In Attempted
Hit Piece
NYT Makes Putin Hero of Defeating TPP
By emptywheel
September
04, 2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- "emptywheel
"
-
In an
remarkable hit piece
NYT spent over 5,000 words yesterday trying to
prove that all of WikiLeaks’ leaks are motivated
from a desire to benefit Russia.
That of
course took some doing. It required ignoring the
evidence of the
other potential source of motivation for Julian
Assange — such as that Hillary participated in an
aggressive, and potentially illegal, prosecution of
Assange for being a publisher and Chelsea Manning
for being his source — even as it repeatedly
presented evidence that that was Assange’s
motivation.
Putin,
who clashed repeatedly with Mrs. Clinton when
she was secretary of state,
[snip]
In late
November 2010, United States officials announced
an investigation of WikiLeaks; Mrs. Clinton,
whose State Department was scrambled by what
became known as “Cablegate,” vowed to take
“aggressive” steps to hold those responsible to
account.
[snip]
Another
person who collaborated with WikiLeaks in the
past added: “He views everything through the
prism of how he’s treated. America and Hillary
Clinton have caused him trouble, and Russia
never has.”
It also
required dismissing some of the most interesting
counterexamples to the NYT’s thesis.
Sunshine
Press, the group’s public relations voice,
pointed out that in 2012 WikiLeaks also
published an archive it called the Syria files —
more than two million emails from and about the
government of President Bashar al-Assad, whom
Russia is supporting in Syria’s civil war.
Yet at the
time of the release, Mr. Assange’s associate,
Ms. Harrison, characterized the material as
“embarrassing to Syria, but it is also
embarrassing to Syria’s opponents.” Since then,
Mr. Assange has accused the United States of
deliberately destabilizing Syria, but has not
publicly criticized human rights abuses by Mr.
Assad and Russian forces fighting there.
As I have
noted, there is a significant likelihood that
the Syria files came via Sabu and Anonymous from the
FBI — that is, that it was actually an American spy
operation. Even aside from how important a
counterexample the Syrian files are (because they
went directly contrary to Putin’s interests in
protecting Assad, no matter how bad they made
Assad’s western trade partners look), the provenance
of these files and Assange’s current understanding
of them deserve some attention if NYT is going to
spend 5,000 words on this story.
But the most
remarkable stunt in this 5,000 screed is taking
Wikileaks’ efforts to show policies a great
many people believe are counterproductive — most
importantly, passing trade deals that benefit
corporations while hurting real people, but also
weakening other strong hands in climate change
negotiations — and insinuating they might be a
Putinesque plot. This bit requires editorial notes
in line:
From
November 2013 to May 2016, WikiLeaks published
documents describing internal deliberations on
two trade pacts: the Trans-Pacific Partnership,
which would liberalize trade [ed: no, it
would protect IP, the opposite of liberalizing
trade] between the United States, Japan and
10 other Pacific Rim countries, and the Trade in
Services Agreement, an accord between the United
States, 21 other countries and the European
Union.
Russia,
which was excluded, has been the most vocal
opponent of the pacts [this is presented
with no evidence, nor even a standard of
evidence. I and all of America’s TPP opponents
as well as TPP opponents from around the world
must redouble our very loud effort], with
Mr. Putin portraying them as an effort to give
the United States an unfair leg up in the global
economy.
The drafts released by WikiLeaks stirred
controversy among environmentalists, advocates
of internet freedom and privacy, labor leaders
and corporate governance watchdogs, among
others. They also stoked populist resentment
against free trade that has become an important
factor in American and European politics.
[Here, rather than admitting
that this broad opposition to these trade
deals shows that Putin is
not
the most vocal opponent of these pacts —
contrary to their foundational assumption in
this section — they instead portray a wide
spectrum of well-considered activism as
unthinking response to Putinesque manipulation.
And note, here, a news outlet is complaining
that ordinary citizens get access to critically
important news, without even blushing? Also note
the NYT makes no mention of the members of
Congress who were also begging for this
information, which makes it easier to ignore the
profoundly anti-democratic nature of these trade
agreements.]
The material was released at critical moments,
with the apparent aim of thwarting negotiations,
American trade officials said. [In
a piece obscuring the unpopular and
anti-democratic nature of these trade deals, the
NYT gives these sources anonymity.]
WikiLeaks highlighted the domestic and
international discord on its Twitter accounts.
American negotiators assumed that the leaks had
come from a party at the table seeking leverage.
[That anonymity again:
NYT is protecting some bitter trade negotiators
who’ve invented a paranoid conspiracy here. On
what grounds?]
Then in
July 2015, on the day American and Japanese
negotiators were working out the final details
of the Trans-Pacific Partnership, came what
WikiLeaks dubbed its “Target Tokyo” release.
Relying
on top-secret N.S.A. documents, the release
highlighted 35 American espionage targets in
Japan, including cabinet members and trade
negotiators, as well as companies like
Mitsubishi. The trade accord was finally agreed
on — though it has not been ratified by the
United States Senate — but the document release
threw a wrench into the talks.
“The lesson for Japan is this: Do not expect a
global surveillance superpower to act with honor
or respect,” Mr. Assange said in a news release
at the time. “There is only one rule: There are
no rules.” [That the
US spies on trade negotiations was of course not
news by this point. But it is, nevertheless,
worthy to point out.]
Because
of the files’ provenance, United States
intelligence officials assumed that Mr. Assange
had gotten his hands on some of the N.S.A.
documents copied by Mr. Snowden.
But in
an interview, Glenn Greenwald, one of the two
journalists entrusted with the full Snowden
archive, said that Mr. Snowden had not given his
documents to WikiLeaks and that the “Target
Tokyo” documents were not even among those Mr.
Snowden had taken.
The next
paragraph goes on to note that the same NSA
documents focused on climate negotiations between
Germany and the UN, which seems to suggest the NYT
also believes it is in petro-state leader Putin’s
interest for the US attempts to dominate climate
change negotiations to be thwarted, even as Assange
describes US actions as protection petroleum
interests, which of course align with Putin’s own.
In other
words, as a central piece of evidence, the NYT spent
11 paragraphs repackaging opposition to shitty trade
deals — a widely held very American view (not to
mention a prominent one is most other countries
affected) — into something directed by Russia, as if
the only reasons to oppose TPP are to keep Russia on
an equal shitty neoliberal trade footing as the rest
of us, as if opposing the deals don’t benefit a
whole bunch of red-blooded Americans.
That’s not
only logically disastrous, especially in something
billed as “news,” but it is very dangerous. It makes
legitimate opposition to bad (albeit widely accepted
as good within beltway and I guess NYT conventional
wisdom) policy something disloyal.
NYT’s
argument that Putin was behind WikiLeaks’ NSA leaks
doesn’t hold together for a lot of reasons (not
least that those two topics are probably not what
Putin would prioritize, or even close). But it also
has the bizarre effect, in a hit piece targeting
Assange and Putin, of making Putin the hero of the
anti-TPP movement.
And yet,
NYT’s three journalists don’t seem to understand how
counterproductive to their “journalistic” endeavor
that argument is.
Update: Oy.
As Trevor Timm notes, NYT
worked with WL on the TPP release. |