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Western Media Is Now the Propaganda Wing of al-Qaeda

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Western Media Is Now the Propaganda Wing of al-Qaeda

Western media has transformed into a distributor of jihadist propaganda

Brendan O'Neill


Originally appeared at Spiked

The British press is morphing into a mouthpiece for al-Qaeda. Consider its coverage of yesterday’s assassination of Andrei Karlov, the Russian ambassador to Turkey. It is borderline sympathetic.

The killer’s words — or rather, certain of the killer’s words — have been turned into emotional headlines, into condemnations of Russia’s actions in Syria. That the killer’s first and loudest cry was ‘Allahu Akbar’ — the holler of the modern terrorist — has been downplayed, and in the case of at least one newspaper, the Express, completely ignored.

Instead the papers upfront the killer’s other cries, about Aleppo. ‘This is for Aleppo’, says The Times. ‘Remember Aleppo’, says the Mirror’s headline, but with no quote marks, because these were not the exact words spoken by the gunman — they’re more like the Mirror’s own sympathetic echo of the killer’s sentiment.

To get a sense of how disturbing, or at least unusual, this coverage is, imagine if the 2013 murder of British soldier Lee Rigby by two Islamists had led to headlines like ‘This is for Afghanistan’ or ‘Remember Basra’ (those two knifemen, like Karlov’s killer, justified their action as a response to militarism overseas).

Or if the 7/7 bombings had not given rise to front pages saying ‘Terror bombs explode across London’ or ‘BASTARDS’ but rather ‘While you kill us in Iraq, we will kill you here’.

Reading the early coverage of Karlov’s killing, and noting how different it is to British press coverage of other acts of Islamist terror, one gets the impression that the media think this killing is justified, or at least understandable. ‘Remember Aleppo’: they’re saying this as much as the killer is — a perverse union of terrorist and editorial intent.

But the killer said, first, ‘Allahu Akbar’. Which perhaps suggests that his sympathy was not with Syria as such but with certain forces in Syria. Forces likely to shout ‘Allahu Akbar’ as they kill people. Islamist forces.

Something peculiar has happened in British media and political circles in recent weeks. Having spent years telling us al-Qaeda-style groups are the greatest threat to our way of life, these people have lately become spectacularly uncritical about, and even weirdly supportive of, the existence and influence of al-Qaeda-style groups in Syria.

The press coverage of Karlov’s killing is in keeping with the superbly reductive, highly moralised media coverage of events in Aleppo over the past fortnight, in which there are apparently only two sides:
defenceless civilians and evil Russia and Assad. The militants in Aleppo, which include some grotesquely illiberal and misanthropic groups, have been airbrushed out of the coverage as surely as some reporters airbrushed away, or at least demoted to paragraph six, the Turkish assassin’s cry of ‘Allahu Akbar’.

The Western media coverage of Syria counts as some of the most biased, uncritical war reporting of recent times. A vastly complex war, referred to by one journalist in August as ‘the world’s most complicated cat’s cradle’, has in recent weeks been reduced to a simplistic, binary morality play, a clash of innocence and evil.

The British media coverage of Aleppo in particular has focused heavily, and at times entirely, on the horrendous plight of civilians. Footage shows us civilians cowering in their homes, dashing through the streets to avoid Russian bombs, gathering in hospitals for news of loved ones.

What’s missing is striking: images of the gunmen, an estimated 10,000 of them, huge numbers of whom are al-Nusra, who had made Eastern Aleppo one of their harsh, unforgiving strongholds. These militants would muddy the simplistic narrative of a Russian-led genocide against Syrian civilians, and so they’re simply redacted from what we see on the TV news: an act of omission that borders on censorship.

The end result is coverage that elevates emotionalism over analysis, feeling over fact, making readers weep over helping readers understand. And coverage which, in the process, ends up doing Islamists’ bidding. In the words of Patrick Cockburn of the Independent, Western news organisations are ‘being spoon-fed by Syrian jihadists and their sympathisers who make it impossible for independent observers to visit areas they control’.

