(updated below ā Update II)
The vast bulk of the commentary issuing from American commentators about the Russian military action in Ukraine involves condemning exactly that which they routinely advocate and which the US itself routinely does. So suffocating is the resulting stench that those who played leading roles in selling the public the attack on Iraq and who areĀ still unrepentant about it, such as David āAxis of Evil/The Right Manā Frum, have actually become the leading media voices condemning Russia on the ground that it is wrong to invade sovereign countries; Frum thus has no troubleĀ saying things like thisĀ with an apparently straight face: āIf Russia acts the outlaw nation, can it be expected to be treated as anything but an outlaw?ā
Enthusiastic supporters of a wide range of other US interventions in sovereign states, both past and present and in and out of government, are equally righteous in their newfound contempt for invasions ā when done by Russia. Secretary of State John Kerry ā who stood on the Senate floor in 2002 and voted to authorize the invasion of Iraq because āSaddam Hussein [is] sitting in Baghdad with an arsenal of weapons of mass destructionā and there is ālittle doubt that Saddam Hussein wants to retain his arsenal of weapons of mass destructionā āĀ toldĀ Face the NationĀ on Sunday: āYou just donāt in the 21st Century behave in 19th Century fashion by invading another country on completely trumped-up pretext.ā The supremely sycophanticĀ Face the NationĀ host Bob Schieffer ā as he demanded to know how Russia would be punished –Ā never once bothered KerryĀ (or his other Iraq-war-advocating guests, including Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel andĀ Washington PostĀ columnist David Ignatius) by asking about any of that unpleasantness (is it hard at all for you to sermonize against invasions of sovereign countries given, you know, how often you yourself support them?)
American invasions and occupations of nations halfway around the world are perfectly noble, but Russian interference in a part of a country right on its border is the supreme act of lawless, imperial aggression. Few things are worse than watching Americaās militarists, invasion-and-occupying-justifiers, regime-change enthusiasts, drone-lovers, and supporters of its various ākinetic military actionsā self-righteously wrap themselves in the banner of non-intervention, international law and respect for sovereignty. Does anyone take those denunciations seriously outside of the class of western elites who disseminate them?
American media elites awash in an orgy of feel-good condemnation in particular love to mock Russian media, especially the government-funded English-language outlet RT, as being a source of shameless pro-Putin propaganda, where free expression is strictly barred (in contrast to the Free American Media). That that network has a strong pro-Russian bias is unquestionably true. But one of its leading hosts, Abby Martin, remarkably demonstrated last night what ājournalistic independenceā means by ending herĀ Breaking the SetĀ program with a clear and unapologetic denunciation of the Russian action in Ukraine:
For all the self-celebrating American journalists and political commentators: was there even a single US television host who said anything comparable to this in the lead-up to, or the early stages of, the US invasion of Iraq? Even now, how many American TV hosts on the major networks and cable outlets report on the types of American killings described inĀ the first three paragraphs of this interviewĀ with Hamid Karzai, or theĀ ongoing extinguishing of innocent human livesĀ by President Obamaās drone attacks, or theĀ pervasive chaos and sufferingĀ left in the wake of the NATO intervention in Libya that they almost universally cheered, or theĀ endless brutalityĀ of the West Bank occupation and Gaza domination by the USās closest Middle East ally, or, for that matter,Ā US/EU interference in the very same countryĀ that Russia is now condemned for invading? As political science professor Asāad AbuKhalilĀ put it yesterdayĀ after listening to Obamaās condemnation of Russia:
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This is what imperialism is all about: to give yourself the right to intervene in far away places and to project power in every corner of the globe, including the arctic, and to disregard world public opinion.Ā Imperialism is to have the temerity to lecture and hector Russia about the evils of intervention in the affairs of its neighbor, Ukraine, where the US and EU are blatantly conspiring against Russian interests there. . . . Obama sends drones around the world to kill people, including Americans, who have never been put on trial and yet sounds like a peaceful dove when offering lessons to Russia. Basically the US is objecting to attempts by Russia to play a smaller and even far less aggressive version of its own world game.
When that sort of commentary and reporting appears frequently on major American television outlets, American celebration of its own āfree pressā can be taken seriously. Or, put another way, until hosts of major U.S. television programs do what Abby Martin just did on RT in connection with a major American military intervention, American commentatorsā self-justifying mockery of Russian media outlets will continue to be as persuasive as the condemnation of Russian imperialism and aggression from the David Frums of the world.
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UPDATE: The official RT account on Twitter seems perfectly proud of Martinās statements, as they re-tweeted my commentary about her monologue condemning Russiaās actions:
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UPDATE II: In response to my question about whether any US television hosts issued denunciations of the attack on Iraq similar to what Martin just did on RT, Washington lawyer Bradley MossĀ replied: āPhil Donahue (MSNBC) and Peter Arnett (NBC).ā
Leaving aside that Arnett wasnāt a host, this perfectly proves the point I made, since both Donahue and ArnettĀ were fired because of their opposition to the US war.Ā ArnettĀ was fired instantly by NBCĀ after he made critical comments about the war effort on Iraqi television, while a memo from MSNBC executives made clear they were firing Donahue despite his show being the networkās highest-rated programĀ becauseĀ he would beĀ āa difficult public face for NBC in a time of warā.
During that same time, MSNBCās rising star Ashleigh Banfield wasĀ demoted and then firedĀ after she delivered a stinging rebuke of misleading pro-war TV coverage by US outlets, while Jessica Yellin, at MSNBC during the time of the war,Ā admitted in 2008 thatĀ āthe press corps was under enormous pressure from corporate executives, frankly, to make sure that this was a war that was presented in a way that was consistent with the patriotic fever in the nation and the presidentās high approval ratingsā and that executives would change stories to make them more pro-war.
All of that stands in rather stark contrast to the clear denunciation of the Russian intervention by Martin which RT broadcast and this morning is promoting. Weāll see if she suffers any recriminations, but if she does, US media behavior during the attack on Iraq was hardly any better.
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2 Comments
I read somewhere that a visiting VIP from Russia observed the operation of the American free press for a while and then asked his host how had it been to achieve such press compliance with Government policy. He said that they had never been able to achieve this in Russia.
This has echoes of a story Noam Chomsky wrote about:
http://www.chomsky.info/articles/198912–.htm
“In May 1983, a remarkable event took place in Moscow. A courageous newscaster, Vladimir Danchev, denounced the Russian invasion of Afghanistan in five successive radio broadcasts”
Chomsky then makes the comparison to US journalists and America’s war in Vietnam, and how it is impossible for journalists to even recognize US agression:
“For the past 25 years I have been searching to find some reference in mainstream journalism or scholarship to a U.S. invasion of South Vietnam, or U.S. aggression in Indochina — without success. Instead I find a U.S. defense of South Vietnam against terrorists supported from outside (namely, from Vietnam), a defense that was unwise, the doves maintain. ”
The more things change …