Nato
War Propaganda: A Danger to Russia and World
Peace
By Christopher Black
March 14, 2015 "ICH"
- "NEO"
- The reaction of the media in the Nato
countries to the murder of Boris Nemtsov
reveals the next phase of the war against
Russia. Defeated at Debaltsevo, defied by
Russia, lectured by China, the Nato warlords
need something immediate and dramatic to
guide the imaginations of their peoples
towards war. The constant propaganda
offensive aimed at Russia is accelerating
and is increasingly designed to identify
Russia and its people not with the Russian
government, but with a single man and, with
the murder of Nemtsov, that man is now
labelled assassin.
Across the broad spectrum of
the “western” media in the past days there
has appeared one story after another
designed to make the average citizen believe
that President Putin was personally involved
in the killing. The facts of the case do not
matter. The Nato governments deny any
involvement in a provocation but their
immediate denunciations, the morning
following the murder, of Russian democracy,
of Russian government, and of President
Putin, convict them all on the charge of
exploiting the murder as surely as if the
assassins’ bullets were theirs.
The labelling of resisting
leaders as criminals has been used
frequently in the west since the days of the
Roman Empire and once a foreign leader is so
labelled a war soon follows. In recent
history the Americans and their Nato
lieutenants identified President Milosevic
as a criminal for simply refusing Nato’s
diktats. They did the same with Saddam
Hussein, with Muammar Gaddafi and murdered
them all, one way or another.
Once a head of state is
demeaned in this way and reduced to a common
criminal the people of the aggressor country
are easily persuaded that his elimination,
and the elimination of the government that
supports him, is a necessary task. The
persuasion has been going on since Putin’s
speech in 2007, which drew a line in the
sand against American imperial ambitions in
Eurasia, and reached new levels of hysteria
when Flight MH17 was shot down last year.
Evidence that it was probably the Kiev
forces that committed the crime, with
American collusion, was completely supressed
by the western media and when more evidence
of their culpability was produced the shoot
down was erased from history and now is
rarely mentioned. Since the overthrow of the
legitimate government of Ukraine a year ago
the western media have been caught time and
again repeating US propaganda about Russian
threats to peace in Europe, about Russian
territorial ambitions and Russian regular
army units being involved in the Donbass.
Denials by Russia, and even observers of the
OSCE, are ignored and the lies are repeated
day after day after day.
The use of propaganda to
incite hatred towards another people or
government, and to incite calls for
aggressive war and all the war crimes that
flow from aggressive war are crimes against
humanity and prohibited under international
and national laws. Journalists who
prostitute themselves by telling their
fellow citizens lies are not only betraying
the trust put in them by the people, and
treating them with contempt, they are also
war criminals and should be judged as such.
Their responsibility in preparing the way
for war is as great as those who plan the
war and carry out the military operations of
the war.
We need only look at the case
of Juluis Streicher at the Nuremberg Trials
in 1946 to understand that propagandists can
be hanged too. Streicher neither gave orders
for the extermination of Jews nor was
involved in any military operations. But
that did not prevent him from being
convicted of crimes against humanity for
producing the anti-semitic journal Der
Sturmer that put out a constant barrage of
hate propaganda against Jews. His role in
preparing the ground for the dehumanization
of Jews in Germany was determined to be
critical in creating the conditions for
their extermination by the Nazis. The
Nuremberg prosecutors argued that his
articles and speeches were incendiary and
that he was an accessory to murder and
therefore as culpable as those who actually
carried out the killings. The Allied judges
agreed and he was convicted of crimes
against humanity and hanged in October 1946.
The judgement stated in part that “…he
infected the German mind with the virus of
anti-semitism and incited the German people
to active persecution and..murder.”
The role of propaganda in
preparing a nation’s people to call for and
support an aggressive war was never put
better than by another Nazi, Herman Goering
during the same trial that convicted
Streicher. In an interview with Gustave
Gilbert published in in 1947, in Nuremberg
Diary, he said:
-
Göring:
“Why, of course, the people don’t want
war. Why would some poor slob on a farm
want to risk his life in a war when the
best that he can get out of it is to
come back to his farm in one piece?
