August 20/21,
2023 -
Information Clearing House -
In the 1970s, I met one of Hitler’s
leading propagandists, Leni Riefenstahl,
whose epic films glorified the Nazis. We
happened to be staying at the same lodge in
Kenya, where she was on a photography
assignment, having escaped the fate of other
friends of the Führer.
She told me that the “patriotic messages”
of her films were dependent not on “orders
from above” but on what she called the
“submissive void” of the German public.
Did that include the liberal, educated
bourgeoisie? I asked. “Yes, especially
them,” she said.
I think of this as I look around at the
propaganda now consuming Western societies.
Of course, we are very different from
Germany in the 1930s. We live in information
societies. We are globalists. We have never
been more aware, more in touch and better
connected.
Are we? Or do we live in a media society
where brainwashing is insidious and
relentless, and perception is filtered
according to the needs and lies of state and
corporate power?
The United States dominates the Western
world’s media. All but one of the top ten
media companies is based in North America.
The internet and social media — Google,
Twitter, Facebook — are mostly
American-owned and controlled.
In my lifetime, the United States has
overthrown or attempted to overthrow more
than 50 governments, mostly democracies. It
has interfered in democratic elections in 30
countries. It has dropped bombs on the
people of 30 countries, most of them poor
and defenceless. It has attempted to murder
the leaders of 50 countries. It has fought
to suppress liberation movements in 20
countries.
Click Here To
Get
Our FREE Newsletter
The extent and scale of this carnage are
largely unreported, and unrecognised; and
those responsible continue to dominate
Anglo-American political life.
In the years before he died in 2008, the
playwright Harold Pinter made two
extraordinary speeches, which broke a
silence.
“US foreign policy,” he said, is “best
defined as follows: kiss my arse or I’ll
kick your head in. It is as simple and as
crude as that. What is interesting about it
is that it’s so incredibly successful. It
possesses the structures of disinformation,
use of rhetoric, distortion of language,
which are very persuasive, but are actually
a pack of lies. It is very successful
propaganda. They have the money, they have
the technology, they have all the means to
get away with it, and they do.”
In accepting the Nobel prize for
literature, Pinter said this: “The crimes of
the United States have been systematic,
constant, vicious, remorseless, but very few
people have actually talked about them. You
have to hand it to America. It has exercised
a quite clinical manipulation of power
worldwide while masquerading as a force for
universal good. It’s a brilliant, even
witty, highly successful act of hypnosis.”
Pinter was a friend of mine and possibly
the last great political sage — that is,
before dissenting politics were gentrified.
I asked him if the “hypnosis” he referred to
was the “submissive void” described by Leni
Riefenstahl.
“It’s the same,” he replied. “It means
the brainwashing is so thorough we are
programmed to swallow a pack of lies. If we
don’t recognise propaganda, we may accept it
as normal and believe it. That’s the
submissive void.”
In our systems of corporate democracy,
war is an economic necessity, the perfect
marriage of public subsidy and private
profit: socialism for the rich, capitalism
for the poor. The day after 9/11 the stock
prices of the war industry soared. More
bloodshed was coming, which is great for
business.
Today, the most profitable wars have
their own brand. They are called “forever
wars”: Afghanistan, Palestine, Iraq, Libya,
Yemen and now Ukraine. All are based on a
pack of lies.
Iraq is the most infamous, with its
weapons of mass destruction that didn’t
exist. Nato’s destruction of Libya in 2011
was justified by a massacre in Benghazi that
didn’t happen. Afghanistan was a convenient
revenge war for 9/11, which had nothing to
do with the people of Afghanistan.
Today, the news from Afghanistan is how
evil the Taliban are — not that President
Joe Biden’s theft of $7-billion of the
country’s bank reserves is causing
widespread suffering. Recently, National
Public Radio in Washington
devoted two hours to Afghanistan — and
30 seconds to its starving people.
At its summit in Madrid in June, Nato,
which is controlled by the United States,
adopted a strategy document that militarises
the European continent and escalates the
prospect of war with Russia and China. It
proposes ‘multi-domain warfighting
against nuclear-armed peer-competitors’. In
other words, nuclear war.
It says: “Nato’s enlargement has been a
historic success.”
I read that in disbelief.
A measure of this “historic success” is
the war in Ukraine, news of which is mostly
not news, but a one-sided litany of
jingoism, distortion, and omission. I have
reported a number of wars and have never
known such blanket propaganda.
In February, Russia invaded Ukraine as a
response to almost eight years of killing
and criminal destruction in the
Russian-speaking region of Donbass on their
border.
In 2014, the United States sponsored a
coup in Kyiv that got rid of Ukraine’s
democratically elected, Russian-friendly
president and installed a successor who the
Americans made clear was their man.
In recent years, American “defender”
missiles have been installed in eastern
Europe, Poland, Slovenia, and the Czech
Republic, almost certainly aimed at Russia,
accompanied by false assurances all the way
back to James Baker’s “promise” to Gorbachev
in February 1990 that Nato would never
expand beyond Germany.
Ukraine is the frontline. Nato has
effectively reached the very borderland
through which Hitler’s army stormed in 1941,
leaving more than 23-million people dead in
the Soviet Union.
Last December, Russia
proposed a far-reaching security plan
for Europe. This was dismissed, derided or
suppressed in the Western media. Who read
its step-by-step proposals? On 24 February,
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy
threatened to develop nuclear weapons unless
America armed and protected Ukraine. This
was the final straw.
On the same day, Russia invaded —
according to the Western media, an
unprovoked act of congenital infamy. The
history, the lies, the peace proposals, the
solemn agreements on Donbass at Minsk
counted for nothing.
