The
Orwellian War Against Skepticism
Official Washington’s rush into an Orwellian future is
well underway as political and media bigwigs move to
silence Internet voices of independence and dissent.
By Robert Parry
December 01, 2016
"Information
Clearing House"
- "Consortium
News"
- Under
the cover of battling “fake news,” the mainstream U.S.
news media and officialdom are taking aim at
journalistic skepticism when it is directed at the
pronouncements of the U.S. government and its allies.
One might have
hoped that the alarm about “fake news” would remind
major U.S. news outlets, such as The Washington Post and
The New York Times, about the value of journalistic
skepticism. However, instead, it seems to have done the
opposite.
The idea of
questioning the claims by the West’s officialdom now
brings calumny down upon the heads of those who dare do
it. “Truth” is being redefined as whatever the U.S.
government, NATO and other Western interests say is
true. Disagreement with the West’s “group thinks,” no
matter how fact-based the dissent is, becomes “fake
news.”
So, we have the
case of Washington Post columnist David Ignatius having
a starry-eyed interview with Richard Stengel, the State
Department’s Undersecretary for Public Diplomacy, the
principal arm of U.S. government propaganda.
Entitled “The
truth is losing,”
the column laments that the official narratives as
deigned by the State Department and The Washington Post
are losing traction with Americans and the world’s
public.
Stengel, a
former managing editor at Time magazine, seems to take
aim at Russia’s RT network’s slogan, “question more,” as
some sinister message seeking to inject cynicism toward
the West’s official narratives.
“They’re not
trying to say that their version of events is the true
one. They’re saying: ‘Everybody’s lying! Nobody’s
telling you the truth!’,” Stengel said. “They don’t have
a candidate, per se. But they want to undermine faith in
democracy, faith in the West.”
No
Evidence
Typical of
these recent mainstream tirades about this vague Russian
menace, Ignatius’s column doesn’t provide any specifics
regarding how RT and other Russian media outlets are
carrying out this assault on the purity of Western
information. It’s enough to just toss around pejorative
phrases supporting an Orwellian solution, which is to
stamp out or marginalize alternative and independent
journalism, not just Russian.
Ignatius
writes: “Stengel poses an urgent question for
journalists, technologists and, more broadly, everyone
living in free societies or aspiring to do so. How do we
protect the essential resource of democracy — the truth
— from the toxin of lies that surrounds it? It’s like a
virus or food poisoning. It needs to be controlled. But
how?
“Stengel argues
that the U.S. government should sometimes protect
citizens by exposing ‘weaponized information, false
information’ that is polluting the ecosystem. But
ultimately, the defense of truth must be independent of
a government that many people mistrust. ‘There are
inherent dangers in having the government be the
verifier of last resort,’ he argues.”
By the way, Stengel
is not the fount of truth-telling, as he and Ignatius
like to pretend. Early in the Ukraine crisis, Stengel
delivered a rant against RT that was full
of inaccuracies or what you might call “fake news.”
Yet, what
Stengel and various mainstream media outlets appear to
be arguing for is the creation of a “Ministry of Truth”
managed by mainstream U.S. media outlets and enforced by
Google, Facebook and other technology platforms.
In other words,
once these supposedly responsible outlets decide what
the “truth” is, then questioning that narrative will
earn you “virtual” expulsion from the marketplace of
ideas, possibly eliminated via algorithms of major
search engines or marked with a special app to warn
readers not to believe what you say, a sort of yellow
Star of David for the Internet age.
And then
there’s the possibility of more direct (and
old-fashioned) government enforcement by launching FBI
investigations into media outlets that won’t toe the
official line. (All of these “solutions” have been
advocated in recent weeks.)
On the other
hand, if you do toe the official line that comes from
Stengel’s public diplomacy shop, you stand to get
rewarded with government financial support. Stengel
disclosed in his interview with Ignatius that his office
funds “investigative” journalism projects.
“How should
citizens who want a fact-based world combat this assault
on truth?” Ignatius asks, adding: “Stengel has approved
State Department programs that teach investigative
reporting and empower truth-tellers.”
