‘Group-Thinking’ the World
into a New War
The armchair warriors of Official Washington
are eager for a new war, this time with
Russia over Ukraine, and they are operating
from the same sort of mindless “group think”
and hostility to dissent that proved so
disastrous in Iraq, reports Robert Parry.
By Robert Parry
If you wonder how the lethal
“group think” on Iraq took shape in 2002,
you might want to study what’s happening
today with Ukraine. A misguided consensus
has grabbed hold of Official Washington and
has pulled in everyone who “matters” and
tossed out almost anyone who disagrees.
Part of the problem, in
both cases, has been that neocon
propagandists understand that in the modern
American media the personal is the
political, that is, you don’t deal with the
larger context of a dispute, you make it
about some easily demonized figure. So,
instead of understanding the complexities of
Iraq, you focus on the unsavory Saddam
Hussein.
This approach has been
part of the neocon playbook at least since
the 1980s when many of today’s leading
neocons – such as Elliott Abrams and Robert
Kagan – were entering government and cut
their teeth as propagandists for the Reagan
administration. Back then, the game was to
put, say, Nicaragua’s President Daniel
Ortega into the demon suit, with accusations
about him wearing “designer glasses.” Later,
it was Panamanian dictator Manuel Noriega
and then, of course, Saddam Hussein.
Instead of Americans
coming to grips with the painful history of
Central America, where the U.S. government
has caused much of the violence and
dysfunction, or in Iraq, where Western
nations don’t have clean hands either, the
story was made personal – about the
demonized leader – and anyone who provided a
fuller context was denounced as an “Ortega
apologist” or a “Noriega apologist” or a
“Saddam apologist.”
So, American skeptics were
silenced and the U.S. government got to do
what it wanted without serious debate. In
Iraq, for instance, the American people
would have benefited from a thorough airing
of the complexities of Iraqi society – such
as the sectarian divide between Sunni and
Shiite – and the potential risks of invading
under the dubious rationale of WMD.
But there was no thorough
debate about anything: not about
international law that held “aggressive war”
to be “the supreme international crime”; not
about the difficulty of putting a shattered
Iraq back together after an invasion; not
even about the doubts within the U.S.
intelligence community about whether Iraq
possessed usable WMD and whether Hussein had
any ties to al-Qaeda.
All the American people
heard was that Saddam Hussein was “a bad
guy” and it was America’s right and duty to
get rid of “bad guys” who supposedly had
dangerous WMDs that they might share with
other “bad guys.” To say that this
simplistic argument was an insult to a
modern democracy would be an understatement,
but the propaganda worked because almost no
one in the mainstream press or in academia
or in politics dared speak out.
Those who could have made
a difference feared for their careers – and
they were “right” to have those fears, at
least in the sense that it was much safer,
career-wise, to run with the herd than to
stand in the way. Even after the Iraq War
had turned into an unmitigated disaster with
horrific repercussions reaching to the
present, the U.S. political/media
establishment undertook no serious effort to
impose accountability.
Almost no one who joined
in the Iraq “group think” was punished. It
turns out that there truly is safety in
numbers. Many of those exact same people are
still around holding down the same powerful
jobs as if nothing horrible had happened in
Iraq. Their pontifications still are
featured on the most influential opinion
pages in American journalism, with the New
York Times’ Thomas L. Friedman a perfect
example.
Though Friedman has been
wrong again and again, he is still regarded
as perhaps the preeminent foreign policy
pundit in the U.S. media. Which brings us to
the issue of Ukraine and Russia.
A New Cold War
From the start of the
Ukraine crisis in fall 2013, the New York
Times, the Washington Post and virtually
every mainstream U.S. news outlet have
behaved as dishonestly as they did during
the run-up to war with Iraq. Objectivity and
other principles of journalism have been
thrown out the window. The larger context of
both Ukrainian politics and Russia’s role
has been ignored.
Again, it’s all been about
demonized “bad guys” – in this case,
Ukraine’s elected President Viktor
Yanukovych and Russia’s elected President
Vladimir Putin – versus the “pro-Western
good guys” who are deemed model democrats
even as they collaborated with neo-Nazis to
overthrow a constitutional order.
