The
Guardian used, not so long ago, be a newspaper I could rely on. Now
it is a source of lies about Russia and Ukraine.
So
confident was the Guardian in the lies it published that it even
produced the article in Russian
Read
the original article HERE
We
Stand on Firm Ground
There Goes the Guardian, Lying About Ukraine…Again!
by
ERIC DRAITSER
The
western media is busily trying to prop up their failed narrative of
“Russian aggression” in Ukraine in a desperate attempt to
legitimize their consciously deceitful reporting. To do so, they are
now relying not on experts or western intelligence reports, but a
discredited blogger and his corporate media chums.
20
February, 2015
On
February 17, 2015, The Guardian ran a story with the headline“Russia
shelled Ukrainians from within its own territory, says study.”The
title alone is enough to convince many casual observers that yes, the
mainstream media reporting on the civil war in Ukraine has been
correct all along. You see, it’s all because of Russian aggression,
or so the meme would go. But closer analysis of this story, and the
key players involved, should cause any reasonably intelligent and
logical person to seriously doubt the veracity of nearly every aspect
of the story.
Let’s
begin first with the headline and subhead which, as anyone in media
knows, is often all that will be read by many readers. The headline
leads with a conclusion: Russia shelled Ukraine from within Russian
territory. Simple. Clear. Why bother reading further? Well, in
reality, the article both overtly and tacitly admits that the so
called “study” (more on that later) has not reached that clear
conclusion, not even close. Here are some key phrases sprinkled
throughout the piece that should give pause to any serious-minded
political observer or analyst.
Despite
the declaration in the headline, a close reader encounters phrases
such as “near conclusive proof,” “estimated trajectories,”
“likely firing positions,” and other ambiguous phrases that are
more suggestive than they are declarative. In other words, these are
mere rhetorical flourishes designed to lead casual, uninformed
readers to make conclusions that are simply not backed up by the
evidence.
The
so called study relied heavily on “crater patterns from satellite
photos of three battlefields,” and it is from these crater
patterns, and the equally dubious “tyre tracks” that the authors
of the study drew their conclusions. However, even the independent
military forensics expert contacted by The Guardian “warned that
the accuracy of crater analysis in determining direction of fire on
the basis of satellite photography was scientifically unproven.”
Indeed,
conveniently buried at the end of the long article is the key quote
from Stephen Johnson, a weapons expert at the Cranfield Forensic
Institute, part of the Defence Academy of the United Kingdom who said
quite clearly that crater analysis is “highly experimental and
prone to inaccuracy.” Mr. Johnson added that “This does not mean
there is no value to the method, but that any results must be
considered with caution and require corroboration.”
Wait
a second. I thought that our dear expert authors of the study had
“near conclusive proof” according to the lead paragraphs of the
story. When you actually read what the real expert, as opposed to the
non-experts who conducted the “study,” has to say, it immediately
casts a long shadow of doubt on the entire narrative being propagated
by the article. Is The Guardian here guilty of clear manipulation of
the story for political purposes? It would seem at best
unprofessional and dishonest reporting, at worst it’s outright
lying in the service of the agenda of those at the top of the western
political establishment.
Now
of course we know that The Guardian has repeatedly been taken to task
by highly respected journalists and analysts for its biased and
one-sided reporting of issues ranging from its coverage of Russian
President Putin and Russia’s actions in Crimea,
to its shamefully biased (here,here and here for
three of the many examples) coverage of Israel-Palestine conflict,
and a number of other important issues.
Perhaps
most germane to this discussion is The Guardian’s own reporting
last summer, which it references in this article, of Russian
military vehicles crossing the border into Ukraine –
a significant charge that would be taken seriously if there were one
shred of tangible proof. But alas there isn’t. There is only the
word of The Guardian’s reporter Shaun Walker, who conveniently
could not get a photograph or video of the alleged military vehicles
crossing into Ukraine. One would think with mobile phones all
equipped with cameras and the vast resources of a major western media
outlet, not to mention the seemingly all-encompassing global
surveillance architecture at the disposal of western governments, at
least some credible, verifiable evidence would have emerged. But no,
we just have to take the Guardian’s word for it.
There’s
a lot of that going around when it comes to Ukraine. We just have to
“take their word for it,” as we were supposed to with regard to
the charges of Russian military shooting down MH17, a baseless charge
that has since disappeared from the headlines, with the actual
results of the investigation being buried or suppressed entirely.
Not
only should The Guardian’s reporting be scrutinized, but so too
should their darling “expert” blogger Eliot Higgins, aka Brown
Moses, the author of this inconclusive “conclusive report.”
