Gulf Crisis: US Admits Fake News
of Russian Hacking
By Finian Cunningham
July 18,
2017 "Information
Clearing House"
-
In a sharp about-turn, US
intelligence agencies are now accusing the
United Arab Emirates for hacking into Qatar’s
official news agency, thereby sparking the Gulf
crisis between Washington’s Arab allies. The
latest twist amounts to an admission that the US
is guilty of previously broadcasting fake news
blaming Russia.
This week, the
Washington Post cites US intelligence officials
when it reported Monday:
«The United Arab Emirates orchestrated the
hacking of Qatari government news and social
media sites in order to post incendiary false
quotes attributed to Qatar’s emir, Sheikh Tamim
bin Hamad al Thani, in late May that sparked the
ongoing upheaval between Qatar and its
neighbors».
However, last
month, on June 7, the American news outlet CNN
had a completely different take on the Gulf
crisis, when it blamed Russia for trying to sow
division between US allies in the Persian Gulf.
It reported in
an «exclusive» article with the headline: «US
suspects Russian hackers planted fake news
behind Qatar crisis».
That CNN report went on
to claim: «US officials say the Russian goal
appears to be to cause rifts among the US and
its allies. In recent months, suspected Russian
cyber activities, including the use of fake news
stories, have turned up amid elections in
France, Germany and other countries».
While CNN hinted that
the alleged Russian hackers in the Gulf could
have been criminal privateers, the thrust of its
report last month very much pointed the finger
of blame at the Russian government for hacking
into the Qatar news agency. Using assertion,
speculation and anonymous sources, the alleged
Russian cyber-attack on Qatar was linked to
alleged meddling by the Kremlin in the US
presidential election last year.
«US intelligence has long been
concerned with what they say is the Russian
government's ability to plant fake news in
otherwise credible streams, according to US
officials», reported CNN.
But now this week, US
intelligence officials have changed their tune
on who they think is whipping up the Gulf
crisis. It is not Russia, it is the United Arab
Emirates (UAE).
«[US] Officials became aware last
week that newly analyzed information gathered by
US intelligence agencies confirmed that on
May 23, senior members of the UAE government
discussed the plan and its implementation,»
reports the Washington Post this week.
For over a month now, the UAE has
aligned with Saudi Arabia and Bahrain to
blockade Qatar, another member of the Gulf
Cooperation Council (GCC). The crisis has become
deadlocked with neither side willing to back
down, much to the strategic concern of
Washington. All of the monarchial energy-rich
states are longtime allies of the US and
together as a unit are a linchpin in maintaining
the global petrodollar system. The other GCC
members, Kuwait and Oman, have taken a neutral
stance in the diplomatic crisis and have acted
as brokers to resolve the dispute. Egypt, has
joined with the Saudi-led bloc, to impose
sanctions against Qatar.
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The row blew up dramatically days
after US President Donald Trump made an official
state visit to Saudi Arabia on May 20-22. In
exchange for a record $110-billion arms deals
with the Saudi rulers, it seems clear that Trump
gave the green light for the Saudis to instigate
a blockade on Qatar. Ostensibly, the Saudis and
the others are accusing Qatar of sponsoring
terrorism and, they say, that is why they acted
to isolate the neighboring gas-rich state. The
absurd hypocrisy behind the accusation belies
the real motive of petty rivalry among the Gulf
monarchs. In particular, the Qatari-based Al
Jazeera news network has been a bane for the
Saudi and Egyptian rulers owing to its
relatively independent and critical reporting on
repression in those countries. Qatar’s support
for the Muslim Brotherhood has also rankled the
Saudis and Egyptians.
Two days after Trump flew out of
Saudi on May 22, the official Qatari News Agency
was hit with a fake news attack. Its news
reports attributed statements to the Qatari
emir, Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad al Thani, in which
he praised Iran – the Shia arch-enemy of the
US-backed Sunni monarchies – as well as making
critical comments about Trump.
The whole debacle was an obvious
set-up. Despite urgent notices from Qatar that
its new agency had been hacked with fake news,
the Saudi, Bahraini and Emirati media continued
to prominently report the statements as if they
were genuine, with the evident intention of
smearing Qatar and provoking a stand-off.