Again, the political is
made personal: Yanukovych had a pricy sauna
in his mansion; Putin rides a horse
shirtless and doesn’t favor gay rights. So,
if you raise questions about U.S. support
for last year’s coup in Ukraine, you somehow
must favor pricy saunas, riding shirtless
and holding bigoted opinions about gays.
Anyone who dares protest
the unrelentingly one-sided coverage is
deemed a “Putin apologist” or a “stooge of
Moscow.” So, most Americans – in a position
to influence public knowledge but who want
to stay employable – stay silent, just as
they did during the Iraq War stampede.
One of the ugly but sadly
typical cases relates to Russia scholar
Stephen F. Cohen, who has been denounced by
some of the usual neocon suspects for
deviating from the “group think” that blames
the entire Ukraine crisis on Putin. The New
Republic, which has gotten pretty much every
major issue wrong during my 37 years in
Washington, smeared Cohen as “Putin’s
American toady.”
And, if you think that
Cohen’s fellow scholars are more tolerant of
a well-argued dissent, the Association for
Slavic, East European and Eurasian Studies
further proved that deviation from the
“group think” on Ukraine is not to be
tolerated.
The academic group spurned
a fellowship program, which it had solicited
from Cohen’s wife, Katrina vanden Heuvel,
because the program’s title included Cohen’s
name. “It’s no secret that there were
swirling controversies surrounding Professor
Cohen,” Stephen Hanson, the group’s
president,
told the New York Times.
In a protest letter to the
group, Cohen called this action “a political
decision that creates serious doubts about
the organization’s commitment to First
Amendment rights and academic freedom.” He
also noted that young scholars in the field
have expressed fear for their professional
futures if they break from the herd.
He mentioned the story of
one young woman scholar who dropped off a
panel to avoid risking her career in
case she said something that could be deemed
sympathetic to Russia.
Cohen noted, too, that
even established foreign policy figures,
ex-National Security Advisor Zbigniew
Brzezinski and former Secretary of State
Henry Kissinger, have been accused in the
Washington Post of “advocating that the West
appease Russia,” with the notion of
“appeasement” meant “to be disqualifying,
chilling, censorious.” (Kissinger had
objected to the comparison of Putin to
Hitler as unfounded.)
In other words, as the
United States rushes into a new Cold War
with Russia, we are seeing the makings of a
new McCarthyism, challenging the patriotism
of anyone who doesn’t get into line. But
this conformity of thought presents a
serious threat to U.S. national security and
even the future of the planet.
It may seem clever for
some New Republic blogger or a Washington
Post writer to insult anyone who doesn’t
accept the over-the-top propaganda on Russia
and Ukraine – much as they did to people who
objected to the rush to war in Iraq – but a
military clash with nuclear-armed Russia is
a crisis of a much greater magnitude.
Botching Russia
Professor Cohen has been
one of the few scholars who was right in
criticizing Official Washington’s earlier
“group think” about post-Soviet Russia, a
reckless and mindless approach that laid the
groundwork for today’s confrontation.
To understand why Russians
are so alarmed by U.S. and NATO meddling in
Ukraine, you have to go back to those days
after the Soviet Union collapsed in 1991.
Instead of working with the Russians to
transition carefully from a communist system
to a pluralistic, capitalist one, the U.S.
prescription was “shock therapy.”
As American “free market”
experts descended on Moscow during the
pliant regime of Boris Yeltsin,
well-connected Russian thieves and their
U.S. compatriots plundered the country’s
wealth, creating a handful of billionaire
“oligarchs” and leaving millions upon
millions of Russians in a state of near
starvation, with a collapse in life
expectancy rarely seen in a country not at
war.
Yet, despite the
desperation of the masses, American
journalists and pundits hailed the
“democratic reform” underway in Russia with
glowing accounts of how glittering life
could be in the shiny new hotels,
restaurants and bars of Moscow. Complaints
about the suffering of average Russians were
dismissed as the grumblings of losers who
failed to appreciate the economic wonders
that lay ahead.
As recounted in his 2001
book, Failed Crusade, Cohen
correctly describes this fantastical
reporting as journalistic “malpractice” that
left the American people misinformed about
the on-the-ground reality in Russia. The
widespread suffering led Vladimir Putin, who
succeeded Yeltsin, to pull back on the
wholesale privatization, to punish some
oligarchs and to restore some of the social
safety net.