On 25 April, the US defence secretary,
General Lloyd Austin, flew into Kyiv and
confirmed that America’s aim was to destroy
the Russian Federation — the word he used
was “weaken”. America had got the war it
wanted, waged by an American bankrolled and
armed proxy and expendable pawn.
Almost none of this was explained to
Western audiences.
Russia’s invasion of Ukraine is wanton
and inexcusable. It is a crime to invade a
sovereign country. There are no “buts” —
except one.
When did the present war in Ukraine begin
and who started it? According to the United
Nations, between 2014 and this year, some 14
000 people have been killed in the Kyiv
regime’s civil war on the Donbass. Many of
the attacks were carried out by neo-Nazis.
Watch an ITV news report from May 2014,
by the veteran reporter James Mates, who is
shelled, along with civilians in the city of
Mariupol, by Ukraine’s Azov (neo-Nazi)
battalion.
In the same month, dozens of
Russian-speaking people were burned alive or
suffocated in a trade union building in
Odessa besieged by fascist thugs, the
followers of the Nazi collaborator and
anti-Semitic fanatic Stephen Bandera. The
New York Times called the thugs
“nationalists.”
“The historic mission of our nation in
this critical moment,” said Andreiy Biletsky,
founder of the Azov Battalion, “is to lead
the white races of the world in a final
crusade for their survival, a crusade
against the Semite-led Untermenschen.”
Since February, a campaign of
self-appointed “news monitors” (mostly
funded by the Americans and British with
links to governments) have sought to
maintain the absurdity that Ukraine’s
neo-Nazis don’t exist.
Airbrushing, a term once associated with
Stalin’s purges, has become a tool of
mainstream journalism.
In less than a decade, a “good” China has
been airbrushed and a “bad” China has
replaced it: from the world’s workshop to a
budding new Satan.
Much of this propaganda originates in the
US, and is transmitted through proxies and
“think tanks,” such as the notorious
Australian Strategic Policy Institute, the
voice of the arms industry, and by zealous
journalists such as Peter Hartcher of the
Sydney Morning Herald, who
labelled those spreading Chinese
influence as “rats, flies, mosquitoes and
sparrows” and called for these “pests” to be
“eradicated.”
News about China in the West is almost
entirely about the threat from Beijing.
Airbrushed are the 400 American military
bases that surround most of China, an armed
necklace that reaches from Australia to the
Pacific and Southeast Asia, Japan and Korea.
The Japanese island of Okinawa and the
Korean island of Jeju are loaded guns aimed
point-blank at the industrial heart of
China. A Pentagon official described this as
a “noose.”
Palestine has been misreported for as
long as I can remember. To the BBC, there is
the “conflict” of “two narratives.” The
longest, most brutal, lawless military
occupation in modern times is unmentionable.
The stricken people of Yemen barely
exist. They are media unpeople. While the
Saudis rain down their American cluster
bombs with British advisers working
alongside the Saudi targeting officers, more
than half a million children face
starvation.
This brainwashing by omission has a long
history. The slaughter of World War I was
suppressed by reporters who were knighted
for their compliance and confessed in their
memoirs. In 1917, the editor of the
Manchester Guardian, CP Scott, confided
to Prime Minister Lloyd George: “If people
really knew [the truth], the war would be
stopped tomorrow, but they don’t know and
can’t know.”
The refusal to see people and events as
those in other countries see them is a media
virus in the West, as debilitating as Covid.
It is as if we see the world through a
one-way mirror, in which “we” are moral and
benign and “they” are not. It is a
profoundly imperial view.
The history that is a living presence in
China and Russia is rarely explained and
rarely understood. Vladimir Putin is Adolf
Hitler. Xi Jinping is Fu Man Chu. Epic
achievements, such as the eradication of
abject poverty in China, are barely known.
How perverse and squalid this is.
When will we allow ourselves to
understand? Training journalists
factory-style is not the answer. Neither is
the wondrous digital tool, which is a means,
not an end, like the one-finger typewriter
and the linotype machine.
In recent years, some of the best
journalists have been eased out of the
mainstream. “Defenestrated” is the word
used. The spaces once open to mavericks, to
journalists who went against the grain,
truth-tellers, have closed.
The case of Julian Assange is the most
shocking. When Assange and WikiLeaks could
win readers and prizes for the Guardian,
the New York Times and other
self-important “papers of record,” he was
celebrated.
When the dark state objected and demanded
the destruction of hard drives and the
assassination of Assange’s character, he was
made a public enemy. Then vice-president
Biden called him a “hi-tech terrorist”.
Hillary Clinton asked, “Can’t we just drone
this guy?”
The ensuing campaign of abuse and
vilification against Assange — the UN
Rapporteur on Torture called it “mobbing” —
brought the liberal press to its lowest ebb.
We know who they are. I think of them as
collaborators: as Vichy journalists.
When will real journalists stand up? An
inspirational samizdat already exists on the
internet: Consortium News, founded
by the great reporter Robert Parry, Max
Blumenthal’s Grayzone, Mint Press News,
Media Lens, Declassified UK, Alborada,
Electronic Intifada, WSWS, ZNet, ICH,
CounterPunch, Independent Australia,
Globetrotter, the work of Chris Hedges,
Patrick Lawrence, Jonathan Cook, Diana
Johnstone, Caitlin Johnstone and others who
will forgive me for not mentioning them
here.
And when will writers stand up, as they
did against the rise of fascism in the
1930s? When will filmmakers stand up, as
they did against the Cold War in the 1940s?
When will satirists stand up, as they did a
generation ago?
Having soaked for 82 years in a deep bath
of righteousness that is the official
version of the last world war, isn’t it time
those who are meant to keep the record
straight declared their independence and
decoded the propaganda? The urgency is
greater than ever.