US Democracy Is In “Very Serious Decline,” – Chomsky
By RT StaffApril 18, 2015 "ICH"
- "RT"
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Major American media organizations diligently parrot what US officials want the
public to know about global affairs, historian Noam Chomsky told RT. To US
leaders, any news outlet that “does not repeat the US propaganda system is
intolerable,” he said.
The culpability of the West – namely the United States
– for world affairs, such as the Ukrainian conflict or tensions with Iran, is
another idea that is not permissible in leading American media, Chomsky said,
adding that world opinion does not matter when that opinion counters US
strategy.
“The West means the United States and everyone else that goes along,”
he said. “What’s called the international community in the United States is
the United States and anyone who happens to be going along with it. Take, say,
for example, the question of Iran’s right to carry out its current nuclear
policies, whatever they are. The standard line is that the international
community objects to this. Who is the international community? What the United
States determines it to be.”
He added that, “any reader of [George] Orwell would be perfectly familiar
with this. But it continues virtually without comment.”
Chomsky’s remarks came this week just before a congressional hearing that was
officially titled ‘Confronting Russia’s Weaponization of Information.’ Of the
meeting, House Foreign Affairs Committee chair Ed Royce said, “The Russian
media is now dividing societies abroad and, in fact, weaponizing information.”
The social philosopher and MIT professor said, “if there were any
imaginable possibility of honesty,” Rep. Royce could be talking about the
American media. He pointed to a recent New York Times story that discussed
reasons not to trust Iran amid the
tentative agreement between Tehran and Washington, along with other major
global powers, over the former’s nuclear ambitions.
“The most interesting one is the charge that Iran is destabilizing the
Middle East because it’s supporting militias which have killed American soldiers
in Iraq,” Chomsky told RT’s Alexey Yaroshevsky.
“That’s kind of as if, in 1943, the Nazi press had criticized England
because it was destabilizing Europe for supporting partisans who were killing
German soldiers. In other words, the assumption is, when the United States
invades, it kills a couple hundred thousand people, destroys the country,
elicits sectarian conflicts that are now tearing Iraq and the region apart,
that’s stabilization. If someone resists that tact, that’s destabilization.”
Chomsky also related American media propaganda to
recent moves by
US President Barack Obama to reach out to Cuba, which the US has long considered
a state sponsor of terror while instituting a harsh embargo regime. Chomsky said
top American media outlets go to great lengths to pit Cuba -- and not the US --
as the isolated party in the Western Hemisphere.
“The facts are very clear. This is a free and open society, so we have
access to internal documents at an extraordinary level. You can’t claim you
don’t know. It’s not like a totalitarian state where there are no records. We
know what happened. The Kennedy administration launched a very serious terrorist
war against Cuba. It was one of the factors that led to the missile crisis. It
was a war that was planned to lead to an invasion in October 1962, which Cuba
and Russia presumably knew about. It’s now assumed by scholarship that that’s
one of the reasons for the placement of the missiles. That war went on for
years. No mention of it is permissible [in the US]. The only thing you can
mention is that there were some attempts to assassinate [Fidel] Castro. And
those can be written off as ridiculous CIA shenanigans. But the terrorist war
itself was very serious.”
Obama has changed course on Cuban policy not for reasons pursuant to freedom
or democracy, as is peddled in the US media, Chomsky said.
“There is no noble gesture, just Obama’s recognition that the United
States is practically being thrown out of the hemisphere because of its
isolation on this topic,” he added. “But you can’t discuss that [in the
US]. It’s all public information, nothing secret, all available in public
documents, but undiscussable. Like the idea -- and you can’t contemplate the
idea -- that when the US invades another country and the other resists, it’s not
the resistors who are committing the crime, it’s the invaders.”