MH-17 Case Slips into Propaganda Fog
Almost a year ago, Malaysia Airlines Flight 17 was
shot down over eastern Ukraine killing 298 people. Yet, instead of a
transparent investigation seeking justice, the case became a
propaganda game of finger-pointing, with the CIA withholding key
evidence all the better to blame Russia, reports Robert Parry.
By Robert Parry
July 10, 2015 "Information
Clearing House"
-
"Consortium
News" - The Dutch investigation into the
shoot-down of Malaysia Airlines Flight 17 over eastern Ukraine last
July has failed to uncover conclusive proof of precisely who was
responsible for the deaths of the 298 passengers and crew but is
expected to point suspicions toward the ethnic Russian rebels,
fitting with the West’s long-running anti-Russian propaganda
campaign.
A source who has been briefed on the outlines of
the investigation said some U.S. intelligence analysts have reached
a contrary conclusion and place the blame on “rogue” elements of the
Ukrainian government operating out of a circle of hard-liners around
one of Ukraine’s oligarchs. Yet, according to this source, the U.S.
analysts will demur on the Dutch findings, letting them stand
without public challenge.
A
Malaysia Airways’ Boeing 777 like the one that crashed in
eastern Ukraine on July 17, 2014. (Photo credit: Aero Icarus
from Zürich, Switzerland)
Throughout the Ukraine crisis, propaganda and
“information warfare” have overridden any honest presentation of
reality – and the mystery around the MH-17 disaster has now
slipped into that haze of charge and counter-charge. Many
investigative journalists, including myself,
have been rebuffed in repeated efforts to get verifiable
proof about the case or even informational briefings.
In that sense, the MH-17 case stands as an outlier
to the usual openness that surrounds inquiries into airline
disasters. The Obama administration’s behavior has been particularly
curious, with its rush to judgment five days after the July 17, 2014
shoot-down, citing sketchy social media posts to implicate the
ethnic Russian rebels and indirectly the Russian government but then
refusing requests for updates.
But why the later secrecy? If Director of National
Intelligence James Clapper decided that unverified information about
the shoot-down could be released five days after the event, why
would his office then decide to keep the U.S. public in the dark as
more definitive data became available?
Over the past 11 months, the DNI’s office has
offered no updates on the initial assessment, with a DNI spokeswoman
even making
the absurd claim that U.S. intelligence had made no
refinements of its understanding about the tragedy since July 22,
2014.
I’m told that the reason for the DNI’s reversal
from openness to secrecy was that U.S. intelligence analysts found
no evidence that the Russian government had given the rebels
sophisticated anti-aircraft missiles capable of downing an aircraft
at 33,000 feet, the altitude of MH-17, and that an examination of
U.S. satellite and electronic intelligence instead implicated
extremists linked to Ukraine’s U.S.-backed regime, although not to
Kiev’s political leadership.
At that point, admitting to an erroneous rush to
judgment would have embarrassed the administration and undermined
the “public diplomacy” campaign around the MH-17 case. By blaming
Russia and its President Vladimir Putin last summer, the Obama
administration whipped Europe into an anti-Russian frenzy and helped
win the European Union’s support for economic sanctions against
Russia. Keeping Putin on the defensive is a top U.S. priority.
As one senior U.S. government official explained
to me, information warfare was the only area in the Ukraine crisis
where Washington felt it had an edge over Moscow, which benefited
from a host of other advantages, such as geography, economic and
cultural ties, and military pressure.
‘False Flags’
It also appears that right-wing Ukrainian
political forces, which seized power in the Feb. 22, 2014 coup, have
understood the value of propaganda, including “false flag”
operations that pin the blame for atrocities on their opponents. One
of the most successful may have been the mysterious sniper attacks
on Feb. 20, 2014, that slaughtered both police and protesters in
Kiev’s Maidan square, with the violence immediately blamed on
President Viktor Yanukovych and used to justify his overthrow two
days later.
Later independent investigations indicated that
extreme right-wing elements seeking Yanukovych’s ouster were more
likely responsible. Two European Union officials, Estonia’s Foreign
Minister Urmas Paet and European Union foreign affairs chief
Catherine Ashton, were revealed discussing in a phone call their
suspicions that elements of the protesters were responsible for the
shootings.
“So there is a stronger and stronger understanding
that behind snipers it was not Yanukovych, it was somebody from the
new coalition,” Paet told Ashton, as
reported by the UK Guardian. [A worthwhile documentary on
this mystery is “Maidan
Massacre.”]
