August 16, 2022:
Information Clearing House-- Back on June 1st, I
noted that Ukraine couldn’t possibly absorb
more than $54 billion in U.S. aid, most of it
related to weaponry and munitions, given the
country’s lack of infrastructure as well as the
chaos inherent to a shooting war.
As I wrote back then:
The entire defense budget of Ukraine
before the war was just under $6 billion.
How can Ukraine possibly absorb (mostly)
military “aid” that represents NINE TIMES
their annual defense budget? It simply can’t
be done…
From a military perspective, the gusher
of money and equipment being sent to Ukraine
makes little sense because there’s no way
Ukraine has the infrastructure to absorb it
and use it effectively. The U.S. approach
seems to be to flood the zone with weaponry
and assorted equipment of all sorts,
irrespective of how it might be used or
where it might ultimately end up. I can’t
see how all this lethal “aid” will stay in
the hands of troops and out of the hands of
various criminal networks and black markets.
And so it goes. Recent reports suggest that
only 30-40% of U.S. military aid is actually
reaching Ukrainian troops. The rest is being
siphoned off, lost, stolen, what-have-you. The
response in U.S. media is to suppress this
truth, per dictates from Ukraine!
Caitlin Johnstone does an excellent job of
summarizing the case, and since she generously
encourages her readers to share her posts, I
thought I’d avail myself of her generosity.
Without further ado:
Caitlin Johnstone, CBS Tries Critical
Journalism; Stops After Ukraine Objects
Following objections from the Ukrainian
government, CBS News has removed
a short documentary which had reported
concerns from numerous sources that a large
amount of the supplies being sent to Ukraine
aren’t making it to the front lines.
The Ukrainian government has listed
its objections to the report on a government
website, naming Ukrainian officials who objected
to it and explaining why each of the CBS news
sources it dislikes should be discounted. After
the report was taken down and the Twitter post
about it removed, Ukrainian Foreign Minister
Dmytro Kuleba said this was a good start but
still not enough.
“Welcome first step, but it is not enough,”
Kuleba tweeted.
“You have misled a huge audience by sharing
unsubstantiated claims and damaging trust in
supplies of vital military aid to a nation
resisting aggression and genocide. There should
be an internal investigation into who enabled
this and why.”
“This article has been updated to reflect
changes since the CBS Reports documentary
‘Arming Ukraine’ was filmed, and the documentary
is also being updated. Jonas Ohman says the
delivery has significantly improved since
filming with CBS in late April. The government
of Ukraine notes that U.S. defense attaché
Brigadier General Garrick M. Harmon arrived in
Kyiv in August 2022 for arms control and
monitoring.”
CBS News does not say why it has taken so
long for this report to come out, why it didn’t
check to see if anything had changed in the last
few months during a rapidly unfolding war before
releasing its report, or why it felt its claims
were good enough to air before Kyiv raised its
objections but not after.
Someone uploaded the old version of the
documentary on
YouTube here, or you can watch it on
Bitchute here if that one gets taken down.
It was supportive of Ukraine and very
oppositional to Russia, and simply featured a
number of sources saying they had reason to
believe a lot of the military supplies being
sent to Ukraine aren’t getting where they’re
supposed to go.
The original article quotes the
aforementioned Jonas Ohman as follows:
“All of this stuff goes across the
border, and then something happens, kind of
like 30% of it reaches its final
destination,” said Jonas Ohman, founder and
CEO of Blue-Yellow, a Lithuania-based
organization that has been meeting with and
supplying frontline units with military aid
in Ukraine since the start of the conflict
with Russia-backed separatists in 2014.
“30-40%, that’s my estimation,” he said
in April of this year.
“The US has sent tens of thousands of
anti-aircraft and anti-armor systems, artillery
rounds, hundreds of artillery systems,
Switchblade armored drones, and tens of millions
of rounds of small arms ammunition,” CBS’s Adam
Yamaguchi tells us at 14:15
of the documentary. “But in a conflict where
frontlines are scattered and conditions change
without warning, not all of those supplies reach
their destination. Some also reported weapons
are being hoarded, or worse fear that they are
disappearing into the black market, an industry
that has thrived under corruption in post-Soviet
Ukraine.”
“I can tell you unarguably that on the
frontline units these things are not getting
there,” the Mozart
Group‘s Andy Milburn tells
Yamaguchi at 17:40. “Drones, Switchblades,
IFAKs. They’re not, alright. Body armor,
helmets, you name it.”
“Is it safe to characterize this as a little
bit of a black hole?” Yamaguchi asked him,
perhaps in reference to an April
report from CNN whose source said the
equipment that’s being sent “drops into a big
black hole, and you have almost no sense of it
at all after a short period of time.”
“I suppose if you don’t have visibility of
where this stuff is going, and if you’re asking
that question, then it would appear that it’s a
black hole, yeah,” Milburn replied.
“We don’t know,” Amnesty International’s
Donatella Rovera tells Yamaguchi at 18:45 when
asked if it’s known where the weapons being sent
to Ukraine are going.
“There is really no information as to where
they’re going at all,” Rovera says. “What is
more worrying is that at least some of the
countries that are sending weapons do not seem
to think that it is their responsibility to put
in place a very robust oversight mechanism to
ensure that they know how they’re being used
today, but also how they might and will be used
tomorrow.”
A news outlet pulling a report because their
own government didn’t like it would be a
scandalous breach of journalistic ethics. A news
outlet pulling a report because a foreign government
didn’t like it is even more so.
We’ve already seen that the western media
will uncritically report literally any claim
made by the government of Ukraine in bizarre
instances like the recent
report that Russia was firing rockets at a
nuclear power plant it had already captured, or
its regurgitation
of claims that Russians are raping babies to
death from a Ukrainian official who ended up getting
fired for promoting unevidenced claims about
rape. Now not only will western media outlets
uncritically report any claim the Ukrainian
government makes, they will also retract claims
of their own when the Ukrainian government tells
them to.
It’s not just commentators like me who see
the western press as propagandists: that’s how
they see themselves. If you think it’s your job
to always report information that helps one side
of a war and always omit any information which
might hinder it, then you have given yourself
the role of propagandist. You might not call
yourself that, but that’s what you are by any
reasonable definition of that word.
And a great many western Zelenskyites
honestly see this as the media’s role as well.
They’ll angrily
condemn anyone who inserts skepticism of the
US empire’s narratives about Ukraine into
mainstream consciousness, but then they’ll also
yell at you if you say we’re not being told the
truth about Ukraine. They demand to be lied to,
and call you a liar if you say that means we’re
being lied to.
You can’t have it both ways. Either you want
the mass media to serve as war propagandists or
you want them to tell the truth. You cannot hold
both of those positions simultaneously. They are
mutually exclusive. And many actually want the
former.
This can’t lead anywhere good.
Follow
this link to read all of Caitlin’s article:
William J. Astore, a retired
lieutenant colonel (USAF) and professor of
history. He is the author or co-author of three
books and numerous articles focusing on military
history as well as the history of science,
technology, and religion.
https://bracingviews.com
Views expressed in this article are
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