Fifty
Shades of Brown
Aside
from the deceptive language and misleading statements, there is a
broader issue that must be addressed, namely the reliability of the
source of this so called study. Perhaps first we should dispense with
the use of the term “study” as that would imply experts using
objective facts, data, etc. Rather, what we are dealing with is a
politically motivated report by a source that has already been
discredited numerous times.
The
report comes from an organization called Bellingcat, purportedly an
independent citizen journalism platform that uses social media and
other open source information to draw conclusions about everything
from military hardware movements to the firing of missiles and
artillery. Of course it should immediately raise questions that The
Guardian’s article is co-authored by one Eliot Higgins, a
self-proclaimed “military expert” who founded the “Brown Moses”
blog. Why is this important? Because Bellingcat is a creation of the
same Eliot Higgins. Indeed, Bellingcat’s
Kickstarter page made
no secret of the fact that “Bellingcat is a website founded by
Brown Moses…the pseudonym for Eliot Higgins, a laid-off government
worker turned blogger turned weapons analysis expert and leading
source of information on the conflict in Syria.”
A
close look at some of the blurbs noted on the Kickstarter page
reveals that this “independent blogger” has been touted by The
Guardian, Deutsche Welle, UK’s Channel 4, The Daily Beast, and many
other corporate media outlets. Anyone with an understanding of how
hard it is to actually be an independent analyst
knows that such establishment outlets do not simply promote
independent media that provides thoughtful analysis. Rather, Brown
Moses and Bellingcat have been seized upon as a convenient foil to
true alternative media, spinning the establishment narrative under
the guise of “independent reporting.” However, let us not simply
deride this obvious sham. Let us evaluate Brown Moses’ own record,
which for an “expert” is dismal.
Higgins
aka Brown Moses aka BM claimed to have proven that the chemical
weapons attack on Ghouta, Syria on August 21, 2013 could only have
been carried out by the Syrian military and government. His claims
are based on his own “expert” analysis of missile trajectories
and other “evidence” he claims to have obtained through videos
and other open source information. Of course, in making this claim,
Higgins places himself in direct opposition to former UN weapons
inspector Richard Lloyd and Prof. Theodore Postel of MIT, the authors
of anactual report from
the MIT Science, Technology, and Global Security Working Group
entitled “Possible Implications of Faulty US Technical Intelligence
in the Damascus Nerve Agent Attack of August 21, 2013.” The report,
conducted by real experts, not armchair bloggers, concluded that the
Syrian government could not have carried out the attack, and that
such intelligence was nearly used as justification for yet another
aggressive war.
Also
debunking BM’s spurious charges is the report from
Pulitzer Prize winning investigative journalist Seymour Hersh which
revealed the existence of a classified US Defense Intelligence Agency
briefing which noted unequivocally that the Al Nusra Front had its
own chemical weapons, not to mention deep ties to Saudi and Turkish
intelligence and chemical arms suppliers. Hersh’s reporting finally
firmly established the fact that the rebels were indeed capable of
carrying out the attack on East Ghouta, and that they had help from
Turkey, Saudi Arabia, and possibly other regional actors. And so, not
only did they have the motive (to blame Assad for using chemical
weapons while international investigators were in Syria, thereby
justifying a military intervention and regime change), but also the
means and opportunity. This is an essential point because the
entire ‘case’ against
Assad relied on the fact that only Damascus was technologically and
logistically capable of carrying out such an attack.
But
BM contended that he was right, Hersh, Lloyd, and Postel were wrong,
and that the narrative should reflect that. So, on the one hand we
have a blogger with no formal training in ballistics, physics, or any
relevant scientific or military field, and on the other we have a
Pulitzer Prize winner with decades of experience and high-level
contacts and sources all over the world. We have the word of some guy
in an apartment in the UK, or the scientifically arrived at findings
of a former chemical weapons inspector (read actual expert)
and an internationally respected Professor of Science, Technology,
and National Security Policy at MIT, a world renowned academic and
research institution. And which do you think The Guardian chose to
promote?
But
BM’s noxious odor also pervades the reporting on the downing of MH
17, yet another story that The Guardian utterly distorted, before
mostly dropping it from the headlines when the western narrative was
discredited. In an August 2, 2014 article written
by Higgins entitled “MH17 Missiles Can’t Hide From These Internet
Sleuths,” Higgins claims to have concluded that Russia or the
anti-Kiev rebels must have shot down the plane with a Buk missile
launcher – a weapons system also in the possession of Kiev’s
military. What is his evidence? It’s a series of photographs
published in various media outlets that he cannot corroborate in any
way. Instead, this “sleuth” is making his case based on faith –
faith that the photographs were taken where and when they claim to
have been, and show what they claim to show.
