BBC Protects U.K.’s Close Ally Saudi
Arabia With Incredibly Dishonest and Biased Editing
By Glenn Greenwald
October 26, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" - "The
Intercept" - The BBC loves to
boast about how “objective” and “neutral” it is. But a
recent article, which it was forced to change, illustrates
the lengths to which the British
state-funded media outlet will go to protect one of
the U.K. government’s closest allies, Saudi Arabia,
which also happens to be
one of the country’s largest arms purchasers (just this
morning, the Saudi ambassador to the U.K. threatened in
an op-ed that any further criticism of the Riyadh regime
by Jeremy Corbyn could jeopardize the multi-layered
U.K./Saudi alliance).Earlier this
month, the BBC published
an article describing the increase in weapons and money
sent by Saudi Arabia and other Gulf regimes to anti-Assad
fighters in Syria. All of that “reporting” was based on the
claims of what the BBC called “a Saudi government official,”
who — because he works for a government closely allied with
the U.K. — was granted anonymity by the BBC and then had his
claims mindlessly and uncritically presented as fact (it is
the rare exception when the BBC reports adversarially on
the Saudis). This anonymous “Saudi official” wasn’t
whistleblowing or presenting information contrary to the
interests of the regime; to the contrary, he was
disseminating official information the regime wanted
publicized. This was the key claim of the anonymous Saudi
official (emphasis added):
The well-placed official, who asked
not to be named, said supplies of modern, high-powered
weaponry including guided anti-tank weapons would be
increased to the Arab- and western-backed rebel groups
fighting the forces of Syria’s President Bashar al-Assad
and his Russian, Iranian and Lebanese allies.
He said those groups being
supplied did not include either Islamic State (IS) or
al-Nusra Front, both of which are proscribed
terrorist organizations. Instead, he said the
weapons would go to three rebel alliances — Jaish
al-Fatah (Army of Conquest), the Free Syrian Army
(FSA) and the Southern Front.
So the Saudis, says the anonymous
official, are only arming groups such as the “Army of
Conquest,” but not the al Qaeda affiliate the Nusra
Front. What’s the problem with this claim? It’s obvious,
though the BBC would not be so impolite as to point it out:
The Army of Conquest includes the Nusra Front as one of its
most potent components. This is not even in remote
dispute; the New York Times’ elementary
explainer on the Army of Conquest from three weeks ago
states:
Who are its members?
The alliance consists of a number of
mostly Islamist factions, including the Nusra Front, al
Qaeda’s Syrian affiliate; Ahrar al-Sham, another large
group; and more moderate rebel factions that have
received covert arms support from the intelligence
services of the United States and its allies.
The Telegraph,
in
an early October article complaining that Russia was
bombing “non-ISIL rebels,” similarly noted that the Army of
Conquest (bombed by Russia) “includes a number of Islamist
groups, most powerful among them Ahrar al-Sham and Jabhat
al-Nusra. Jabhat al-Nusra is the local affiliate of
al-Qaeda.” Even the Voice
of America noted that “Russia’s main target has
been the Army of Conquest, an alliance of insurgent groups
that includes the al-Nusra Front, al-Qaida’s affiliate in
Syria, and the hard-line Islamist group Ahrar al-Sham, as
well as some less extreme Islamist groups.”
In other words, the claim from the
anonymous Saudi official that the BBC uncritically
regurgitated — that the Saudis are only arming the Army of
Conquest but no groups that “include” the Nusra Front — is
self-negating. A BBC reader, Ricardo Vaz, brought this
contradiction to the BBC’s attention. As he told The
Intercept: “The problem is that the Nusra Front is the
most important faction inside the Army of Conquest. So
either the Saudi official expected the BBC journalist not to
know this, or he expects us to believe they can deliver
weapons to factions fighting side by side with an al Qaeda
affiliate and that those weapons will not make their way
into Nusra’s hands. In any case, this is very close to an
official admission that the Saudis (along with Qataris and
Turkish) are supplying weapons to an al Qaeda affiliate.
This of course is not a secret to anyone who’s paying
attention.”
