'Propagandising
For War'
By Media
Lens
August 26,
2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- "Media
Lens"
-
A
report published by the London School of
Economics last month found extreme levels of bias in
BBC reporting. The 'impartial' BBC's early evening
news was almost five times more likely to depict
Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn in a negative light. In
the time period studied (September 1 - November 1,
2015), no headlines on this key news programme
presented Corbyn in a positive light.
But this is
a mere drop in the ocean of the corporation's
pro-establishment bias. It could hardly be more
obvious that BBC news reports, comment pieces and
discussions are overwhelmingly hostile to US-UK
government enemies like Russia, Iran, Venezuela,
North Korea and Syria, and overwhelmingly favourable
to the United States and Israel. It has long been
clear to us that BBC journalists perceive this, not
as bias, but as an accurate depiction of a world
that really is divided into well-intentioned Western
'good guys' and their enemies, the 'bad guys'.
On August
20, the BBC website featured a Radio 4 Today
programme
discussion hosted by former political editor
Nick Robinson interviewing BBC World Affairs Editor
John Cody Fidler-Simpson and Dr. Karin von Hippel, a
former State Department official dealing with US
strategy against Islamic State.
The
discussion was introduced with the following written
text, which was repeated in slightly altered form in
Robinson's spoken introduction:
'Exactly five years ago President Obama called
on the Syrian President Bashir-Al-Assad to step
down but today he is still in power.'
The
prominence and repetition of the observation of
course conferred great significance. The
implication: for the BBC, Obama is not just the
leader of another country, he is a kind of World
President with the authority to call on other
leaders to 'step down'. In reality, Obama made his
demand, not in the name of the United Nations, or of
the Syrian people, but because, as President George
H.W. Bush once
declared:
'what we say goes'.
In his
introduction, Robinson described a disturbing
image that 'has gone viral on social media' of a
Syrian child allegedly injured by Russian or Syrian
bombing. The child, five-year-old Omran Daqneesh, is
depicted sitting between Obama and Putin. Robinson
noted that one of these images carried the sarcastic
caption: 'Thank you for keeping me safe.' We have
found the image but not that caption.
One
reasonable interpretation of Robinson's
introduction, then: five years ago, Obama called on
Assad to go, but 'failed' to follow through in
making that happen – 'little Omran', and numerous
other Syrian civilians, are continuing to suffer as
a result. Adam Johnson
writes that the viral picture of Daqneesh has
'amped up calls for direct US intervention against
the Syrian government' made by numerous 'laptop
bombardiers' 'jumping from one outrage in urgent
need of US bombs to the next'. The BBC's Today
programme discussion can be understood as a further
example of this media herd behaviour.
John
Simpson agreed with Robinson that Obama had been
keen to avoid 'the kind of dreadful errors' - he
meant crimes - that George W. Bush had committed in
Iraq, and so had 'wanted to stay out of things'.
According to Simpson, Obama's failure to intervene
in Syria has been a 'disaster'. After all, Russia
recently 'managed to attack Syria with its planes
from the airfields of Iran'. As investigative
journalist Gareth Porter notes below, the Syrian
government in fact invited Russian military
support, so Russia can hardly be described as
attacking Syria. Simpson, by contrast, argued that
Russo-Iranian cooperation was 'a link up which would
have caused absolute consternation in the
United States, and worldwide, just a few years ago'.
In other words, the world's sole superpower has
proven powerless to stop the kind of military
cooperation it practices the world over all the time
– how awful!
Simpson's
imperial sympathies have been
aired before on the BBC, notably in October
2014:
'The
world (well, most of it) wants an active,
effective America to act as its policeman,
sorting out the problems smaller countries can't
face alone.'
Interfering In A
Big Way
In a
classic example of BBC imbalance, Dr. von Hippel
then supported Robinson's and Simpson's
interpretation of the cause of the Syria disaster,
noting of Obama that, 'as John Simpson was saying,
he didn't believe that America interfering in a big
way would help... he was never convinced that force,
or greater use of force, would make a difference.
