and Putin’s
retaliatory measure to the sanctions, canceling
a program in which American parents adopted
Russian children. One source told me that
Veselnitskaya also wanted to enhance her stature
in Russia with the boast that she had taken a
meeting at Trump Tower with Trump’s son.
But
another goal of Veselnitskaya’s U.S. trip was to
participate in an effort to give Americans a
chance to see Nekrasov’s blacklisted
documentary. She traveled to Washington in the
days after her Trump Tower meeting and attended
a House Foreign Affairs Committee hearing,
according to The Washington Post.
There
were hopes to show the documentary to members of
Congress but the offer was rebuffed. Instead a
room was rented at the Newseum near Capitol
Hill. Browder’s lawyers. who had successfully
intimidated the European Parliament, also tried
to strong arm the Newseum, but its officials
responded that they were only renting out a room
and that they had allowed other controversial
presentations in the past.
Their
stand wasn’t exactly a profile in courage.
“We’re not going to allow them not to show the
film,” said Scott Williams, the chief operating
officer of the Newseum. “We often have people
renting for events that other people would love
not to have happen.”
In an article about the controversy in June
2016, The New York Times
added that “A
screening at the Newseum is especially
controversial because it could attract lawmakers
or their aides.” Heaven forbid!
One-Time
Showing
So,
Nekrasov’s documentary got a one-time showing
with Veselnitskaya reportedly in attendance and
with a follow-up discussion moderated by
journalist Seymour Hersh. However, except for
that audience, the public of the United States
and Europe has been essentially shielded from
the documentary’s discoveries, all the better
for the Magnitsky myth to retain its power as a
seminal propaganda moment of the New Cold War.
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Media
After the Newseum presentation,
a Washington Post editorial
branded Nekrasov’s documentary Russian
“agit-prop” and sought to discredit Nekrasov
without addressing his many documented examples
of Browder’s misrepresenting both big and small
facts in the case. Instead, the Post accused
Nekrasov of using “facts highly selectively” and
insinuated that he was merely a pawn in the
Kremlin’s “campaign to discredit Mr. Browder and
the Magnitsky Act.”
The
Post also misrepresented the structure of the
film by noting that it mixed fictional scenes
with real-life interviews and action, a point
that was technically true but willfully
misleading because the fictional scenes were
from Nekrasov’s original idea for a docu-drama
that he shows as part of explaining his
evolution from a believer in Browder’s
self-exculpatory story to a skeptic. But the
Post’s deception is something that almost no
American would realize because almost no one got
to see the film.
The
Post concluded smugly: “The film won’t grab a
wide audience, but it offers yet another example
of the Kremlin’s increasingly sophisticated
efforts to spread its illiberal values and
mind-set abroad. In the European Parliament and
on French and German television networks,
showings were put off recently after questions
were raised about the accuracy of the film,
including by Magnitsky’s family.
“We
don’t worry that Mr. Nekrasov’s film was
screened here, in an open society. But it is
important that such slick spin be fully exposed
for its twisted story and sly deceptions.”
The Post’s gleeful editorial had the feel of
something you
might read in a totalitarian society
where the public only hears about dissent when
the Official Organs of the State denounce some
almost unknown person for saying something that
almost no one heard.
New
Paradigm
The
Post’s satisfaction that Nekrasov’s documentary
would not draw a large audience represents what
is becoming a new paradigm in U.S. mainstream
journalism, the idea that it is the media’s duty
to protect the American people from seeing
divergent narratives on sensitive geopolitical
issues.
Over the past year, we have seen a growing
hysteria about
“Russian propaganda” and “fake news”
with The New York Times and other major news
outlets
eagerly awaiting algorithms
that can be unleashed on the Internet to
eradicate information that groups like Google’s
First Draft Coalition deem “false.”
First
Draft consists of the Times, the Post, other
mainstream outlets, and establishment-approved
online news sites, such as Bellingcat with links
to the pro-NATO think tank, Atlantic Council.
First Draft’s job will be to serve as a kind of
Ministry of Truth and thus shield the public
from information that is deemed propaganda or
untrue.
In the
meantime, there is the ad hoc approach that was
applied to Nekrasov’s documentary. Having missed
the Newseum showing, I was only able to view the
film because I was given a special password to
an online version.
From
searches that I did on Wednesday, Nekrasov’s
film was not available on Amazon although a pro-Magnitsky
documentary was. I did find a streaming service
that appeared to have the film available.
But the
Post’s editors were right in their expectation
that “The film won’t grab a wide audience.”
Instead, it has become a good example of how
political and legal pressure can effectively
black out what we used to call “the other side
of the story.” The film now, however, has
unexpectedly become a factor in the larger drama
of Russia-gate and the drive to remove Donald
Trump Sr. from the White House.
Investigative reporter Robert
Parry broke many of the Iran-Contra stories for
The Associated Press and Newsweek in the 1980s.
You can buy his latest book, America’s Stolen Narrative,
either in print
here or
as an e-book (from Amazon
and
barnesandnoble.com).
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