The Crazy
Imbalance of Russia-gate
Exclusive: If the U.S. government and mainstream
media are really concerned about foreign influence
in American politics, they might look at Israel and
other nations with much more clout than Russia,
notes Robert Parry.
By Robert Parry
September 23,
2017 "Information
Clearing House"
- The core absurdity of the Russia-gate frenzy is
its complete lack of proportionality. Indeed, the
hysteria is reminiscent of Sen. Joe McCarthy warning
that “one communist in the faculty of one university
is one communist too many” or Donald Trump’s
highlighting a few “bad hombres” raping white
American women.
It’s not
that there were no Americans who espoused communist
views at universities and elsewhere or that there
are no “bad hombre” rapists; it’s that these rare
exceptions were used to generate a dangerous
overreaction in service of a propagandistic agenda.
Historically, we have seen this technique used often
when demagogues seize on an isolated event and
exploit it emotionally to mislead populations to
war.
Today, we
have The New York Times and The Washington Post
repeatedly publishing front-page articles about
allegations that some Russians with “links” to the
Kremlin bought $100,000 in Facebook ads to promote
some issues deemed hurtful to Hillary Clinton’s
campaign although some of the ads ran after the
election.
Initially, Facebook could find no evidence of even
that small effort but was pressured in May by Sen.
Mark Warner, D-Virginia. The Washington Post
reported that
Warner, who is spearheading the Russia-gate
investigation in the Senate Intelligence Committee,
flew to Silicon Valley and urged Facebook executives
to take another look at possible ad buys.
Facebook
responded to this congressional pressure by scouring
its billions of monthly users and announced that it
had located 470 suspect accounts associated with ads
totaling $100,000 – out of Facebook’s $27 billion in
annual revenue.
Here
is how the Times
described those
findings: “Facebook officials disclosed that they
had shut down several hundred accounts that they
believe were created by a Russian company linked to
the Kremlin and used to buy $100,000 in ads pushing
divisive issues during and after the American
election campaign.” (It sometimes appears that every
Russian — all 144 million of them — is somehow
“linked” to the Kremlin.)
Last week,
congressional investigators urged Facebook to expand
its review into “troll farms” supposedly based in
Belarus, Macedonia and Estonia – although Estonia is
by no means a Russian ally; it joined NATO in 2004.
“Warner and his Democratic counterpart on the House
Intelligence Committee, Rep. Adam B. Schiff of
California, have been increasingly vocal in recent
days about their frustrations with Facebook,” the
Post
reported.
Facebook Complies
So, on
Thursday, Facebook succumbed to demands that it turn
over to Congress copies of the ads, a move that has
only justified more alarmist front-page stories
about Russia! Russia! Russia!
In response
to this political pressure – at a time when Facebook
is fending off possible anti-trust legislation – its
chief executive Mark Zuckerberg added that he is
expanding the investigation to include “additional
Russian groups and other former Soviet states.”
So, it
appears that not only are all Russians “linked” to
the Kremlin, but all former Soviet states as well.
But why
stop there? If the concern is that American
political campaigns are being influenced by foreign
governments whose interests may diverge from what’s
best for America, why not look at countries that
have caused the United States far more harm recently
than Russia?
After
all, Saudi Arabia and its Sunni Wahabbi leaders have
been
pulling the U.S. government
into their sectarian wars with the Shiites,
including conflicts in Yemen and Syria that have
contributed to anti-Americanism in the region, to
the growth of Al Qaeda, and to a disruptive flow of
refugees into Europe.
And, let’s
not forget the 8,000-pound gorilla in the room:
Israel. Does anyone think that whatever Russia may
or may not have done in trying to influence U.S.
politics compares even in the slightest to what
Israel does all the time?
Which
government used its pressure and that of its
American agents (i.e., the neocons) to push the
United States into the disastrous war in Iraq? It
wasn’t Russia, which was among the countries urging
the U.S. not to invade; it was Israel and Prime
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.
Indeed, the plans for “regime change” in Iraq and
Syria can be traced back to the work of key American
neoconservatives employed by Netanyahu’s political
campaign in 1996. At that time, Richard Perle,
Douglas Feith and other leading neocons unveiled a
seminal document entitled “A
Clean Break: A New Strategy for Securing the Realm,”
which proposed casting aside negotiations with Arabs
in favor of simply replacing the region’s
anti-Israeli governments.
However, to
make that happen required drawing in the powerful
U.S. military, so after the 9/11 attacks, the
neocons inside President George W. Bush’s
administration set in motion a deception campaign to
justify invading Iraq, a war which was to be
followed by more “regime changes” in Syria and Iran.
A
Wrench in the Plans
Although the military disaster in Iraq threw a
wrench into those plans, the Israeli/neocon agenda
never changed. Along with
Israel’s new regional ally, Saudi Arabia,
a proxy war was fashioned to remove Syrian President
Bashar al-Assad.