The stage was then set for Saudi
Arabia, UAE, Bahrain and Egypt to announce on
June 5 a total embargo of commercial, media and
transport links with Qatar «because of its
support for terrorism and friendly relations
with Iran».
US President Trump initially
voiced support for the blockade on Qatar,
claiming it as a success from his trip to Saudi
Arabia.
«So good to see the Saudi Arabia
visit with the King [Saudi King Salman] and 50
countries already paying off», Trump smugly
declared through his Twitter feed. «They said
they would take a hard line on funding
extremism, and all reference was pointing to
Qatar. Perhaps this will be the beginning of the
end to the horror of terrorism!»
But ever since Trump set off the
worst crisis in the Gulf among US allies, his
top diplomat Rex Tillerson has been busy trying
to calm the row.
Qatar serves as the base for US
Central Command in the Middle East with an
airbase housing 10,000 troops. American
warplanes flying out of Qatar are the main
strike force for operations in Iraq, Syria and
Yemen. Strategic planners in Washington realize
that the US cannot afford to alienate Qatar.
Tillerson has diverged noticeably
from Trump’s simplistic broadside supporting
Saudi Arabia, and has instead sought to bring
Qatar back into the GCC fold. The US Secretary
of State has hinted that the Saudi-led blockade
is draconian and unrealistic. On June 23, Saudi
Arabia and its partners demanded that Qatar shut
down the Al Jazeera network along with a dozen
other ultimatums. Qatar refused.
Last week, Tillerson had a
frenetic week of shuttle diplomacy flying
between Qatar and Saudi Arabia to get both sides
to compromise. On Friday, July 14, the former
Exxon CEO returned to the US deflated, unable to
break the deadlock.
While traveling
back to the US, Tillerson alluded to the
strategic importance at stake for Washington in
maintaining Gulf Arab unity. He said it
is «really important to us from a national
security standpoint. We need this part of the
world to be stable, and this particular conflict
between these parties is obviously not helpful».
This would explain why the US has
now moved to expose the Saudi-led camp as being
behind the fake news hack incident against the
Qatari news agency.
That disclosure undermines the
Saudi-led position. It confirms what the Qataris
have been saying from the outset; namely, that
they have been set up for a faux crisis by Gulf
rivals, whose objective is to subjugate Qatari
sovereignty under Saudi tutelage. Shutting down
the «offensive» Al Jazeera news station being
one of the desired outcomes.
By undermining the Saudis and UAE
in this way, the US is waging that it can lever
the Saudis and the others GCC members into
softening their demands on Qatar.
So keen are the US military and
geopolitical planners to defuse the prolonged
Gulf crisis – a crisis that threatens the
petrodollar system – that they were obliged to
come clean about the real identify of the
perpetrators of the cyber attack on Qatar. That
means dishing the dirt on the Saudis and UAE as
the source of the hack, and abandoning the
earlier claim that Russia was to blame.
CNN is
once again caught out faking news about Russian
hackers. At the time of its «exclusive» last
month accusing Russia of destabilizing US allies
in the Gulf, the news channel at least had the
decency to quote Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov
on the claim.
Peskov said in the June 7 report:
«It is another lie.. CNN again and
again publish references to unnamed sources in
unnamed agencies, etc, etc. These streams of
information have no connection with the reality.
It is so far away from the reality. Fake is a
fake».
What the whole episode shows is
not just how irresponsible US intelligence
officials and major media are in publishing
false claims defaming Russia. It also shows them
as unscrupulous and expedient.
Just because the lingering Gulf
crisis is spiraling to threaten US strategic
interests, only then is there a sudden switch to
a version of events that more accurately
reflects reality. If it weren’t for US strategic
concerns in the Gulf, the fake news put out
about Russian hackers would no doubt continue.
Which begs the question: if Russian hackers in
the Gulf is fake news, then what does that say
about similar claims of Russian hacking in the
US?
Finian
Cunningham has written extensively on
international affairs, with articles published
in several languages. He is a Master’s graduate
in Agricultural Chemistry and worked as a
scientific editor for the Royal Society of
Chemistry, Cambridge, England, before pursuing a
career in newspaper journalism. He is also a
musician and songwriter. For nearly 20 years, he
worked as an editor and writer in major news
media organisations, including The Mirror, Irish
Times and IndependentThe
views expressed in this article are solely those
of the author and do not necessarily reflect the
opinions of Information Clearing House.