Even U.S. officials have faulted the new regime
for failing to conduct a diligent investigation to determine who was
to blame for the sniper attack. During a rousing
anti-Russian speech in Kiev last month, U.S. Ambassador
to the United Nations Samantha Power inserted one criticism of the
post-coup regime – that “investigations into serious crimes such as
the violence in the Maidan and in Odessa [where
scores of ethnic Russians were burned alive] have been
sluggish, opaque, and marred by serious errors – suggesting not only
a lack of competence, but also a lack of will to hold the
perpetrators accountable.”
In other words, regarding the Maidan sniper
massacre, the Kiev regime wasn’t willing to reveal evidence that
might undermine the incident’s use as a valuable propaganda ploy.
That attitude has been shared by the mainstream Western media which
has sought to glue white hats on the post-coup regime and black hats
on the ethnic Russian rebels who supported Yanukovych and have
resisted the new power structure.
For instance, since Yanukovych’s ouster nearly 1½
years ago, The New York Times and other mainstream outlets have
treated reports about the key role played in the coup regime by
neo-Nazis and other far-right nationalists as “Russian propaganda.”
However, this week, the Times finally acknowledged the importance of
these extremists in Kiev’s military operations. [See
Consortiumnews.com’s “Ukraine
Merges Nazis and Islamists.”]
A similar propaganda fog has enveloped the MH-17
investigation, with the lead investigators – the Dutch, British,
Australians and Ukrainians – all firmly in the pro-Kiev and
anti-Moscow camp. (Specialists from the United States, Russia and
Malaysia have also been involved in the inquiry.)
Not surprisingly, leaders in Ukraine and
Australia, as well, didn’t wait for the investigation to reach a
conclusion before placing the blame on Putin. Last October,
Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott used an Australian football
term in
vowing to “shirtfront” Putin about his supposed guilt in
the MH-17 case.
Media Fakery
Keeping the later U.S. intelligence analysis
secret also allows for the Putin-did-it propaganda campaigns to go
forward in mainstream media outlets and various propaganda fronts. A
good example was the Australian “60 Minutes” report in May
presenting bogus video evidence supposedly corroborating
“Russia-did-it” claims made by British blogger Eliot Higgins.
While the segment appeared to be authoritative –
supposedly proving that Putin was responsible for mass murder – a
closer examination showed that the program had relied on video
fakery to mislead its viewers. The key scene supposedly matching up
a video of a getaway Buk anti-aircraft missile battery with
landmarks in the rebel-controlled city of Luhansk didn’t match up at
all. [See Consortiumnews.com’s “You
Be the Judge.”]
After I revealed the fraud by showing how the two
scenes were almost entirely different, the Australian show fell back
on a claim that one utility pole in the getaway video looked like a
utility pole that its reporting team has found in Luhansk. It is
perhaps a sign of how crazy the anti-Russian propaganda has gotten
that a major news program could feel that it can make such an absurd
argument and get away with it.
In a rational world, matching up the two scenes
would require all the landmarks to fit, when in this case none of
them did. Further, to cite similarities between two utility poles as
evidence ignored the fact that most utility poles look alike and
there was the additional fact that none of the area around the two
utility poles matched at all, including a house behind one that
didn’t appear in the scene of the other. [See Consortiumnews.com’s “A
Reckless Stand-upper on MH-17.”]
However, as long as the U.S. government’s
comprehensive intelligence information on MH-17 is kept secret, such
sleights of hand can continue to work. I’m told that the Dutch
report is likely to contain similar circumstantial claims, citing
such things as the possible angle of the fired missile, to suggest
that the ethnic Russian rebels were at fault.
Last October, the Dutch Safety Board’s initial
report answered very few questions, beyond confirming that MH-17
apparently was destroyed by “high-velocity objects that penetrated
the aircraft from outside.” Other key questions went begging, such
as what to make of the Russian military radar purporting to show a
Ukrainian SU-25 jetfighter in the area, a claim that the Kiev
government denied.
Either the Russian radar showed the presence of a
jetfighter “gaining height” as it closed to within three to five
kilometers of the passenger plane – as
the Russians claimed in a July 21 press conference – or
it didn’t. The Kiev authorities insisted that they had no military
aircraft in the area at the time.
But
the 34-page Dutch report was silent on the jetfighter
question, although noting that the investigators had received Air
Traffic Control “surveillance data from the Russian Federation.” The
report also was silent on the “dog-not-barking” issue of whether the
U.S. government had satellite surveillance that revealed exactly
where the supposed ground-to-air missile was launched and who may
have fired it.