Now, I personally disagree with that...'.
Von Hippel
went so far as to assert that 'there were many
things you could do between sending 100,000 troops
in and nothing'. The comment was ambiguous but, in
the context of the discussion, invited listeners to
conclude that Obama had indeed done next to nothing
in Syria. And yet, von Hippel herself noted that US
special forces are working with anti-Assad groups in
Syria and Turkey, and that this and other support
'has made a difference'.
In fact
this is only the tip of the iceberg. In June 2015,
the Washington Post
reported of the US:
'At $1
billion, Syria-related operations account for
about $1 of every $15 in the CIA's overall
budget... US officials said the CIA has trained
and equipped nearly 10,000 fighters sent into
Syria over the past several years — meaning that
the agency is spending roughly $100,000 per year
for every anti-Assad rebel who has gone through
the program.'
The US
media watch website, Fairness and Accuracy in
Reporting,
added some context:
'In
addition to this, the Obama administration has
engaged in
crippling sanctions against the Assad
government,
provided air support for those looking to
depose him, incidentally
funneled arms to ISIS, and not incidentally
aligned the CIA-backed Free Syrian Army with Al
Qaeda. Regardless of one's position on Syria
— or whether they think the US is somehow
secretly in alliance with Assad, as some advance
— one thing cannot be said: that the US has
"done nothing in Syria." This is historically
false.'
Ignoring
these entirely uncontroversial facts, Robinson
observed that, 'there were a series of occasions' in
which David Cameron 'tried to persuade
Obama - others were doing it, too - to take some
form of military action, and at each stage he didn't
want to do it.' 'Yes', Simpson replied, 'I think
that David Cameron was really frustrated
towards the end...'.
Obama, we
are to believe, then, repeatedly refused 'to take
some form of military action' and is even guilty of
'silence, almost' on Syria. Robinson then affirmed
the whole narrative:
'So, in
other words... this is a disaster, not just for
the people of Syria, but a strategic
disaster for the United States – makes them look
weak.'
If there
was any doubt what 'strong' means to Robinson, it
was removed when he concluded the discussion by
asking Simpson to respond to potential listener
criticism:
'Just
address those people who we know are listening
at home who'll go: "Haven't they learned
anything? We know that military
intervention in the Middle East always
produces a worse disaster than the one that we
started with."'
In a
tragicomic, Rumsfeldian reply, Simpson acknowledged
that the conflict is 'fiendishly complicated, Nick,
really, as you know', adding:
'Whatever you do is going to have tremendous
downsides. But that doesn't mean to say that
everything you do, or don't do,
um, is, is, is... simply going to be the worst
thing you can possibly do. There are some
things that are worse than others.'
Perhaps it
takes a World Affairs Editor to join the big picture
dots with such insight. Simpson continued:
'And I
think, sitting on your hands watching Putin
running away with the whole thing is the
worst possible thing that Obama could
have done, and I think it's going to be a stain
on his reputation permanently.'
This
reminded us of the many sociopathic comments that
viewed the deaths of hundreds of thousands of people
in Iraq as primarily a problem for the American
brand, with tragic implications for the reputations
of George W. Bush and Tony Blair.
Any Flavour You
Like - Gareth Porter Responds
We were so
astonished by the propaganda bias and gross
omissions in this BBC discussion – with literally no
balance challenging the false consensus that Obama
had been 'sitting on his hands' on Syria, even doing
'nothing' – that we sent the discussion to Gareth
Porter, one of the most knowledgeable and honest
reporters on Syria. We expected a paragraph or two
in reply, but Porter felt moved to respond at some
length:
'The
BBC interview is so one-sided and distorts the
most basic realities of the issue in Syria that
it is a caricature of the media propagandizing
for war. It has offered the public two flavors
of essentially neoconservative thinking -- one
perhaps closer to Bush administration thinking,
the other closer to the views of Hillary
Clinton.