Buying
Propaganda
After reading
Ignatius’s column on Wednesday, I submitted a question
to the State Department asking for details on this
“journalism” and “truth-telling” funding that is coming
from the U.S. government’s top propaganda shop, but I
have not received an answer.
But we do know
that the U.S. government has been investing tens of
millions of dollars in various media programs to
undergird Washington’s desired narratives.
For instance,
in May 2015, the U.S. Agency for International
Development (USAID) issued
a fact sheet summarizing its work financing friendly
journalists around the world, including “journalism
education, media business development, capacity building
for supportive institutions, and strengthening
legal-regulatory environments for free media.”
USAID estimated
its budget for “media strengthening programs in over 30
countries” at $40 million annually, including aiding
“independent media organizations and bloggers in over a
dozen countries,” In Ukraine before the 2014 coup
ousting elected President Viktor Yanukovych and
installing a fiercely anti-Russian and U.S.-backed
regime, USAID offered training in “mobile phone and
website security,” skills that would have been quite
helpful to the coup plotters.
USAID, working
with currency speculator George Soros’s Open Society,
also has funded the Organized Crime and Corruption
Reporting Project, which engages in “investigative
journalism” that usually goes after governments that
have fallen into disfavor with the United States and
then are singled out for accusations of corruption. The
USAID-funded OCCRP
collaborates with Bellingcat, an online
investigative website founded by blogger Eliot Higgins.
Higgins has
spread misinformation on the Internet, including
discredited claims
implicating the Syrian government in the sarin attack in
2013 and directing an Australian TV news crew to
what appeared to be
the wrong location for a video of a BUK anti-aircraft
battery as it supposedly made its getaway to Russia
after the shoot-down of Malaysia Airlines Flight 17 in
2014.
Despite his
dubious record of accuracy, Higgins has gained
mainstream acclaim, in part, because his “findings”
always match up with the propaganda theme that the U.S.
government and its Western allies are peddling. Higgins
is now associated with the Atlantic Council, a pro-NATO
think tank which is partially
funded by the U.S. State Department.
Beyond funding
from the State Department and USAID, tens of millions of
dollars more are flowing through the
U.S.-government-funded National Endowment for Democracy,
which was started in 1983 under
the guiding hand of CIA Director William Casey.
NED became a
slush fund to help finance what became known, inside the
Reagan administration, as
“perception management,” the art of controlling the
perceptions of domestic and foreign populations.
The
Emergence of StratCom
Last year, as
the New Cold War heated up, NATO created the Strategic
Communications Command in Latvia to further wage
information warfare against Russia and individuals who
were contesting the West’s narratives.
As veteran war
correspondent Don North
reported in 2015 regarding this new StratCom, “the
U.S. government has come to view the control and
manipulation of information as a ‘soft power’ weapon,
merging psychological operations, propaganda and public
affairs under the catch phrase ‘strategic
communications.’
“This attitude
has led to treating psy-ops — manipulative techniques
for influencing a target population’s state of mind and
surreptitiously shaping people’s perceptions — as just a
normal part of U.S. and NATO’s information policy.”
Now, the
European Parliament and the U.S. Congress are moving to
up the ante, passing new legislation to escalate
“information warfare.”
On Wednesday,
U.S. congressional negotiators
approved $160 million to combat what they deem
foreign propaganda and the alleged Russian campaign to
spread “fake news.” The measure is part of the National
Defense Authorization Act and gives the State Department
the power to identify “propaganda” and counter it.
This bipartisan
stampede into an Orwellian future for the American
people and the world’s population follows
a shoddily sourced Washington Post article that
relied on a new anonymous group that identified some 200
Internet sites, including some of the most prominent
American independent sources of news, as part of a
Russian propaganda network.
Typical of this
new McCarthyism, the report lacked evidence that any
such network actually exists but instead targeted cases
where American journalists expressed skepticism about
claims from Western officialdom.
Consortiumnews.com was included on the list apparently
because we have critically analyzed some of the claims
and allegations regarding the crises in Syria and
Ukraine, rather than simply accept the dominant Western
“group thinks.”
