The Mystery
of the Russia-gate Puppies
The U.S.
mainstream media is determined to prove Russia-gate
despite the scandal’s cracking foundation and its
inexplicable anomalies, such as why Russia would set
up a Facebook “puppies” page, writes Robert Parry.
By
Robert Parry
October 06,
2017 "Information
Clearing House"
- What is perhaps most unprofessional, unethical and
even immoral about the U.S. mainstream media’s
coverage of Russia-gate is how all the stories start
with the conclusion – “Russia bad” – and then make
whatever shards of information exist fit the
preordained narrative.
For
instance, we’re told that Facebook executives, who
were sent back three times by Democratic lawmakers
to find something to pin on Russia, finally detected
$100,000 worth of ads spread out over three years
from accounts “suspected of links to Russia” or
similar hazy wording.
These
Facebook ads and 201 related Twitter accounts, we’re
told, represent the long-missing proof about Russian
“meddling” in the U.S. presidential election after
earlier claims
faltered or fell apart
under even minimal scrutiny.
For
example, not only have major questions been raised
about whether
Russian intelligence operatives were behind the
“hacking” of Democratic emails,
but the Senate Intelligence Committee announced on
Wednesday that two early elements of the Russia-gate
hysteria — minor changes that were made to the
Republican platform and a brief meeting between
Russian Ambassador Sergey Kislyak and then-Sen. (now
Attorney General) Jeff Sessions at Washington’s
Mayflower Hotel — have been dropped as innocent or
inconsequential.
But like
all good conspiracy theories, once one allegation is
dismissed as meaningless, it is replaced by another
and another.
In
the old days, journalists might have expressed some
concern that Facebook “found” the “Russia-linked”
ads only under
extraordinary pressure
from powerful politicians, such as Sen. Mark Warner,
D-Virginia, the vice chairman of the Senate
Intelligence Committee and a leading legislator on
the tech industry. But today’s mainstream reporters
took Warner’s side and made it look like Facebook
had been dragging its heels and that there must be
much more out there.
However, it
doesn’t really seem to matter how little evidence
there is. Anything will do.
Even the
paltry $100,000 is not put in any perspective
(Facebook has annual revenue of $27 billion), nor
the 201 Twitter accounts (compared to Twitter’s 328
million monthly users). Nor are the hazy allegations
of “suspected … links to Russia” subjected to
serious inspection. Although Russia is a nation of
144 million people and many divergent interests,
it’s assumed that everything must be personally
ordered by President Vladimir Putin.
Yet, if you
look at some of the details about these $100,000 in
ads, you learn the case is even flimsier than you
might have thought. The sum was spread out over
2015, 2016 and 2017 – and thus represented a very
tiny pebble in a very large lake of Facebook
activity.
But
more recently we learned that only 44 percent of the
ads appeared before Americans went to the polls last
November,
according to Facebook;
that would mean that 56 percent appeared afterwards.
Facebook
added that “roughly 25% of the ads were never shown
to anyone. … For 50% of the ads, less than $3 was
spent; for 99% of the ads, less than $1,000 was
spent.”
So, as
minuscule as the $100,000 in ad buys over three
years may have seemed, the tiny pebble turns out
really to be only a fraction of a tiny pebble if the
Russians indeed did toss it into the 2016 campaign.
What About the Puppies?
We further
have learned that most ads weren’t for or against a
specific candidate, but rather addressed supposedly
controversial issues that the mainstream media
insists were meant to divide the United States and
thus somehow undermine American democracy.
Except, it
turns out that one of the issues was puppies.
As
Mike Isaac and Scott Shane of The New York Times
reported in
Tuesday’s editions, “The Russians who posed as
Americans on Facebook last year tried on quite an
array of disguises. … There was even a Facebook
group for animal lovers with memes of adorable
puppies that spread across the site with the help of
paid ads.”
Now, there
are a lot of controversial issues in America, but I
don’t think any of us would put puppies near the top
of the list. Isaac and Shane reported that there
were also supposedly Russia-linked groups advocating
gay rights, gun rights and black civil rights,
although precisely how these divergent groups were
“linked” to Russia or the Kremlin was never fully
explained. (Facebook declined to offer details.)
At this
point, a professional journalist might begin to pose
some very hard questions to the sources, who
presumably include many partisan Democrats and their
political allies hyping the evil-Russia narrative.
It would be time for some lectures to the sources
about the consequences for taking reporters on a
wild ride in conspiracy land.
Yet,
instead of starting to question the overall premise
of this “scandal,” journalists at The New York
Times, The Washington Post, CNN, etc. keep making
excuses for the nuttiness. The explanation for the
puppy ads was that the nefarious Russians might be
probing to discover Americans who might later be
susceptible to propaganda.