Given that it’s too dangerous for Western journalists to go to Eastern Aleppo, the media have become reliant on anti-Assad and anti-Russia activists to provide them with information and heartrending footage. But of course, these activists are only permitted to do and say certain things, given they live in areas controlled by ‘some of the most violent and merciless movements on Earth’, in Cockburn’s words. The consequence? ‘There’s more propaganda than news coming out of Aleppo’, as Cockburn says.

This transformation of much of the Western media into a kind of distributor of jihadist propaganda is not down to the wile and power of the jihadists themselves. Rather, what we’re witnessing is a marriage of convenience between so-called rebels in Syria keen to push their simplistic anti-Assad narrative and media outlets in the West desperate for another seemingly simple foreign crisis through which they might get to do some of their moralised, emotionalised journalism.

In essence, they’re in search of Another Sarajevo. In recent years, much Western journalism, particularly war reporting, has openly dispensed with the old ideal of objectivity in favour of making morality tales out of other people’s suffering. From Bosnia to Rwanda to Darfur to Syria, vastly complex, historic and bloody conflicts have been reduced by Western journalists to simple cases of good and evil, in which they, of course, are on the side of good. The instinct becomes less to inform than to moralise; less to report than to storify; less to study than to become a brave player in other people’s tragedies, a flak-jacketed exposer of Evil.

As a result, actual critical investigation, or simply critical thought, comes not only to be devalued but actively discouraged. Note how anyone, even Cockburn, who says Syria might be more complex than we’re being told, and that the rebels are profoundly problematic, can be written off as an Assad apologist or Putin sympathiser.

The newly moralised Western media doesn’t only fail in its duty to capture and report the complexities of foreign wars; it also uses ‘genocide denier’, ‘Assad supporter’, ‘Putinite’ and other slurs to guard its own moralised narratives and depress through libel and stigma the asking of difficult questions.

And so we arrive at a situation where Western reporters become willing sharers of a narrative that benefits Syria’s jihadist groups. This makes perverse sense. For there is something that binds together the modern Western reporter, the Western moral crusader, with al-Qaeda-style outlets. And that is a binary moralism, an almost apocalyptic belief in the forces of Good (us, always us) and Evil (them, usually Russia).

Indeed, the weird moral marriage of convenience in Syria between Western moral crusaders and Islamist extremists is perhaps the third time these forces have come together on the international stage. First there was Western support for jihadists in Afghanistan in the 1980s.

Then Western intelligence agents and virtually the entire Western media found themselves on the same side as the Mujahideen in Bosnia in the 1990s, both sides utterly devoted to a good-and-evil script in which the Serbs were the new Nazis deserving of being bombed by NATO (in the eyes of Western observers) or beheaded (in the eyes of the Mujahideen).

And now, again, Western elements are aligning, at least, with jihadists in Syria, both deriving a sense of moral purpose from being against Evil, against Russia, against Assad. They might look like they have nothing in common, these liberal Westerners and backward jihadists, but there’s that one thing, that shared desire to fashion a binary moral universe in order to make them feel important in the world.
 
Western Media Is Now the Propaganda Wing of al-Qaeda

Western media has transformed into a distributor of jihadist propaganda

Brendan O'Neill


Originally appeared at Spiked

The British press is morphing into a mouthpiece for al-Qaeda. Consider its coverage of yesterday’s assassination of Andrei Karlov, the Russian ambassador to Turkey. It is borderline sympathetic.

The killer’s words — or rather, certain of the killer’s words — have been turned into emotional headlines, into condemnations of Russia’s actions in Syria. That the killer’s first and loudest cry was ‘Allahu Akbar’ — the holler of the modern terrorist — has been downplayed, and in the case of at least one newspaper, the Express, completely ignored.

Instead the papers upfront the killer’s other cries, about Aleppo. ‘This is for Aleppo’, says The Times. ‘Remember Aleppo’, says the Mirror’s headline, but with no quote marks, because these were not the exact words spoken by the gunman — they’re more like the Mirror’s own sympathetic echo of the killer’s sentiment.

