November 08, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" - "SCF"
-- Like a good laundering machine, the Western media operate an
efficient spin cycle for rinsing out dirty water. No sooner had
Russia’s foreign ministry issued a fairly straightforward statement
on Syria’s political future this week, then Western media news
outlets were getting all in a lather with the spin that Moscow was
preparing to hang Syrian President Bashar al-Assad out to dry. What
that reaction shows is that these outlets are dutifully laundering
the political agenda of their governments. That agenda seems to
involve getting Russia to implement, unwittingly, the Western
objective of regime change in Damascus.
Russian foreign
ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova
was
quoted by Russian news agency ITAR-TASS as saying that the
Syrian leader’s hold on power was not a matter of principle for
Moscow. She also spoke about other important issues: the imperative
to respect the sovereign right of the Syrian people to decide the
political future of their country; and that regime change in Syria
would usher in even greater disaster from terrorism and refugees.
However, it was the
words on Assad that got picked up and thrown into the spin cycle
with haste. Britain’s state broadcaster, the BBC, issued
a breaking news flash with the headline: ‘Russia says keeping
Assad not crucial’. While American channel CNN
adverted that: ‘Russian leaders were opening the door for
Assad’s exit’.
Such so-called news
items are laughably becoming more like commercial breaks. Commercial
breaks between, well, more commercial breaks. Low on intelligent
content and pitched to get viewers to buy somebody’s tawdry product.
There was nothing
further to back up either report on BBC or CNN – only a selective,
speculative interpretation of the words from the Russian foreign
ministry. There was no mention of the sovereign right of the Syrian
nation nor of the global-scale disaster if regime change were to
take place. Just a seemingly puerile gaze at the words about Assad’s
staying in power not being «a matter of principle» for Moscow.
What the Russian
foreign ministry spokeswoman actually said was this: «We have never
said Assad's staying in power is a principled aspect. We are saying
that the change of regime in Syria could become a disaster not only
on a local or even regional scale, but, with account for that
problem with refugees that we have now, this could become a big
black hole».
Russia had already
warned about Western media «juggling with its words» over Syria, and
in particular on attempts to wilfully distort its policy. Following
the Vienna summit last weekend on Syria, there was Western
speculation that Moscow had tacitly agreed to Assad relinquishing
power. Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov sternly
dismissed then what he called were «rumours».
«I heard that the
rumours are being spread already that it has been or will be agreed
that Assad will step down in some period of time. This is not the
case,» said Lavrov.
If Western media were
to provide a journalistic service instead of laundering their
governments’ political agenda then they might have reported that
Russia’s position is rightly centred on the sovereignty of Syria and
on the defeat of foreign-backed terrorism in that country. That
Moscow is saying that the question of Bashar al-Assad staying in
power, or not, is not a matter of principle is simply stating that
Russia does not view the Syrian leader as a life-long president.
Assad’s presidency will be subject to the democratic will of the
people, which is the all-important sovereign point. What is so
controversial or enigmatic about stating that? Nothing, unless there
is a mischievous will to misconstrue.
Put another way, if
Russia had said instead that Assad staying in power was a matter of
principle for Moscow, then the Western media would no doubt have
gone into double-spin mode and claimed that the Kremlin was
dictating that the Syrian leader must remain in presidential office
forever – regardless of the will of the electorate. One can imagine
the headlines in that scenario: ‘Putin lays down law to Syrian
people’ and so on.
Of course, Western
media spinning is hardly new and the consequences of the latest dash
to misinterpret will no doubt be as fleeting as a soapy bubble. But
the alacrity with which Western media outlets operated on the issue
is instructive.
As argued in a
previous column, what appears to be the underlying purpose of
Washington and its allies in the recently convened so-called peace
talks over Syria is that these powers are seeking their illicit
objective of regime change by alternative means. The talks are
decidedly less about seeking peace or conflict resolution, as
Western media advertise, quoting Western government leaders at face
value.
Russia’s military
operation in Syria to protect the state and its sovereignty from
foreign-orchestrated mercenary terror groups has dealt a devastating
blow to Washington’s covert military agenda of regime change. That
agenda, instrumented by the deployment of mercenary terror groups,
predates
the outbreak of violence in Syria in March 2011 by several
years, as uncovered by American journalist Seymour Hersh. Also as
disclosed by former French Foreign Minister Roland Dumas, as
well as leaked US diplomatic
cables indicate from as early as 2009.
Washington and its
allies are now being compelled to use a political means to achieve
what they couldn’t otherwise pull off by covert military means –
because of Vladimir Putin’s bold intervention in Syria, beginning on
September 30.
Recall, too, that US
Secretary of State John Kerry
demanded last month, with typical haughtiness, for Russia to
«bring Assad to the negotiating table». Not that there is much to
discuss as far as Washington, London or Paris are concerned. Assad
has to go, in their arrogant view, sooner or later.
By going into
so-called «diplomacy mode», as opposed to covert
terrorist-supporting mode, what the Western imperial overlords
expect is for Russia to comply with a political framework concocted
in order to push Assad from power. That modus operandi is a negation
of Syrian sovereignty, of course. And Russia is much too intelligent
to be hoodwinked by these Western charlatans.
Nevertheless, we can
expect all sorts of chicanery and inducements from the West to
inveigle Russia into, in effect, acceding to its regime change
agenda. Notably, John Kerry appeared to be angling for such
concessions from Russia this week when he said that the United
States would consider cooperating militarily with Moscow against the
Islamic State terror group in return for «progress» on the issue of
«political transition» in Syria.
One aspect of
chicanery will be continued Western claims aimed at undermining
Russia’s military operations in Syria. Russia’s operations have
inflicted severe blows against various terror groups. But those
significant gains, rather than being welcomed, have perversely
prompted the Western media to carry unverified reports of civilian
casualties from Russia’s air strikes. Last week, Western media,
citing US sources, claimed that Russian strikes had hit six
hospitals – claims which turned out to be false.
Also, on the day that
the talks opened in Vienna last Friday, Western media reports
pointedly claimed that
a multiple-rocket attack on the Damascus suburb of Douma was
caused by Russia’s Syrian government ally. But there have been no
follow-up reports on the atrocity which reportedly claimed nearly
100 lives. It would not be the first time that a massacre has been
stealthily perpetrated by foreign-backed mercenaries with the
intention of smearing the Assad government. (See for example the
Ghouta chemical gas attack in August 2013, or the Houla massacre in
May 2012, both initially blamed on government militia but
later found to be likely the work of Turk or Saudi-backed
al Qaeda-linked extremists.)
As the Vienna talks
proceed over the coming weeks, the Western media will no doubt carry
out more laundry services for Washington and its allies. High on the
list will be attempts to misrepresent Russia’s political position on
Syria with a view to cajoling Moscow into cutting off Syria’s
Assad.
Western governments
and their complicit media have so corrupted international law over
the past two decades and more, from criminal interventions in
Afghanistan, Iraq, Libya, Syria and Ukraine, among other countries,
that they no longer know the meaning of principle. They only think
of price. Everybody and everything can be bought for a price, in
their debased view.
Or as the Irish
playwright Oscar Wilde once said, «they know the price of
everything, but the value of nothing».
Russia, by contrast,
has conducted its policy on Syria with principle and integrity. It
is standing by the sovereign right of the Syrian people, as
international law obliges. In that case, Western laundering and
spinning of its foul articles will simply not wash.
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