Also on the
“black list” were such quality journalism sites as
Counterpunch, Truth-out, Truthdig, Naked Capitalism and
ZeroHedge along with many political sites ranging across
the ideological spectrum.
The
Fake-News Express
Normally such
an unfounded conspiracy theory would be ignored, but –
because The Washington Post treated the incredible
allegations as credible – the smear has taken on a life
of its own, reprised by cable networks and republished
by major newspapers.
But the
unpleasant truth is that the mainstream U.S. news media
is now engaged in its own fake-news campaign about “fake
news.” It’s publishing bogus claims invented by a
disreputable and secretive outfit that just recently
popped up on the Internet. If that isn’t “fake news,” I
don’t know what is.
Yet, despite
the Post’s clear violations of normal journalistic
practices, surely, no one there will pay a price,
anymore than there was accountability for the Post
reporting as flat fact that Iraq was hiding WMD in
2002-2003. Fred Hiatt, the editorial-page editor most
responsible for that catastrophic “group think,” is
still in the same job today.
Two nights ago,
MSNBC’s Chris Matthews featured the spurious Washington
Post article in a segment that – like similar rehashes
–didn’t bother to get responses from the journalists
being slandered.
I found that
ironic since Matthews repeatedly scolds journalists for
their failure to look skeptically at U.S. government
claims about Iraq possessing WMD as justification for
the disastrous Iraq War. However, now Matthews joins in
smearing journalists who have applied skepticism to U.S.
and Western propaganda claims about Syria and/or
Ukraine.
While the U.S.
Congress and the European Parliament begin to take
action to shut down or isolate dissident sources of
information – all in the name of “democracy” – a
potentially greater danger is that mainstream U.S. news
outlets are already teaming up with technology
companies, such as Google and Facebook, to impose their
own determinations about “truth” on the Internet.
Or, as Ignatius
puts it in his column reflecting Undersecretary for
Public Diplomacy Stengel’s thinking, “The best hope may
be the global companies that have created the
social-media platforms.
“‘They see this
information war as an existential threat,’ says Stengel.
… The real challenge for global tech giants is to
restore the currency of truth. Perhaps “machine
learning” [presumably a reference to algorithms] can
identify falsehoods and expose every argument that uses
them. Perhaps someday, a human-machine process will
create what Stengel describes as a ‘global ombudsman for
information.’”
Ministry of Truth
An
organization of some 30 mainstream media companies
already exists, including not only The Washington Post
and The New York Times but also the Atlantic
Council-connected Bellingcat, as the emerging arbiters –
or ombudsmen – for truth, something Orwell described
less flatteringly as a “Ministry of Truth.”
The New York
Times has even
editorialized in support of Internet censorship,
using the hysteria over “fake news” to justify the
marginalization or disappearance of dissident news
sites.
It now appears
that this 1984-ish “MiniTrue” will especially target
journalistic skepticism when applied to U.S. government
and mainstream media “group thinks.”
Yet, in my four
decades-plus in professional journalism, I always
understood that skepticism was a universal journalistic
principle, one that should be applied in all cases,
whether a Republican or a Democrat is in the White House
or whether some foreign leader is popular or demonized.
As we have seen
in recent years, failure to ask tough questions and to
challenge dubious claims from government officials and
mainstream media outlets can get lots of people killed,
both U.S. soldiers and citizens of countries invaded or
destabilized by outsiders.
To show
skepticism is not the threat to democracy that
Undersecretary Stengel and columnist Ignatius appear to
think it is.
Whether you
like or dislike RT’s broadcasts – or more likely have
never seen one – a journalist really can’t question its
slogan: “question more.” Questioning is the essence of
journalism and, for that matter, democracy.
[In protest of
the Post’s smearing of independent journalists,
RootsAction has undertaken a petition drive, which can
be
found here.]
Investigative reporter Robert Parry broke many of the
Iran-Contra stories for The Associated Press and
Newsweek in the 1980s. You can buy his latest book,
America’s Stolen
Narrative, either in print
here or as an e-book (from
Amazon and
barnesandnoble.com).
The views
expressed in this article are the author's own and do
not necessarily reflect Information Clearing House
editorial policy. |