Though the U.S. mainstream
media portrays Putin as essentially a
tyrant, his elections and approval numbers
indicate that he commands broad popular
support, in part, because he stood up to
some oligarchs (though he still worked with
others). Yet, Official Washington continues
to portray oligarchs whom Putin jailed as
innocent victims of a tyrant’s revenge.
Last October, after Putin
pardoned one jailed oligarch Mikhail
Khodorkovsky, neocon Freedom House sponsored
a Washington dinner in his honor, hailing
him as one of Russia’s political heroes. “I
have to say I’m impressed by him,” declared
Freedom House President David Kramer. “But
he’s still figuring out how he can make a
difference.”
New York Times writer
Peter Baker fairly swooned at Khodorkovsky’s
presence. “If anything, he seemed stronger
and deeper than before” prison, Baker
wrote. “The notion of prison as
cleansing the soul and ennobling the spirit
is a powerful motif in Russian literature.”
Yet, even Khodorkovsky,
who is now in his early 50s, acknowledged
that he “grew up in Russia’s emerging Wild
West capitalism to take advantage of what he
now says was a corrupt privatization
system,” Baker reported.
In other words,
Khodorkovsky was admitting that he obtained
his vast wealth through a corrupt process,
though by referring to it as the “Wild West”
Baker made the adventure seem quite dashing
and even admirable when, in reality,
Khodorkovsky was a key figure in the plunder
of Russia that impoverished millions of his
countrymen and sent many to early graves.
In the 1990s, Professor
Cohen was one of the few scholars with the
courage to challenge the prevailing
boosterism for Russia’s “shock therapy.” He
noted even then the danger of mistaken
“conventional wisdom” and how it strangles
original thought and necessary skepticism.
“Much as Russia scholars
prefer consensus, even orthodoxy, to
dissent, most journalists, one of them tells
us, are ‘devoted to group-think’ and ‘see
the world through a set of standard
templates,’” wrote Cohen. “For them to break
with ‘standard templates’ requires not only
introspection but retrospection, which also
is not a characteristic of either
profession.”
A Plodding Pundit
Arguably, no one in
journalism proves that point better than New
York Times columnist Friedman, who is at
best a pedestrian thinker plodding somewhere
near the front of the herd. But Friedman’s
access to millions of readers on the New
York Times op-ed page makes him an important
figure in consolidating the “group think” no
matter how askew it is from reality.
Friedman played a key role
in lining up many Americans behind the
invasion of Iraq and is doing the same in
the current march of folly into a new Cold
War with Russia, including now a hot war on
Russia’s Ukrainian border. In one typically
mindless but inflammatory
column, entitled “Czar Putin’s
Next Moves,” Friedman decided it was time to
buy into the trendy analogy of likening
Putin to Hitler.
“Last March, former
Secretary of State Hillary Clinton was
quoted as saying that Russian President
Vladimir Putin’s attack on Ukraine,
supposedly in defense of Russian-speakers
there, was just like ‘what Hitler did back
in the ‘30s’ — using ethnic Germans to
justify his invasion of neighboring lands.
At the time, I thought such a comparison was
over the top. I don’t think so anymore.”
Though Friedman was
writing from Zurich apparently without
direct knowledge of what is happening in
Ukraine, he wrote as if he were on the front
lines: “Putin’s use of Russian troops
wearing uniforms without insignia to invade
Ukraine and to covertly buttress Ukrainian
rebels bought and paid for by Moscow — all
disguised by a web of lies that would have
made Nazi propagandist Joseph Goebbels blush
and all for the purpose of destroying
Ukraine’s reform movement before it can
create a democratic model that might appeal
to Russians more than Putin’s kleptocracy —
is the ugliest geopolitical mugging
happening in the world today.
“Ukraine matters — more
than the war in Iraq against the Islamic
State, a.k.a., ISIS. It is still not clear
that most of our allies in the war against
ISIS share our values. That conflict has a
big tribal and sectarian element. It is
unmistakably clear, though, that Ukraine’s
reformers in its newly elected government
and Parliament — who are struggling to get
free of Russia’s orbit and become part of
the European Union’s market and democratic
community — do share our values. If Putin
the Thug gets away with crushing Ukraine’s
new democratic experiment and unilaterally
redrawing the borders of Europe, every
pro-Western country around Russia will be in
danger.”