'John
Simpson and Karin von Hippel both score the
Obama administration's policy for failing to
exert more power in Syria and thus allowing
Russia to play a dominant power role in the
conflict. Simpson is scandalized by the fact
that Obama allowed Russia, which he calls a
"second-rate" or even "third-rate" country to
"run away with the whole thing" in Syria, which
he calls "the worst possible thing Obama could
have done".
'Von
Hippel similarly laments the fact that Obama did
not take steps to build up the Syrian armed
opposition and has now allowed the Russians to
play the role of peacemaker in Syria. She
invokes the threat of a "power vacuum" in the
Aleppo area because Obama did not intervene on
the side of the armed opposition. That phrase
recalls Hillary Clinton criticism of Obama's
Syrian policy for having created a "power
vacuum" by refusing to support a proposed CIA
program for building up the armed opposition
when she was Secretary of State.
'BBC
listeners were not made aware of the crucial
fact that Russia was able to play the role it
has in Syria because it is intervening at the
request of the Syrian government. Nor were they
told that the Obama administration, on the other
hand, has been seeking to overthrow the regime
in cooperation with Turkey, Saudi Arabia and
Qatar, which began in 2012 supplying arms to
Islamic extremists who cooperated with al
Qaeda's Syrian franchise, al Nusra Front.
'By
early 2013, it was already clear to close
observers of the war that al Nusra Front was the
dominant armed opposition organization in Syria.
By 2016 none of the U.S.-supported armed groups
were willing or able to fight without the full
cooperation of al Nusra Front. That reality
helps to explain why Russia, and not the United
States, was better positioned to broker a
ceasefire in 2016, and why the Obama
administration has been unwilling or unable to
get the opposition it supports to go along with
it.
'As for
von Hippel's complaint about Obama's failure to
arm the opposition earlier, she should know very
well (because Hillary Clinton acknowledges it in
her memoirs) that Obama's argument to his
advisers was that the United States should not
repeat the mistake it made in Afghanistan, of
arming anti-regime rebels only to contribute to
the rise of al Qaeda. Since there was never a
time when that was not a very serious threat,
the argument for an aggressive CIA covert
operation in Syria was always highly
questionable -- except, perhaps to those seeking
to make a career out of interventionism, like
von Hippel. But von Hippel never even mentions
the fact that a jihadist terrorist organization
that is officially regarded by the United States
as a primary global security threat is the most
powerful political-military force seeking to
overthrow the regime. Nor does either von Hippel
or Simpson acknowledge that the Obama
administration sold 15,000 TOW anti-tank
missiles to Saudi Arabia in late 2013 knowing
that hundreds or thousands would be sent to
armed opposition groups in Syria. That was a
very risky move, given the near certainty that
large numbers of those highly effective weapons
soon ended up in the hands of al Nusra Front.
'In the
context of the Syrian war in 2016, with a
powerful al Qaeda-led military coalition that
had gained control over an enormous territory
and planning to declare an Islamic emirate in
northwest Syria, the argument that Obama is
risking a "power vacuum" in Aleppo is the height
of dishonesty. The only real "power vacuum" that
is being risked is the one that would be created
if the al-Qaeda-led coalition were to be
successful in defeating the Assad regime. Then
Syria would either have a jihadist terrorist
state in Damascus or would experience a civil
war between ISIS and al Qaeda similar to the
civil war among jihadists in Afghanistan after
the Soviets withdrew.
'That
outcome -- not the success of Russia in
brokering a peace agreement that keeps the
Syrian government intact -- would be the "worst
possible thing that Obama could have done". But
BBC listeners have been spared having to deal
with such troublesome realities.' (Gareth
Porter, email to Media Lens, August 22, 2016)
None of
this should come as a surprise. BBC 'balance'
typically involves the selection of interviewees
guaranteed to accept false propaganda claims made by
the interviewer. This is how elite media manufacture
the kind of false consensus that is vital for the
proper functioning of a 'managed democracy'.
If you do
write to journalists, we strongly urge you to
maintain a polite, non-aggressive and non-abusive
tone.
Write to
Nick Robinson at the BBC:
Email:
today@bbc.co.uk - Twitter:
@bbcnickrobinson |