The West &
Syria: The Corporate Media vs. Reality
By Ian Sinclair
August 27,
2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- "Open
Democracy"
- “The sinister fact about literary censorship in
England is that it is largely voluntary”, George
Orwell
noted in his censored preface to his 1945 book
Animal Farm. “Unpopular ideas can be silenced, and
inconvenient facts kept dark, without the need for
any official ban”. Orwell went onto explain that “at
any given moment there is an orthodoxy, a body of
ideas which it is assumed that all right-thinking
people will accept without question. It is not
exactly forbidden to say this, that or the other,
but it is ‘not done’ to say it”.
The
corporate media’s ‘coverage’ of Syria adds a twist
to Orwell’s dictum – inconvenient reports and facts
do occasionally appear in respected newspapers and
on popular news programmes but they are invariably
ignored, decontextualised or not followed up on.
Rather than informing the historical record, public
opinion and government policy these snippets of
essential information are effectively thrown down
the memory hole.
Instead the
public is fed a steady diet of simplistic,
Western-friendly propaganda, a key strand of which
is that the US has, as Channel 4 News’s Paul Mason
blindly
asserted in January 2016, “stood aloof from the
Syrian conflict”. This deeply ingrained ignorance
was taken to comical lengths when Mason’s Channel 4
News colleague Cathy Newman
interviewed the former senior US State
Department official Anne-Marie Slaughter, with both
women agreeing the US had not armed the insurgency
in Syria.
In the real
world the US has been
helping to arm the insurgency since 2012, with
US officials
telling the Washington Post in last year that
the CIA’s $1bn programme had trained and equipped
10,000 rebel fighters. “From the moment the CIA
operation was started, Saudi money supported it”,
notes the New York Times.
According to the former American Ambassador to
Syria, the US "has looked the other way" while
fighters it has backed have "coordinated in military
operations" with the Al-Nusra Front, Al-Qaeda’s
official affiliate in Syria. The UK, of course, has
obediently followed its master into the gates of
hell, with the former UK Ambassador to Syria
recently
explaining the UK has made things worse by
fuelling the conflict in Syria.
And if they
are not playing down the West’s interference in
Syria, journalists and their political masters are
presenting Western actions as having benign,
peaceful motives. For example, in his official
response to the Foreign Affairs Select Committee
report on UK military action in Syria, British Prime
Minister David Cameron
argued “since the start of the crisis the UK has
worked for a political solution in Syria”. The
Guardian’s foreign affairs specialist Simon Tisdall
echoed this idea of the West’s “basic benevolence”
in 2013 when he
noted in passing that President Obama “cannot
count on Russian support to fix Syria”.
Compare,
this propagandistic framing with what Andrew
Mitchell, the former British Secretary of State for
International Development, had to
say about the West’s role in the 2012 United
Nations peace plans on the BBC Today Programme
earlier this month:
“Kofi
Annan, the very distinguished former General
Secretary of the United Nations, came forward with
his plan, asked by the UN General-Secretary to do
so. Part of that plan was to say that [Syrian
President Bashar] Assad is part of the problem here
and, therefore, by definition, is part of the
solution, and therefore he must be included in
negotiations. And that was vetoed by the Americans
and, alas, by the British Government too.”
Mitchell’s
astonishing revelation is backed up by two highly
respected Middle East experts. In September 2015 Avi
Shlaim, Professor Emeritus of International
Relations at Oxford University,
noted that Western insistence that Assad must
step down sabotaged Annan’s efforts to set up a
peace deal and forced his resignation. Professor
Hugh Roberts, the former Director of the North
Africa Project at the International Crisis Group,
concurs,
writing “the Western powers… sabotaged the
efforts of the UN special envoys, Kofi Annan and
then Lakhdar Brahimi, to broker a political
compromise that would have ended the fighting”.
Indeed, the US Secretary of State himself conceded
this reality when he recently noted that demanding
Assad's departure up front in the peace process was
"in fact, prolonging the war."
A quick
survey of recent history shows this warmongering
isn’t an unfortunate one-off but a longstanding US
policy of blocking peace initiatives in times of
conflict.
In 1999 the
US used Serbia’s rejection of the Rambouillet
Agreement to justify its 78-day bombing campaign.
However, the proposed agreement
included
the military occupation and political control of
Kosovo by NATO, and gave NATO the right to occupy of
the rest of Yugoslavia. It was a document “that no
sovereign country on earth would have signed”,
reporter Jeremy Scahill
noted.
Two years
later as the US geared up to bomb and invade
Afghanistan, the Taliban raised the idea of handing
over Osama bin Laden if the US produced evidence of
his involvement in the attack on 9/11.
According to the New York Times “the White House
quickly rejected the move” because “it did not ‘meet
American requirements’ that Afghanistan immediately
hand over the prime suspect in the attacks on the
World Trade Center and the Pentagon”
Several
months into the 2003 Iraq War, the Guardian
reported that “in the few weeks before its fall,
Iraq's Ba'athist regime made a series of
increasingly desperate peace offers to Washington,
promising to hold elections and even to allow US
troops to search for banned weapons.” Like
Afghanistan, the Guardian noted “the advances were
all rejected by the Bush administration, according
to intermediaries involved in the talks.”
And
finally, in January 2015 the Washington Times
highlighted the various attempts made by the
Libyan government to push for a negotiated
settlement during the 2011 NATO intervention. Citing
secret audio recordings between an intermediary
working for the US Joint Chiefs of Staff and the
Libyan government, the newspaper noted the head of
the US African Command attempted to negotiate a
truce but was ordered to stand down by Secretary of
State Hillary Clinton’s State Department. This
account resonates with other reports that show how
NATO ignored
peace initiatives coming from the Libyan
Government and the African Union.
Of course,
some or perhaps all of these peace overtures may
have been disingenuous and/or unworkable. However,
we will never know because they were never seriously
considered or explored by the West in its rush to
war.
Turning
back to Syria, the facts clearly show the West, by
blocking the UN’s peace initiative while continuing
to arm the insurgency, played a key role in
prolonging and escalating a conflict that has killed
hundreds of thousands of people and led to a
staggering 11
million refugees.
Of course,
Russia and Iran, by backing the Assad Government,
have also played a central role in prolonging and
escalating the war but as a British citizen whose
taxes fund the British government my primary concern
is the actions of the UK and its allies. As Noam
Chomsky has noted “You’re responsible for the
predictable consequences of your actions. You’re not
responsible for the predictable consequences of
somebody else’s actions.”
Roberts
clearly
understands what the predictable consequences of
the US and UK actions in Syria have been: “Western
policy has been a disgrace and Britain’s
contribution to it should be a matter of national
shame.”
As always,
the government prefers to treat the public like
mushrooms – keeping them in the dark and feeding
them bullshit. And with our supposedly
crusading, disputatious, stroppy and difficult
fourth estate unable or unwilling to report basic
facts and to connect some very simple dots, what
chance does the general public have of ever gaining
even a basic understanding of what the West is doing
in Syria? |