It has been clear for some time that US corporate news media have explicitly taken a side on the Ukraine War. This role includes suppressing relevant history of the lead-up to the war (FAIR.org, 3/4/22), attacking people who bring up that history as āconspiracy theoristsā (FAIR.org, 5/18/22), accepting official government pronouncements at face value (FAIR.org, 12/2/22) and promoting an overly rosy picture of the conflict in order to boost morale.
For most of the war, most of the US coverage has been as pro-Ukrainian as Ukraineās own media, now consolidated under the Zelenskyy government (FAIR.org, 5/9/23). Dire predictions sporadically appeared, but were drowned out by drumbeat coverage portraying a Ukrainian army on the cusp of victory, and the Russian army as incompetent and on the verge of collapse.
Triumphalist rhetoric soared in early 2023, as optimistic talk of a game-changing āspring offensiveā dominated Ukraine coverage. Apparently delayed, the Ukrainian counteroffensive launched in June. While even US officials did not believe that it would amount to much, US media papered over these doubts in the runup to the campaign.
Over the last three months, it has become clear that the Ukrainian military operation will not be the game-changer it was sold as; namely, it will not significantly roll back the Russian occupation and obviate the need for a negotiated settlement. Only after this became undeniable did media report on the trueĀ costsĀ ofĀ warĀ to the Ukrainian people.
Overwhelming optimism
A former top US general assured NPR (5/12/23) that āUkraineās long-anticipated counteroffensive against Russia will ultimately succeed.ā
In the runup to the counteroffensive, US media were full of excited conversation about how it would reshape the nature of the conflict. NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg told Radio Free Europe (4/21/23) he was āconfident Ukraine will be successful.ā Sen. Lindsey Graham assured Politico (5/30/23), āIn the coming days, youāre going to see a pretty impressive display of power by the Ukrainians.ā Asked for his predictions about Ukraineās plans, retired Lt. Gen. Ben Hodges told NPR (5/12/23), āI actually expectā¦they will be quite successful.ā
Former CIA Director David Patraeus, author of the overhyped āsurgeā strategy in Iraq, told CNN (5/23/23):
I personally think that this is going to be really quite successfulā¦. And [the Russians] are going to have to withdraw under pressure of this Ukrainian offensive, the most difficult possible tactical maneuver, and I donāt think theyāre going to do well at that.
The Washington Postās David Ignatius (4/15/23) acknowledged that āhope is not a strategy,ā but still insisted that āUkraineās will to wināits determination to expel Russian invaders from its territory at whatever costāmight be the X-factor in the decisive season of conflict ahead.ā
The New York Times (6/2/23) ran a story praising recruits who signed up for the Ukrainian pushback, even though it āpromises to be deadly.ā Times columnist Paul Krugman (6/5/23) declared we were witnessing āthe moral equivalent of D-Day.ā CNN (5/30/23) reported that Ukrainians were āunfazedā as they āgear up for a counteroffensive.ā
Cable news was replete with buzz about how the counteroffensive, couched with modifiers like ālong-awaitedā or āhighly anticipated,ā could turn the tide in the war. Nightly news shows (e.g., NBC, 6/15/23, 6/16/23) presented audiences with optimistic statements from Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy and other figures talking about the imminent success.
Downplaying reality
The Washington Post (4/10/23) noted that pessimistic leaked assessments were āa marked departure from the Biden administrationās public statements about the vitality of Ukraineās military.ā
Despite the soaring rhetoric presented to audiences, Western officials understood that the counteroffensive was all but doomed to fail. This had been known long before the above comments were reported, but media failed to include that fact as prominently as the predictions for success.
On April 10, as part of the Discord leaks story, the Washington Post (4/10/23) reported that top secret documents showed that Ukraineās drive would fall āwell shortā of its objectives, due to equipment, ammunition and conscription problems. The document predicted āsustainment shortfallsā and only āmodest territorial gains.ā
The Post additionally cited anonymous officials who claimed that the documentsā conclusions were corroborated by a classified National Intelligence Council assessment, shown only to a select few in Congress. The Post spoke to a Ukrainian official who ādid not dispute the revelations,ā and acknowledged that it was āpartially true.ā
While the Post has yet to publish the documents in full, the leaks and the other sources clearly painted a picture of a potentially disastrous counteroffensive. Fear was so palpable that the Biden administration privately worried about how he could keep up support for the war when the widely hyped offensive sputtered. In the midst of this, Blinken continued to dismiss the idea of a ceasefire, opting instead to pursue further escalating the conflict.