To get a sense of how disturbing, or at least unusual, this coverage is, imagine if the 2013 murder of British soldier Lee Rigby by two Islamists had led to headlines like ‘This is for Afghanistan’ or ‘Remember Basra’ (those two knifemen, like Karlov’s killer, justified their action as a response to militarism overseas).

Or if the 7/7 bombings had not given rise to front pages saying ‘Terror bombs explode across London’ or ‘BASTARDS’ but rather ‘While you kill us in Iraq, we will kill you here’.

Reading the early coverage of Karlov’s killing, and noting how different it is to British press coverage of other acts of Islamist terror, one gets the impression that the media think this killing is justified, or at least understandable. ‘Remember Aleppo’: they’re saying this as much as the killer is — a perverse union of terrorist and editorial intent.

But the killer said, first, ‘Allahu Akbar’. Which perhaps suggests that his sympathy was not with Syria as such but with certain forces in Syria. Forces likely to shout ‘Allahu Akbar’ as they kill people. Islamist forces.

Something peculiar has happened in British media and political circles in recent weeks. Having spent years telling us al-Qaeda-style groups are the greatest threat to our way of life, these people have lately become spectacularly uncritical about, and even weirdly supportive of, the existence and influence of al-Qaeda-style groups in Syria.

The press coverage of Karlov’s killing is in keeping with the superbly reductive, highly moralised media coverage of events in Aleppo over the past fortnight, in which there are apparently only two sides:
defenceless civilians and evil Russia and Assad. The militants in Aleppo, which include some grotesquely illiberal and misanthropic groups, have been airbrushed out of the coverage as surely as some reporters airbrushed away, or at least demoted to paragraph six, the Turkish assassin’s cry of ‘Allahu Akbar’.

The Western media coverage of Syria counts as some of the most biased, uncritical war reporting of recent times. A vastly complex war, referred to by one journalist in August as ‘the world’s most complicated cat’s cradle’, has in recent weeks been reduced to a simplistic, binary morality play, a clash of innocence and evil.

The British media coverage of Aleppo in particular has focused heavily, and at times entirely, on the horrendous plight of civilians. Footage shows us civilians cowering in their homes, dashing through the streets to avoid Russian bombs, gathering in hospitals for news of loved ones.

What’s missing is striking: images of the gunmen, an estimated 10,000 of them, huge numbers of whom are al-Nusra, who had made Eastern Aleppo one of their harsh, unforgiving strongholds. These militants would muddy the simplistic narrative of a Russian-led genocide against Syrian civilians, and so they’re simply redacted from what we see on the TV news: an act of omission that borders on censorship.

The end result is coverage that elevates emotionalism over analysis, feeling over fact, making readers weep over helping readers understand. And coverage which, in the process, ends up doing Islamists’ bidding. In the words of Patrick Cockburn of the Independent, Western news organisations are ‘being spoon-fed by Syrian jihadists and their sympathisers who make it impossible for independent observers to visit areas they control’.

Given that it’s too dangerous for Western journalists to go to Eastern Aleppo, the media have become reliant on anti-Assad and anti-Russia activists to provide them with information and heartrending footage. But of course, these activists are only permitted to do and say certain things, given they live in areas controlled by ‘some of the most violent and merciless movements on Earth’, in Cockburn’s words. The consequence? ‘There’s more propaganda than news coming out of Aleppo’, as Cockburn says.

This transformation of much of the Western media into a kind of distributor of jihadist propaganda is not down to the wile and power of the jihadists themselves. Rather, what we’re witnessing is a marriage of convenience between so-called rebels in Syria keen to push their simplistic anti-Assad narrative and media outlets in the West desperate for another seemingly simple foreign crisis through which they might get to do some of their moralised, emotionalised journalism.

In essence, they’re in search of Another Sarajevo. In recent years, much Western journalism, particularly war reporting, has openly dispensed with the old ideal of objectivity in favour of making morality tales out of other people’s suffering. From Bosnia to Rwanda to Darfur to Syria, vastly complex, historic and bloody conflicts have been reduced by Western journalists to simple cases of good and evil, in which they, of course, are on the side of good. The instinct becomes less to inform than to moralise; less to report than to storify; less to study than to become a brave player in other people’s tragedies, a flak-jacketed exposer of Evil.