The Obama administration has asserted knowledge
about those facts, but the U.S. government has withheld satellite
photos and other intelligence information that could presumably
corroborate the charge. Curiously, too, the Dutch report said the
investigation received “satellite imagery taken in the days after
the occurrence.” Obviously, the more relevant images in assessing
blame would be aerial photography in the days and hours before the
crash.
The Dutch report’s reference to only post-crash
satellite photos was also odd because the Russian military released
a number of satellite images purporting to show Ukrainian government
Buk missile systems north of the eastern Ukrainian city of Donetsk
before the attack, including two batteries that purportedly were
shifted 50 kilometers south of Donetsk on July 17, the day of the
crash, and then removed by July 18.
Russian Lt. Gen. Andrey Kartopolov called on the
Ukrainian government to explain the movements of its Buk systems and
why Kiev’s Kupol-M19S18 radars, which coordinate the flight of Buk
missiles, showed increased activity leading up to the July 17
shoot-down.
The Ukrainian government countered these questions
by asserting that it had “evidence that the missile which struck the
plane was fired by terrorists, who received arms and specialists
from the Russian Federation,” according to Andrey Lysenko, spokesman
for Ukraine’s Security Council, using Kiev’s preferred term for the
rebels.
Lysenko added: “To disown this tragedy, [Russian
officials] are drawing a lot of pictures and maps. We will explore
any photos and other plans produced by the Russian side.” But
Ukrainian authorities have failed to address the Russian evidence
except through broad denials.
Where’s the Intelligence?
On July 29, 2014, amid escalating rhetoric against
Russia from U.S. government officials and the Western news media,
the Veteran Intelligence Professionals for Sanity
called on President Obama to release what evidence the
U.S. government had on the shoot-down, including satellite imagery.
“As intelligence professionals we are embarrassed
by the unprofessional use of partial intelligence information,” the
group wrote. “As Americans, we find ourselves hoping that, if you
indeed have more conclusive evidence, you will find a way to make it
public without further delay. In charging Russia with being directly
or indirectly responsible, Secretary of State John Kerry has been
particularly definitive. Not so the evidence. His statements seem
premature and bear earmarks of an attempt to ‘poison the jury
pool.’”
However, the Obama administration has failed to
make public any intelligence information that would back up its
earlier suppositions or any new evidence at all. One source told me
that U.S. intelligence analysts are afraid to speak out about the
information that contradicts the original rush to judgment because
of Obama’s aggressive prosecution of whistleblowers.
If the Dutch final report emerges with carefully
circumscribed circumstantial evidence implicating the pro-Russian
rebels, the nuances will surely be carved away when the report is
fed into the existing propaganda machinery. The conventional wisdom
about “Russian guilt” will be firmed up.
A sense of how that will go can be seen in a
recent New York Times
article by David Herszenhorn on June 29: “Pro-Russian
separatist leaders in the eastern Ukrainian region of Luhansk have
blocked access to Dutch law enforcement officials pursuing an
investigation into the downing of a Malaysian jetliner nearly a year
ago, the Netherlands Public Prosecution Office said. …
“The obstruction by separatist officials prompted
the investigators, from the Dutch National Police and Ministry of
Defense, to cut short their field work in Ukraine without conducting
research into cellphone towers and cellular networks in the region,
the public prosecution office said. …
“Based on preliminary analysis and intelligence,
including from the United States government, the aircraft was widely
believed to have been destroyed by a surface-to-air missile fired
from territory controlled by Russian-backed separatist forces.”
While the thrust of Herszenhorn’s article made the
ethnic Russian rebels look bad – and foreshadows some of the points
likely to be featured in the Dutch investigative report – perhaps
the most significant word in the story is “preliminary.” While it’s
true that the U.S. government’s “preliminary” report on July 22,
2014, implicated the rebels, the more pertinent question – not asked
by the Times – is why there has been no refinement of that
“preliminary” report.
The Dutch Safety Board issued
a brief progress report on July 1 noting that it had
submitted a draft of its final report to “accredited representatives
of the participating States on … June 2,” giving them 60 days to
submit comments before a “definitive final” report is published in
October.
Meanwhile, Dutch prosecutors handling the criminal
investigation say they have no specific suspects, but lead
investigator Fred Westerbeke claims the probe has a number of
“persons of interest.” Westerbeke said the criminal probe will
likely run through the end of the year or later.
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,
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