Despite the importance of these facts, they were hardly reported on by the rest of corporate media, and dropped from subsequent war coverage. When the Post (6/14/23) published a long article citing Defense Secretary Lloyd Austinās cautious optimism about the campaign, it neglected to mention its earlier reporting about the governmentās privately gloomier assessments. The documents only started appearing again in the press after thousands were dead, and the campaignās failure undeniable.
In an honest press, excited comments from politicians and commentators would be published alongside reports about how even our highest-level officials did not believe that the counteroffensive would amount to much. Instead, anticipation was allowed to build while doubts were set to the side.
Too ācasualty-averseā?
After noting estimates that 70,000 Ukrainian soldiers had died and as many as 120,000 wounded, the New York Times (8/18/23) reported that āAmerican officials say they fear that Ukraine has become casualty averse.ā
y July, Ukrainian casualties were mounting, and it became clearer and clearer that the counteroffensive would fail to recapture significant amounts of Ukrainian territory. Reporting grew more realistic, and we were given insights into conditions on the ground in Ukraine, as well as what was in the minds of US officials.
According to the Washington Post (8/17/23), US and Ukrainian militaries had conducted war games and had anticipated that an advance would be accompanied by heavy losses. But when the real-world fatalities mounted, the Post reported, āUkraine chose to stem the losses on the battlefield.ā
This caused a rift between the Ukrainians and their Western backers, who were frustrated at Ukrainiansā desire to keep their people alive. A mid-July New York Times article (7/14/23) reported that US officials were privately frustrated that Ukraine had become too afraid of dying to fight effectively. The officials worried that Ukrainian commanders āfear[ed] casualties among their ranks,ā and had āreverted to old habitsā rather than āpressing harder.ā A later Times article (8/18/23) repeated Washingtonās worries that Ukrainians were too ācasualty-averse.ā
Acknowledging failure
After it became undeniable that Ukraineās military action was going nowhere, a Wall Street Journal report (7/23/23) raised some of the doubts that had been invisible in the press on the offensiveās eve. The reportās opening lines say it all:
When Ukraine launched its big counteroffensive this spring, Western military officials knew Kyiv didnāt have all the training or weaponsāfrom shells to warplanesāthat it needed to dislodge Russian forces.
The Journal acknowledged that Western officials simply āhoped Ukrainian courage and resourcefulness would carry the day.ā
One Post column (7/26/23) asked, āWas Gen. Mark Milley Right Last Year About the War in Ukraine?ā Columnist Jason Willick acknowledged that āMilleyās skepticism about Ukraineās ability to achieve total victory appears to have been widespread within the Biden administration before the counteroffensive began.ā
And when one official told Politico (8/18/23), āMilley had a point,ā acknowledging the former military headās November suggestion for negotiations. The quote was so telling that Politico made it the headline of the article.
Even Rep. Andy Harris (D-Md.), co-chair of the congressional Ukraine Caucus, publicly questioned whether or not the war was āwinnableā (Politico,Ā 8/17/23). Speaking on the counteroffensiveās status, he said, āIāll be blunt, itās failed.ā
The Washington Post (8/17/23) blamed the failure of āa counteroffensive that saw tens of billions of dollars of Western weapons and military equipmentā on Ukraineās failure to accept āmajor casualtiesā as āthe cost of piercing through Russiaās main defensive line.ā
Newsweek (8/16/23) reported on a Ukrainian leadership divided over how to handle the āunderwhelmingā counteroffensive. The Washington Post (8/17/23) reported that the US intelligence community assessed that the offensive would fail to fulfill its key objective of severing the land bridge between Russian-occupied eastern Ukraine and Crimea.
As the triumphalism ebbed, outlets began reporting on scenes that were almost certainly common before the spring push but had gone unpublished. One piece from the Post (8/10/23) outlined a ādarken[ed] mood in Ukraine,ā in which the nation was āworn out.ā The piece acknowledged that āUkrainian officials and their Western partners hyped up a coming counteroffensive,ā but there was ālittle visible progress.ā
The Wall Street Journal (8/1/23) published a devastating piece about the massive number of amputees returning home from the mine-laden battlefield. They reported that between 20,000 and 50,000 Ukrainians had lost one or more limbs as a result of the warānumbers that are comparable to those seen during World War I.