As a result, actual critical investigation, or simply critical thought, comes not only to be devalued but actively discouraged. Note how anyone, even Cockburn, who says Syria might be more complex than we’re being told, and that the rebels are profoundly problematic, can be written off as an Assad apologist or Putin sympathiser.

The newly moralised Western media doesn’t only fail in its duty to capture and report the complexities of foreign wars; it also uses ‘genocide denier’, ‘Assad supporter’, ‘Putinite’ and other slurs to guard its own moralised narratives and depress through libel and stigma the asking of difficult questions.

And so we arrive at a situation where Western reporters become willing sharers of a narrative that benefits Syria’s jihadist groups. This makes perverse sense. For there is something that binds together the modern Western reporter, the Western moral crusader, with al-Qaeda-style outlets. And that is a binary moralism, an almost apocalyptic belief in the forces of Good (us, always us) and Evil (them, usually Russia).

Indeed, the weird moral marriage of convenience in Syria between Western moral crusaders and Islamist extremists is perhaps the third time these forces have come together on the international stage. First there was Western support for jihadists in Afghanistan in the 1980s.

Then Western intelligence agents and virtually the entire Western media found themselves on the same side as the Mujahideen in Bosnia in the 1990s, both sides utterly devoted to a good-and-evil script in which the Serbs were the new Nazis deserving of being bombed by NATO (in the eyes of Western observers) or beheaded (in the eyes of the Mujahideen).

And now, again, Western elements are aligning, at least, with jihadists in Syria, both deriving a sense of moral purpose from being against Evil, against Russia, against Assad. They might look like they have nothing in common, these liberal Westerners and backward jihadists, but there’s that one thing, that shared desire to fashion a binary moral universe in order to make them feel important in the world.

"USA" is biggest state sponsor of terrorism and US propaganda bullhorns (US corporate media) support terrorism. I think that US terrorists killed Russia’s ambassador to Turkey.

Russian Ambassador Assassinated: Retaliation, But by Whom?
20.12.2016 Author: Tony Cartalucci
Just days after the liberation of Syria’s northern city of Aleppo, Russia’s ambassador to Turkey, Andrei Karlov, was gunned down while giving a talk at an art gallery in Turkey’s capital of Ankara.

The gunman, identified as a former Turkish police officer, flashed the familiar one finger gesture used by terrorist organizations operating in neighboring Syria including by Jabhat Al Nusra and the self-proclaimed “Islamic State” – while shouting, according to the Guardian:

Don’t forget Aleppo. Don’t forget Syria. Unless our towns are secure, you won’t enjoy security. Only death can take me from here. Everyone who is involved in this suffering will pay a price.

The attack coincided with an alleged security incident near America’s embassy in Ankara, characterized by the US Embassy as a “shooting,” though it may be in reference to the actual assassination.

Western newspapers, however, including the Daily Mail, the UK Express, and The Sun attempted to portray the announcement as a separate incident. This may be a deliberate attempt to portray the US as a victim in tandem with Russia, to divert suspicion away from US involvement.

Assassination Takes Place Days After US Vowed “Retaliation” Against Russia

US President Barack Obama, US policymakers and pundits, as well as US Senators for the past week have vowed “retaliation” against Russia for alleged “hacking” during the 2016 US presidential election. These threats take place against a wider backdrop of increasingly unhinged outbursts made by Western politicians, pundits, and policymakers amid frustration in advancing their global agenda versus a reemerging Russia and a rising China.

The Guardian in an article published just this week titled, “Barack Obama promises retaliation against Russia over hacking during US election,” would state:

Barack Obama has warned that the US will retaliate for Russian cyberattacks during the presidential election.

In an interview on National Public Radio on Friday morning, the US president said he is waiting for a final report he has ordered into a range of Russian hacking attacks, but promised there would be a response.

“I think there is no doubt that when any foreign government tries to impact the integrity of our elections … we need to take action,” Obama said. “And we will – at a time and place of our own choosing.

“Some of it may be explicit and publicised; some of it may not be.”