As
Israel’s Ambassador to the U.S. Michael Oren
explained, the goal
was to shatter the Shiite “strategic arc” running
from Iran through Syria to Lebanon and Israel’s
Hezbollah enemies.
How
smashing this Shiite “arc” was in the interests of
the American people – or even within their
consciousness – is never explained. But it was what
Israel wanted and thus it was what the U.S.
government enlisted to do, even to the point of
letting sophisticated U.S. weaponry fall
into the hands of Syria’s Al Qaeda affiliate.
Israel’s
influence over U.S. politicians
is so blatant that presidential contenders queue up
every year to grovel before the Israel Lobby’s
conference of the American Israel Public Affairs
Committee. In 2016, Donald Trump showed up and
announced that he was not there to “pander”
and then pandered his pants off.
And,
whenever Prime Minister Netanyahu wants to show off
his power, he is invited to address a joint session
of the U.S. Congress at which
Republicans and Democrats compete
to see how many times and how quickly they can leap
to their feet in standing ovations. (Netanyahu holds
the record for the number of times a foreign leader
has addressed joint sessions with three such
appearances, tied with Winston Churchill.)
Yet,
Israeli influence is so engrained in the U.S.
political process that even the mention of the
existence of an “Israel Lobby” brings accusations of
anti-Semitism. “Israel Lobby” is a forbidden phrase
in Washington.
However, pretty much whenever Israel targets a U.S.
politician for defeat, that politician goes down, a
muscle that Israel flexed in the early 1980s in
taking out Rep. Paul Findley and Sen. Charles Percy,
two moderate Republicans whose crime was to suggest
talks with the Palestine Liberation Organization.
So, if the
concern is the purity of the American democratic
process and the need to protect it from outside
manipulation, let’s have at it. Why not a full-scale
review of who is doing what and how? Does anyone
think that Israel’s influence over U.S. politics is
limited to a few hundred Facebook accounts and
$100,000 in ads?
A
Historical Perspective
And,
if you want a historical review, throw in the
British and German propaganda around the two world
wars; include how the
South Vietnamese government collaborated with
Richard Nixon in
1968 to sabotage President Lyndon Johnson’s Paris
peace talks; take a serious look at the
collusion between Ronald Reagan’s campaign and Iran
thwarting President Jimmy Carter’s efforts to free
52 American hostages in Tehran in 1980; open the
books on
Turkey’s covert investments in U.S. politicians
and policymakers; and
examine how authoritarian regimes of all stripes
have funded important Washington think tanks and law
firms.
If such an
effort were ever proposed, you would get a sense of
how sensitive this topic is in Official Washington,
where foreign money and its influence are rampant.
There would be accusations of anti-Semitism in
connection with Israel and charges of conspiracy
theory even in well-documented cases of
collaboration between U.S. politicians and foreign
interests.
So,
instead of a balanced and comprehensive assessment
of this problem, the powers-that-be concentrate on
the infinitesimal case of Russian “meddling” as the
excuse for Hillary Clinton’s shocking defeat. But
the key reasons for Clinton’s dismal campaign had
virtually nothing to do with Russia, even if you
believe all
the evidence-lite accusations
about Russian “meddling.”
The
Russians did not tell Clinton to vote for the
disastrous Iraq War and
play endless footsy with the neocons;
the Russians didn’t advise her to set up a private
server to handle her State Department emails and
potentially expose classified information; the
Russians didn’t lure Clinton and the U.S. into
the Libyan fiasco
nor suggest her ghastly joke in response to Muammar
Gaddafi’s lynching (“We came, we saw, he died”); the
Russians had nothing to do with her greedy decision
to accept millions of dollars in Wall Street
speaking fees and then try to keep the speech
contents secret from the voters; the Russians didn’t
encourage her husband to become a serial philanderer
and make a mockery of their marriage; nor did the
Russians suggest to Anthony Weiner, the husband of
top Clinton aide Huma Abedin, that he send lewd
photos to a teen-ager on a laptop also used by his
wife, a development that led FBI Director James
Comey to reopen the Clinton-email investigation just
11 days before the election; the Russians weren’t
responsible for Clinton’s decision not to campaign
in Wisconsin and Michigan; the Russians didn’t stop
her from offering a coherent message about how she
would help the struggling white working class; and
on and on.
But the
Russia-gate investigation is not about fairness and
balance; it’s a reckless scapegoating of a
nuclear-armed country to explain away – and possibly
do away with – Donald Trump’s presidency. Rather
than putting everything in context and applying a
sense of proportion, Russia-gate is relying on wild
exaggerations of factually dubious or relatively
isolated incidents as an opportunistic means to a
political end.
As reckless
as President Trump has been, the supposedly wise men
and wise women of Washington are at least his match.
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).
This
article was first published by
Consortium News
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