Government and the
media work together to promote war on Russia
By Philip Giraldi
July 31, 2022:
Information Clearing House
--There
are some things that I believe to be true
about the anarchy that purports to be US
foreign policy. First, and most important, I
do not believe that any voter cast a ballot
for Joe Biden because he or she wanted him
to relentlessly pursue a needless conflict
with Russia that could easily escalate into
a nuclear war with unimaginable consequences
for all parties. Biden has recently declared
that the US will support Ukraine “until we
win” and, as there are already tens of
billions of dollars of weapons going to
Ukraine plus American “advisers” on the
ground, it constitutes a scenario in which
American and Russian soldiers will soon
likely be shooting at each other. The
President of Serbia and columnists like Pat
Buchanan and Tulsi Gabbard believe that we
are already de facto in World War 3 and one
has to wonder how the White House is getting
away with ignoring the War Powers mandates
in the US Constitution.
Second, I believe
that the Russians approached the United
States and its allies with some quite
reasonable requests regarding their own
national security given that a hostile
military alliance was about to land on its
doorsteps. The issues at stake were fully
negotiable but the US refused to budge on
anything and Russia felt compelled to take
military action. Nevertheless, there is no
such thing as a good war. I categorically
reject anyone invading anyone else unless
there is a dire and immediate threat, but
the onus on how the Ukraine situation
developed the way it did is on Washington.
Third, I believe that
the US and British governments in
particularly have been relentlessly lying to
the people and that the media in most of
west is party to the dissemination of the
lies to sustain the war effort against
Russia in Ukraine. The lies include both the
genesis and progress of the war and there
has also been a sustained effort to demonize
President Vladimir Putin and anything
Russian, including food, drinks, the Russian
language and culture and even professional
athletes. The latest victim is a Tchaikovsky
symphony banned in Canada. Putin is being
personally blamed for inflation, food
shortages and energy problems which more
properly are the fault of the Washington-led
ill-thought-out reaction to him. There is
considerable irony in the fact that Biden is
giving Ukraine $1.7 billion for healthcare,
while healthcare in the US is generally
considered among the poorest in the
developed world.
I believe that Russia
is winning the war comfortably and Ukraine
will be forced to give up territory while
the American taxpayer gets the bill for the
reckless spending policies, currently
totaling more than $60 billion, while also
looking forward to runaway inflation, energy
shortages, and, in a worst-case scenario, a
possible collapse of the dollar.
All of the above and
the politics behind it has led me to believe
that the United States, assisted by some of
its allies, has become addicted to war as an
excuse for domestic failures as well as a
replacement for diplomacy to settle
international disputes. The White House
hypocritically describes its role as “global
leadership” or maintaining a “rules based
international order” or even defending
“democracy against authoritarianism.” But at
the same time the Biden Administration has
just completed a fiasco evacuation that
ended a twenty-year occupation of
Afghanistan. Not having learned anything
from Afghanistan, there are now US troops
illegally present in Syria and Iraq and
Washington is conniving to attack Iran over
false claims made by Israel that the
Iranians are developing a nuclear weapon.
Neither Syria nor Iraq nor Iran in any way
threaten the United States, just as the
Russians did not threaten Americans prior to
a regime change intervention in Ukraine
starting in 2014, when the US arranged the
overthrow of a government that was friendly
to Moscow. The US has also begun to energize
NATO to start looking at steps to take to
confront the alleged Chinese threat.
The toll coming from
constant warfare and fearmongering has also
enabled a steady erosion of the liberties
that Americans once enjoyed, including free
speech and freedom to associate. I would
like to discuss what the ordinary concerned
citizen can do to cut through all the lies
surrounding what is currently taking place,
which might well be described as the most
aggressive propaganda campaign the world has
ever seen, far more extensive than the lying
and dissimulation by the White House and
Pentagon officials that preceded the
disastrous Iraq war. It is an information
plus propaganda war that sustains the actual
fighting on the ground, and it is in some
senses far more dangerous as it seeks to
involve more countries in the carnage while
also creating a global threat perception
that will be used to justify further
military interventions.
Part of the problem
is that the US government is awash with bad
information that it does not know how to
manage so it makes it hard to identify
anything that might actually be true. Back
in my time as an intelligence officer
operating overseas, there were a number of
short cuts that were used to categorize and
evaluate information. For example, if one
were hanging out in a local bar and
overheard two apparent government officials
discussing something of interest that might
be happening in the next week, one might
report it to Washington with a source
description FNU/LNU, which stood for “first
name unknown” and “last name unknown.” In
other words, it was unverifiable hearsay
coming from two individuals who could not be
identified. As such it was pretty much
worthless, but it clogged up the system and
invited speculation.
My personal favorite,
however, was the more precise source
descriptions developed by military
intelligence using an alphabet letter
followed by a number in a sequence running
from A-1 to F-6. At the top of an
intelligence report there would be an
assessment of the source, or agent. A-1
meant a piece of information that was both
credible and had been confirmed by other
sources and that was also produced by an
agent that had actual access to the
information in question. At the other end of
the scale, an F-6 was information that was
dubious produced by a source that appeared
to have no actual access to the information.
By that standard, we
Americans have been fed a lot of largely
fabricated F-6 “fake information” coming
from both the government and the media to
justify the Ukraine disaster. Here is how
you can spot it. If it is a newspaper or
magazine article skim all the way down the
text until you reach a point towards the end
where the sourcing of the information is
generally hidden. If it is attributed to a
named individual who indeed indisputably had
direct access to the information it would at
least suggest that the reporting contains a
kernel of truth. But that is almost never
the case, and one normally sees the source
described as an “anonymous source” or a
“government official” or even, in many
cases, there is no source attribution at
all. That generally means that the
information conveyed in the reporting is
completely unreliable and should be
considered the product of a fabricator or a
government and media propaganda mill. When a
story is written by a journalist who claims
to be on the scene it is also important to
check out whether he or she is actually on
site or working from a pool operating safely
in Poland to produce the reporting. Yahoo
News takes the prize in spreading propaganda
as it currently reproduces press releases
originating with the Ukrainian government
and posts them as if they are unbiased
reporting on what is taking place on the
ground.
Another trick to
making fake news look real is to route it
through a third country. When I was in
Turkey we in CIA never placed a story in the
media there directly. Instead, a journalist
on our payroll in France would do the story
and the Turkish media would pick it up,
believing that because it had appeared in
Paris it must be true even though it was
not. Currently, I have noted that a lot of
apparently MI-6 produced fake stories on
Ukraine have been appearing in the British
media, most notably the Telegraph and
Guardian. They are then replayed in the US
media and elsewhere to validate stories that
are essentially fabricated.
Television and radio
media is even worse than print media as it
almost never identifies the sources for the
stories that it carries. So my advice is to
be skeptical of what you read or hear
regarding wars and rumors of wars. The war
party is bipartisan in the United States and
it is just itching to seize the opportunity
to get a new venture going, and they are
oblivious to the fact that they might in the
process be about to destroy the world as we
know it. We must expose their lies and unite
and fight to make sure that they can’t get
away with it!
Philip M. Giraldi,
Ph.D., is Executive Director of the Council
for the National Interest, a 501(c)3 tax
deductible educational foundation (Federal
ID Number #52-1739023) that seeks a more
interests-based U.S. foreign policy in the
Middle East. Website is
councilforthenationalinterest.org,
address is P.O. Box 2157, Purcellville VA
20134 and its email is
inform@cnionline.org.