If Friedman wished to show
any balance – which he clearly didn’t – he
might have noted that Goebbels would
actually be quite proud of the fact that
some of Hitler’s modern-day followers are at
the forefront of the fight for Ukrainian
“reform,” dispatched by those Kiev
“reformers” to spearhead the nasty slaughter
of ethnic Russians in eastern Ukraine.
But references to those
inconvenient neo-Nazis, who also spearheaded
the coup last February ousting President
Yanukovych, are essentially verboten in the
U.S. mainstream media. So, is any reference
to the fact that eastern Ukrainians have
legitimate grievances with the Kiev
authorities who ousted Yanukovych who had
been elected with strong support from
eastern Ukraine.
But in the mainstream
American “group think,” the people of
eastern Ukraine are simply “bought and paid
for by Moscow” – all the better to feel good
about slaughtering them. [See
Consortiumnews.com’s “Seeing
No Neo-Nazi Militias in Ukraine.”]
We’re also not supposed to
mention that there was a coup in Ukraine, as
the New York Times told us earlier this
month. It was just white-hat “reformers”
bringing more U.S.-sponsored good government
to Ukraine. [See Consortiumnews.com’s “NYT
Still Pretends No Coup in Ukraine.”]
In his column, without any
sense of irony or awareness, Friedman
glowingly quotes Natalie Jaresko, Ukraine’s
new finance minister (leaving out that
Jaresko is a newly minted Ukrainian citizen,
an ex-American diplomat and investment
banker with her own history of “kleptocracy.”)
Friedman quotes Jaresko’s
stirring words: “Putin fears a Ukraine that
demands to live and wants to live and
insists on living on European values — with
a robust civil society and freedom of speech
and religion [and] with a system of values
the Ukrainian people have chosen and laid
down their lives for.”
However, as I noted in
December, Jaresko headed a U.S.
government-funded investment project for
Ukraine that involved substantial insider
dealings, including $1 million-plus fees to
a management company that she also
controlled.
Jaresko served as
president and chief executive officer of
Western NIS Enterprise Fund (WNISEF), which
was created by the U.S. Agency for
International Development with $150 million
to spur business activity in Ukraine. She
also was cofounder and managing partner of
Horizon Capital which managed WNISEF’s
investments at a rate of 2 to 2.5 percent of
committed capital, fees exceeding $1 million
in recent years, according to
WNISEF’s 2012 annual report.
In the 2012 report, the
section on “related party transactions”
covered some two pages and included not only
the management fees to Jaresko’s Horizon
Capital ($1,037,603 in 2011 and $1,023,689
in 2012) but also WNISEF’s co-investments in
projects with the Emerging Europe Growth
Fund [EEGF], where
Jaresko was founding partner and chief
executive officer. Jaresko’s
Horizon Capital also managed EEGF.
From 2007 to 2011, WNISEF
co-invested $4.25 million with EEGF in
Kerameya LLC, a Ukrainian brick
manufacturer, and WNISEF sold EEGF 15.63
percent of Moldova’s Fincombank for $5
million, the report said. It also listed
extensive exchanges of personnel and
equipment between WNISEF and Horizon
Capital.
Though it’s difficult for
an outsider to ascertain the relative merits
of these insider deals, they involved
potential conflicts of interest between a
U.S.-taxpayer-funded entity and a private
company that Jaresko controlled.
Based on the data from
WNISEF’s 2012 annual report, it also
appeared that the U.S. taxpayers had lost
about one-third of their investment in
WNISEF, with the fund’s balance at
$98,074,030, compared to the initial U.S.
government grant of $150 million.
In other words, there is
another side of the Ukraine story, a darker
reality that Friedman and the rest of the
mainstream media don’t want you to know.
They want to shut out alternative
information and lead you into another
conflict, much as they did in Iraq.
But Friedman is right
about one thing: “Ukraine matters.” And he’s
even right that Ukraine matters more than
the butchery that’s continuing in Iraq.
But Friedman is wrong
about why. Ukraine matters more because he
and the other “group thinkers,” who turned
Iraq into today’s slaughterhouse, are just
as blind to the reality of the U.S. military
confronting Russia over Ukraine, except in
the Ukraine case, both sides have nuclear
weapons.
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
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barnesandnoble.com).
You also can order Robert Parry’s trilogy on
the Bush Family and its connections to
various right-wing operatives for only $34.
The trilogy includes America’s
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click here.