Articles like the International Business Times’ “How Can The US Retaliate Against Russia’s Hacking? Here Are 6 Possible Moves,” would list possible forms retaliation could take, including:

Cyberattack on Russian networks or infrastructure; Release damaging information about Vladimir Putin; Target offshore accounts; Place malware inside Russian espionate networks; Interfere in Russian politics Economic sanctions.

However, it has been noted by many analysts, including those within the US’ own foreign policy circles, that America’s ability to retaliate with “cyber attacks” against Russia in such a manner would range from futile, to even galvanizing the Russian people further behind the Kremlin.

The New York Times in an article titled, “Obama Confronts Complexity of Using a Mighty Cyberarsenal Against Russia,” would note:

But while Mr. Obama vowed on Friday to “send a clear message to Russia” as both a punishment and a deterrent, some of the options were rejected as ineffective, others as too risky. If the choices had been better, one of the aides involved in the debate noted recently, the president would have acted by now.

In all likelihood, an attempted counter “cyber attack” would have ended in further humiliation and isolation for the United States’ ruling circles.

Cui Bono?

The cold-blooded assassination of a Russian ambassador in the heart of Turkey, however, is a very effective “retaliation,” not only for Russia’s role in balancing against the Western media’s influence, effectively undermining the West’s monopoly over global public perception, but also for confounding US geopolitical objectives across the Middle East – particularly in Syria, and particularly in the aftermath of Aleppo’s liberation.

The assassination – a crime and even an act of war by any account – was apparently carried out by a militant drawn from the ranks of terrorist organizations armed, trained, and funded by the United States and its regional allies, including Saudi Arabia and Qatar, and even Turkey. And despite this fact, should the US be involved in the assassination, it would be difficult to prove. And even if it was proven, it would be difficult to convince the global public that the US would make the jump from very publicly considering benign “cyber attacks” for the past week to assassinating a foreign diplomat.

Beyond simply “sending a message” as US policymakers sought to do – it also undermines alleged progress made between Ankara and Moscow regarding the former’s role in the ongoing proxy war with Syria. The assassination strains any such progress, even threatening to rollback gains painfully made since Turkey’s downing of a Russian warplane over Syria in November of 2015.

While evidence is still forthcoming regarding the assassination, the US – through its own insistence on publicly and repeatedly threatening Moscow with retaliation – has made itself one of the primary suspects behind the brutal killing. Considering the US’ role in creating, arming, funding, and directing terrorists across the region for years – the US is responsible indirectly at the very least.
source: http://journal-neo.org/2016/12/20/russian-ambassador-assassinated-retaliation-but-by-whom/

and CNN (the clinton news network) is the worst offender.
IMO child molesters from BBC are worse:

BTW all US mainstream media are CIA trolls. I see no much diference between CNN or FoxNews for example, and I see no much diference between Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump. Both are US imperialists. Don't you remember how Obama told that he is different from Bush. While in fact Obama not only didn't stop US war against Iraq and Afganistan, but invaded and destroyed Lybia. Bush, Obama, Clinton, Trump and other US 'presidents" are the same. Trump promised to jail Hillary Clinton. Lets wait and see if big mouth Trump will deliver.
 
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I see no much diference between Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump. Both are US imperialists. Don't you remember how Obama told that he is different from Bush. While in fact Obama not only didn't stop US war against Iraq and Afganistan, but invaded and destroyed Lybia. Bush, Obama, Clinton, Trump and other US 'presidents" are the same. Trump promised to jail Hillary Clinton. Lets wait and see if big mouth Trump will deliver.
A lot of people have been saying that but I'll hold judgement till he actually fucks up like the last 2 morons, let's give him a chance, so far I really like what he's been talking about.
 
A lot of people have been saying that but I'll hold judgement till he actually fucks up like the last 2 morons, let's give him a chance, so far I really like what he's been talking about.
Like the last 43 morons. Trump will be 44th US president not third. All US so called "Founding Fathers" were morons, racists and slave owners.
 
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I think that always quoting the "God is great" line from terrorists mouths as front page quotes is just seen as equating terrorism with Islam. The media is actually just trying to be a little more sensitive and less demonizing of Islam.
 
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