“The goal
of the dog lovers’ page was more obscure,” Isaac and
Shane acknowledged. “But some analysts suggested a
possible motive: to build a large following before
gradually introducing political content. Without
viewing the entire feed from the page, now closed by
Facebook, it is impossible to say whether the
Russian operators tried such tactics.”
The
Joe McCarthy of Russia-gate
The Times
then turned to Clinton Watts, a former FBI agent and
a top promoter of the New McCarthyism that has swept
Official Washington. Watts has testified before
Congress that almost anything that appears on social
media these days criticizing a politician may well
be traceable to the Russians.
For
instance, last March, Watts testified in
conspiratorial terms before the Senate Intelligence
Committee about “social media accounts discrediting
U.S. Speaker of the House Paul Ryan.” At the time,
Ryan was under criticism for his ham-handed handling
of a plan to “repeal and replace” Obamacare, but
Watts saw possible Russian fingerprints.
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Watts also
claimed that Sen. Marco Rubio’s presidential
bid “anecdotally suffered” from an online Russian
campaign against him, though many of you may have
thought Rubio flamed out because he was a
wet-behind-the-ears candidate who performed
robotically in the debates and received the
devastating nickname “Little Marco” from Donald
Trump.
Watts
explained that these nefarious Russian schemes left
no discernible earmarks or detectable
predictability. Russians attack “people on both
sides of the aisle … solely based on what they [the
Russians] want to achieve in their own landscape,
whatever the Russian foreign policy objectives are,”
Watts complained.
Watts’s
vague allegations appear to have been the impetus
behind Sen. Warner’s repeated demands that Facebook
find some evidence to support the suspicions. After
Facebook came up empty twice, Warner flew to Silicon
Valley to personally confront Facebook executives
who then found what Warner wanted them to find, the
$100,000 in suspected Russia-linked ad buys.
So, it
perhaps made sense that the Times would turn to
Watts to explain the rather inexplicable Russian
exploitation of puppies. According to Isaac and
Shane, Watts “said Russia had been entrepreneurial
in trying to develop diverse channels of influence.
Some, like the dogs page, may have been created
without a specific goal and held in reserve for
future use. ‘They were creating many audiences on
social media to try to influence around,’ said Mr.
Watts, who has traced suspected Russian accounts
since 2015.”
In other
words, if you start with the need to prove Russian
guilt, there are no alternative explanations besides
Russian guilt. If some fact, like the puppies page,
doesn’t seem to fit the sinister conspiracy theory,
you simply pound it into place until it does.
Yes, of
course, Russian intelligence operatives must be so
sneaky that they are spending money (but not much)
on Facebook puppy ads so they might sometime in the
future slip in a few other ideological messages. It
can’t be that perhaps the ads were not part of some
Russian government intelligence operation.
The
Russ-kie Plot
But even if
we want to believe that these ads are a Russ-kie
plot and were somehow intended to sow dissension in
the U.S., the totals are insignificant, a subset of
a subset of a subset of $100,000 in ad buys over
three years that, as far as anyone can tell, had no
real no impact on the 2016 election – and surely
much, much, much less than the political influence
from, say, Israel.
If we apply
Facebook’s 44 percent figure, that would suggest the
total spending in the two years before the election
was around $44,000 and much of that focused on a
diverse set of issues, not specific candidates. So,
if some Russians did spend money to promote gay
rights and to push gun rights, any negligible
impact on the 2016 election would more or less have
been canceled out between Clinton and Trump.
Yet, over
these still unproven and speculative allegations of
Russian “links” to these Facebook ads, the national
Democrats and their mainstream media allies are
stoking a dangerous and expensive New Cold War with
nuclear-armed Russia.
I realize
that lots of Democrats were upset about Hillary
Clinton’s humiliating defeat and don’t want to
believe that she could have lost fairly to a buffoon
like Donald Trump. So, they are looking for any
excuses rather than looking in the mirror.
The major
U.S. news outlets also have joined the anti-Trump
Resistance, rather than upholding the journalistic
principles of objectivity and fairness. The Post
even came up with a new melodramatic slogan for the
moment: “Democracy Dies in Darkness.”
But yellow
journalism is not the way to shed light into
darkness; it only blinds Democrats from seeing the
real reasons behind Trump’s appeal to many
working-class whites who feel disaffected from a
Democratic Party that seems disinterested in their
suffering.
Yes, I know
that some Democrats are still hoping against hope
that they can ride Russia-gate all the way to
Trump’s impeachment and get him ridden out of
Washington D.C. on a rail, but the political risk to
Democrats is that they will harden the animosity
that many in the white working class already feel
toward the party.
That could
do more to strengthen Trump’s appeal to these voters
than to weaken him, while hollowing out Democratic
support among millions of peace voters who may
simply declare a plague on both parties.
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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