Rather than dwelling on the stalled campaign, the New York Times and other outlets focused on the drone war against Russia, even while acknowledging that the remote strikes were largely an exercise in public relations. The Times (8/25/23) declared that the strikes had ālittle significant damage to Russiaās overall military mightā and were primarily āa message for [Ukraineās] own people,ā citing US officials who noted that they āintended to demonstrate to the Ukrainian public that Kyiv can still strike back.ā Looking at the quantity of Times coverage (8/30/23, 8/30/23, 8/23/23, 8/22/23, 8/22/23, 8/21/23, 8/18/23), the drone strikes were apparently aimed at an increasingly war-weary US public as well.
War as desirable outcome
The Army War Collegeās John Deni (Wall Street Journal, 12/22/21) urged the US to take āa hard-line stance in diplomatic discussions,ā because āif Mr. Putinās forces invade, Russia is likely to suffer long-term, serious and even debilitating strategic costs.ā
The fact that US officials pushed for a Ukrainian counteroffensive that all but expected would fail raises an important question: Why would they do this? Sending thousands of young people to be maimed and killed does nothing to advance Ukrainian territorial integrity, and actively hinders the war effort.
The answer has been clear since before the war. Despite the high-minded rhetoric about support for democracy, this has never been the goal of pushing for war in Ukraine. Though it often goes unacknowledged in the US press, policymakers saw a war in Ukraine as a desirable outcome. One 2019 study from the RAND Corporationāa think tank with close ties to the Pentagonāsuggested that an effective way to overextend and unbalance Russia would be to increase military support for Ukraine, arguing that this could lead to a Russian invasion.
In December 2021, as Russian President Vladimir Putin began to mass troops at Ukraineās border while demanding negotiations, John Deni of the Atlantic Council published an op-ed in the Wall Street Journal (12/22/21) headlined āThe Strategic Case for Risking War in Ukraine,ā which laid out the US logic explicitly: Provoking a war would allow the US to impose sanctions and fight a proxy war that would grind Russia down. Additionally, the anti-Russian sentiment that resulted from a war would strengthen NATOās resolve.
All of this came to pass as Washingtonās stance of non-negotiation successfully provoked a Russian invasion. Even as Ukraine and Russia sat at the negotiation table early in the war, the US made it clear that it wanted the war to continue and escalate. The USās objective was, in the words of Raytheon boardmemberāturnedāDefense Secretary Lloyd Austin, āto see Russia weakened.ā Despite stated commitments to Ukrainian democracy, US policies have instead severely damaged it.
NATOās āstrategic windfallāĀ
In the wake of the stalled counteroffensive, the US interest in sacrificing Ukraine to bleed Russia was put on display again. In July, the Postās Ignatius declared that the West shouldnāt be so āgloomyā about Ukraine, since the war had been a āstrategic windfallā for NATO and its allies. Echoing two of Deniās objectives, Ignatius asserted that āthe Westās most reckless antagonist has been rocked,ā and āNATO has grown much stronger with the additions of Sweden and Finland.ā
In the starkest demonstration of the lack of concern for Ukraine or its people, he also wrote that these strategic successes came āat relatively low cost,ā adding, in a parenthetical aside, ā(other than for the Ukrainians).ā
Ignatius is far from alone. Hawkish Sen. Mitt Romney (RāUtah) explained why US funding for the proxy war was āabout the best national defense spending I think weāve ever doneā: āWeāre losing no lives in Ukraine, and the Ukrainians, theyāre fighting heroically against Russia.ā
The consensus among policymakers in Washington is to push for endless conflict, no matter how many Ukrainians die in the process. As long as Russia loses men and material, the effect on Ukraine is irrelevant. Ukrainian victory was never the goal.
āFears of peace talksā
Polls show that support for increased US involvement in Ukraine is rapidly declining. The recent Republican presidential debate demonstrated clear fractures within the right wing of the US power structure. Politico (8/18/23) reported that some US officials are regretting potential lost opportunities for negotiations. Unfortunately, this minority dissent has yet to affect the dominant consensus.
The failure of the counteroffensive has not caused Washington to rethink its strategy of attempting to bleed Russia. The flow of US military hardware to Ukraine is likely to continue so long as this remains the goal. The Hill (9/5/23) gave the game away about NATOās commitment to escalation with a piece titled āFears of Peace Talks With Putin Rise Amid US Squabbling.ā
But even within the Biden administration, the Pentagon appears to be at odds with the State Department and National Security Council over the Ukraine conflict. Contrary to what may be expected, the civilian officials like Jake Sullivan, Victoria Nuland and Antony Blinken are taking a harder line on perpetuating this conflict than the professional soldiers in the Pentagon. The mediaās sharp change of tone may both signify and fuel the doubts gaining traction within the US political class.
ZNetwork is funded solely through the generosity of its readers.
Donate