Naturally, the common people don’t want
war; neither in Russia nor in England
nor in America, nor for that matter in
Germany. That is
understood. But, after all, it is the
leaders of the country who determine the
policy and it is always a simple matter
to drag the people along, whether it is
a democracy or a fascist dictatorship or
a Parliament or a Communist
dictatorship.
-
Gilbert: “There is one difference. In a
democracy, the people have some say in
the matter through their elected
representatives, and in the United
States only Congress can declare wars.
-
Göring:
“Oh, that is all well and good, but,
voice or no voice, the people can always
be brought to the bidding of the
leaders. That is easy. All you have to
do is tell them they are being attacked
and denounce the pacifists for lack of
patriotism and exposing the country to
danger. It works the same way in any
country.”
The
Nuremberg principle that propaganda inciting
aggressive war is a crime was codified in
the International Covenant on Civil and
Political Rights adopted by the General
Assembly of the United Nations in 1966.
Article 20
states,
“1.
Any propaganda for war shall be
prohibited by law.
2. Any
advocacy of national, racial or
religious hatred that constitutes
incitement to discrimination, hostility
or violence shall be prohibited by law.”
It was
also included in Article 15 of the American
Convention on Human Rights of 1969 that uses
similar language. It is telling that both
Canada and the United States, two of the
worst offenders in the use of war
propaganda, have refused to ratify the
Convention, but this should not surprise us.
Today we
see the use of propaganda as an offensive
weapon against Russia not only in the press
and other news media, we also see it in film
and television. The American television
series House of Cards, has now descended
deep into the sewer of anti-Russian
propaganda with a Russian leader named
Petrov standing in for Putin, while those
rank opportunists, Pussy Riot, used to try
to embarrass Petrov in one episode, succeed
only in embarrassing themselves.
The
prohibition on the use of war propaganda in
international covenants is important because
war threatens the existence and exercise of
all of the other political and civil rights
contained in those covenants and of the UN
Charter itself, including the right to live
in peace. And since wars of aggression are
illegal under customary international law
and since propaganda related to aggressive
war is illegal, actions could be taken in
national courts against governments,
corporations and individuals who engage in
it.
The
question of the identification of war
propaganda presents no more difficulty than
identifying aggressive war. Distinguishing
it from mere expression of opinion or
supposed reporting of facts is also not
difficult. Any communication to the public
that has the sole purpose of inflaming
emotions and feelings of hatred, hostility
and calls for war would fall under the
definition of war propaganda, whether by
distortion of facts, suppression of facts or
the invention of facts.
In 1966,
at a seminar in the United States on the
meaning of propaganda, the Soviet press
attaché in Washington stated that propaganda
“had rather a broad meaning, implying
purposeful dissemination of certain
information that is to produce upon its
recipient a certain reaction which from the
viewpoint of the disseminator is desirable”,
and defined war propaganda to be both an
“incitement to war between states and a
means for preparing for aggressive war.” The
United States, on the other hand, has
generally opposed efforts to prohibit the
use of war propaganda
in international law citing
concerns about freedom of expression. But
this is a false argument, used to justify
the unjustifiable, the constant use of
propaganda by the United States to create in
the minds of its citizens the necessary
emotions and reactions to support wars
fought for the benefit of a few against the
interests of the many.
War propaganda is a danger to
world peace. It is a danger to democracy
itself. Since wars of aggression are
criminal acts, incitements to engage in them
are also criminal acts. It is high time for
the peoples of the world, against whom this
propaganda is directed, and who are the true
victims of these crimes, to wake up, to get
on their feet, to put their fists in the air
and protest the constant manipulation of
their minds towards hatred and violence and
war and demand the full implementation of
the international covenants that prohibit it
and the arrest and trial of those that use
it.
Christopher Black is an
international criminal lawyer based in
Toronto, he is a member of the Law Society
of Upper Canada and he is known for a number
of high-profile cases involving human rights
and war crimes, especially for the online
magazine
“New Eastern Outlook”.