In response to Vaz’s complaint, the BBC
did not tell its readers about this vital admission.
Instead, it simply edited that Saudi admission out of its
article. In doing so, it made the already-misleading
article so much worse, as the BBC went even further out of
its way to protect the Saudis. This is what that passage now
states on the
current version of the article on the BBC’s site
(emphasis added):
He said those groups being supplied
did not include either Islamic State (IS) or al-Nusra
Front, both of which are proscribed terrorist
organizations. Instead, he said the weapons would go to
the Free Syrian Army and other small rebel groups.
So originally, the BBC stated that the
“Saudi official” announced that the regime was arming the
Army of Conquest. Once it was brought to the BBC’s attention
that the Army of Conquest includes the al Qaeda affiliate
Nusra Front — a direct contradiction of the Saudi
official’s other claim that the Saudis are not arming Nusra
— the BBC literally changed the Saudi official’s own
statement, whitewashed it, to eliminate his admission that
they were arming Army of Conquest. Instead, the BBC now
states that the Saudis are arming “the Free Syrian Army and
other small rebel groups.” The BBC simply deleted the key
admission that the Saudis are arming al Qaeda. As Vaz told The
Intercept:
This is an incredible whitewashing
effort! Before they were directly quoting the Saudi
official, and he explicitly referred to “three rebel
alliances,” including “Jaish al-Fatah” [Army of
Conquest]. There is no way a journalist was told “other
small rebel groups” and understood what was written
before. In their reply to my complaint they said the
mistake was an “editorial oversight,” which is truly
laughable. What we saw was a prestigious western media
outlet surrendering the floor to an anonymous official
from the most medieval of regimes, the official pretty
much saying that they were going to supply (more)
weapons to an al Qaeda affiliate, and instead of
pointing this out, the BBC chose to blur the picture and
cover the terrorist-arming/funding activities of the
Saudis/Qataris/Turkish.
I personally don’t view the presence of al
Qaeda “affiliated” fighters as a convincing argument against
supporting Syrian rebels. It’s understandable that people
fighting against an oppressive regime — one backed by
powerful foreign factions — will align with anyone willing
and capable of fighting with them. Moreover, the
long-standing U.S./U.K. template of branding anyone they
fight and kill as “terrorists” or “al Qaeda” is no more
persuasive or noble when used in Syria by Assad and
the Russians, particularly when used to
obscure civilian casualties. And regarding the
anti-Assad forces as monolithically composed of religious
extremists ignores the anti-tyranny sentiment among ordinary
Syrians motivating much of the anti-regime protests, with
its genesis in the Arab Spring.
But what this does highlight is just how
ludicrous — how beyond parody — the 14-year-old war on
terror has become, how little it has to do with its original
ostensible justification. The regime with
the greatest plausible proximity to
the 9/11 attack —
Saudi Arabia — is the closest U.S. ally in the region
next to Israel. The country that had absolutely nothing to
do with that attack, and which is at least as threatened as
the U.S. by the religious ideology that spurred it — Iran —
is the U.S.’s greatest war-on-terror adversary. Now we have
a virtual admission from the Saudis that they are arming a
group that centrally includes al Qaeda, while the
U.S. itself has at least indirectly
done the same (just as
was true in Libya). And we’re actually at the point
where western media outlets are vehemently denouncing Russia
for bombing al Qaeda elements, which those outlets are manipulatively referring
to as “non-ISIS groups.”
It’s not a stretch to say that the faction
that provides the greatest material support to al Qaeda at
this point is the U.S. and its closest allies. That is true
even as al Qaeda continues to be paraded around as the prime
need for the ongoing war.
But whatever one’s views are on Syria,
it’s telling indeed to watch the BBC desperately protect
Saudi officials, not only by granting them anonymity to
spout official propaganda, but worse, by using blatant
editing games to whitewash the Saudis’ own damaging
admissions, ones the BBC unwittingly published. There are
many adjectives one can apply to the BBC’s behavior here:
“Objective” and “neutral” are most assuredly not among them.