By Finian Cunningham
October 10, 2019 "Information
Clearing House" - The “newspaper of record” New York Times
arguably holds the record for peddling
anti-Russia scare stories. This week the NY
Times delivered yet another classic spook tale
dressed as serious news.
Among its splash articles, under the
headline ‘Top Secret Russian Unit Seeks to
Destabilize Europe, Security Officials Say’,
readers were told of an elite Russian spy team
which has, allegedly, only recently been
discovered.
It’s called “Unit 29155”
and purportedly directed by the Kremlin to “destabilize
Europe” with “subversion, sabotage and
assassination.”
According to the NY Times, this crack squad
of Russia’s most ruthless military intelligence
agents were involved in an attempted
assassination of an arms dealer in Bulgaria in
2015; the destabilization of Moldova; a failed
coup against the Montenegrin government; and the
alleged poisoning of former double agent Sergei
Skripal in England last year.
The article states: “Western security
officials have now concluded that these
operations, and potentially many others, are
part of a coordinated and ongoing campaign to
destabilize Europe, executed by an elite unit
inside the Russian intelligence system skilled
in subversion, sabotage and assassination.”
The NY Times adds: “The purpose of Unit
29155, which has not been previously reported,
underscores the degree to which the Russian
president, Vladimir V. Putin, is actively
fighting the West with his brand of so-called
hybrid warfare — a blend of propaganda, hacking
attacks and disinformation — as well as open
military confrontation.”
This is all because, the readers are told, “The
Kremlin sees Russia as being at war with a
Western liberal order that it views as an
existential threat.”
In response, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov
dismissed it as more of the “pulp
fiction category” which Western news media
have manufactured with seeming increasing
intensity over recent years. Peskov pointed out
that Moscow has repeatedly stated its desire to
normalize relations with Western states and the
European Union in particular, contradicting the
theme of the NY Times’ piece.
Indeed, the Russian Embassy in Britain
recently
published a compilation of false articles
peddled by Western media over the past four
years. The NY Times features prominently as one
of the main purveyors of scare stories about
alleged malign Russian activities, from hacking
into presidential elections, to targeting
American power grids, to covert collusion with
President Donald Trump.
For students of Propaganda 101, this week’s
tale makes a case study of how disinformation is
disseminated in the guise of “news
reporting.”
First of all, the NY Times reporter, Michael
Schwirtz, gives a meandering account of lurid
dirty deeds performed in various international
locations allegedly carried out by the supposed
“elite” Kremlin hybrid warriors. But tellingly,
there are no details evidencing Russian
involvement. It’s all lurid speculation spiced
with fear-mongering, which reads like a pallid
John le Carré spy novel.
Then, the usual giveaway that the NY Times is
engaging in disinformation, it quotes anonymous
security officials for apparent verification of
its claims about “Unit 29155”. This is tacit
admission of who the real authors are: Western
spooks.
Next, a neat effort to give the lame story
some legs is to quote named public figures. But
these sources don’t confirm the existence of the
alleged Kremlin unit; they are merely invited to
speculate on its existence and presumed malign
purpose. One of those named sources is MI6 chief
Alex Younger. Yes, that’s right, the paper of
record is quoting British military intelligence
as a reliable source for public information.
Another named source is Peter Zwack, who is
described as a former US military intelligence
officer who worked at the American Embassy in
Moscow. Zwack is quoted as describing Russians
as “organically ruthless” (whatever
that means), while the paper actually admits
that “he was not aware of the unit’s
existence.”
The purpose of throwing a few names into the
reporting mix is to lend a veneer of credibility
to the nebulous, unverifiable, scary stuff that
the anonymous spooks feed the reporter.
A special mention must be given to a third
named source quoted by the NY Times. He is
Eerik-Niiles Kross, an Estonian lawmaker and
former military intelligence chief in Tallinn.
He
styles himself as “Estonia’s James Bond,”
and is known for his salacious Russophobic
warnings of “imminent invasion of the Baltic
states” – over the past three decades. Kross is
quoted to speculate on the existence of the
alleged Kremlin hybrid warfare unit. Of course,
he dutifully serves up his notorious
anti-Russian fear-mongering. But he is not
confirming. His speculation is pseudo-validation
of information that is essentially fictional.
Are You Tired Of
The Lies And
Non-Stop Propaganda?
|
All in all, the latest installment of
anti-Russia propaganda from the NY Times this
week is a damp squib among many previous
baseless reports of alleged Kremlin malign
activity. If it serves any purpose, it is
perhaps a choice illustration of how
disinformation is sneakily, insidiously
presented as ‘news’. The fact that this should
appear in a Pulitzer Prize-winning, supposedly
premier, American newspaper is the disturbing
part.
But it is no surprise to those who have long
studied how the US corporate media has been
under the control of state intelligence agencies
for many decades, especially after the Second
World War and during the subsequent Cold War
against the Soviet Union.
In a seminal
essay in 1977 for Rolling Stone magazine,
award-winning journalist Carl Bernstein
documented how the CIA systematically cultivated
hundreds of reporters, columnists, editors,
publishing executives and broadcast networks to
function as conduits for disinformation – much
of it directed at demonizing the Soviet Union.
“From the outset, the use of journalists
was among the CIA’s most sensitive undertakings,”
writes Bernstein.
He added: “By far the most valuable of
these associations, according to CIA officials,
have been with the New York Times, CBS and Time
Inc.”
How the CIA goes about planting false stories
in the American and European media is outlined
in this candid
interview by John Stockwell, who was former
National Security Council coordinator for the
agency during the 1970s. Stockwell also added: “Enemies
are necessary for the wheels of the US military
machine to turn.”
You may wonder, if the Cold War ended nearly
30 years ago when the Soviet Union dissolved,
why then do the NY Times and other Western media
outlets continue to pump out anti-Russian
propaganda? But that assumes the Cold War was
primarily about the US opposing the ideology of
communism. It wasn’t. It was, and still is, all
about imposing control over the masses so they
don’t ever challenge the power structure that
deprives them of full democratic rights and
decent livelihoods.
In a recent
interview, philosopher André Vitchek makes
the point that Western politicians and media
like the NY Times keep harping on Cold War scare
stories about evil foreigners in order “to
distract their citizens from thinking about
their increasingly limited freedoms and
diminishing standards of living.”
The Cold War continues, and anti-Russia
hysteria is but a distraction, as was the
anti-Soviet hysteria. The aim is to distract the
public from the real Cold War which is a war by
the elites against democracy ever being actually
realized among the masses.
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 Independent.
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