Of
course, it has since been publicly acknowledged on more than one
occasion that photographs purporting to show Russian military
incursions into Ukraine have
been fabricated and/or misrepresentedcausing
tremendous embarrassment for US and European governments that have
repeatedly claimed to have such evidence. But our dear BM is unfazed
by such revelations. Instead, he seems to simply shriek louder.
Rather than leaving analysis of MH 17 to aviation and military
experts, he peddles his “opinion.” Rather than acknowledging the
bias in his own reporting, to say nothing of the limitations of
armchair technical analysis, he continues to grow his image, and with
it, the lies, omissions, and distortions he propagates.
And
so we return to the new “study” by Higgins and his Bellingcat
group of “digital detectives.” They are obviously
front-and-center in the western media because their conclusions are
aligned with the US-NATO political agenda. They are a de facto arm of
the western corporate media and military-industrial complex,
providing the veneer of “independent analysis” in order to
penetrate the blogosphere and social media platforms where the
mainstream narrative is being questioned, scrutinized, and
discredited. Bellingcat and Higgins’ names should be known to
everyone, but not because their analysis is worthwhile. Rather, they
need to become household names so that those who understand how
western propaganda and soft power actually works, will be on the
lookout for more of their disinformation.
Perhaps
The Guardian should also be more careful in how it presents its
information. By promoting Higgins and his discredited outfit, they
are once again promoting disinformation for the purposes of selling
war. The US almost went to war with Syria (which it is doing now
anyway) based on the flawed intelligence and “analysis” of people
like Higgins. Naturally, everyone remembers how The Guardian, like
all of its corporate media brethren, helped to sell the Iraq War
based on complete lies. Have they learned nothing? It would seem so.
But
those interested in peace and truth, we have learned
something about propaganda and lies used to sell war. We who have
called out these lies repeatedly – from Iraq in 2003, to Syria and
Ukraine today – we once again repudiate the false narrative and the
drumbeat for war. We reject the corporate media propagandists and
their “alternative media” appendages. We stand for peace. And
unlike The Guardian and Higgins, we stand on firm ground.
Eric
Draitser is
the founder of StopImperialism.org. He is an independent geopolitical
analyst based in New York City. You can reach him at
ericdraitser@gmail.com.
Report on Shelling Ukraine by Russia Based on Discredited Source - Experts
Several
experts slam The Guardian for using a faulty evidence from a
prejudiced source for accusing Russia of alleged military presence in
Ukraine.
20
February, 2015
WASHINGTON
(Sputnik) — A study reported by The Guardian news site alleging
that artillery attacks on Ukraine military positions originated from
Russia is based on inconclusive evidence from an unreliable and
biased source who is trying to advance a US-NATO political agenda,
experts told Sputnik.
“The
western media is trying to prop up their failed narrative of ‘Russian
aggression' by relying on a discredited blogger and his corporate
media chums.
Their conclusions are front-and-center because they
align with the US-NATO political agenda,” geopolitical analyst and
editor of StopImperialism.com, Eric Draitser, told Sputnik on
Thursday
Draitser
explained that the study is founded upon faulty evidence that relies
heavily on crater pattern analysis from satellite photos, a process
that an independent military forensics expert said was scientifically
unproven.
“The
article also quotes Stephen Johnson, a UK Defense Academy weapons
expert, who conceded that crater analysis was highly experimental and
prone to inaccuracy,” he said.
Draitser
said the source of the study, Bellingcat, which describes itself as
an investigative citizen journalism group, has been widely
discredited and is notorious for propagating disinformation.
On
Thursday, Sputnik learned that Higgins is a research fellow with a
security organization whose board comprises individuals from UK
policing and the British intelligence community.
“One
of the report’s co-authors, Eliot Higgins, has a history of making
false claims, including accusing Russia and anti-Kiev forces of
shooting down MH17 based on photos that were never corroborated,”
Draitser said.
Draitser
also pointed out that Higgins also accused Syrian President Bashar
al-Assad of chemical weapons attacks that were refuted by a
Pulitzer-prize winning journalist along with a highly-respected
former chemical weapons inspector and his colleague from MIT.
The
Guardian itself, Draitser added, has been accused of biased coverage
of Russian actions in Crimea, including claiming that Russian
vehicles crossed into Ukraine without verifiable evidence.
Patrick
Armstrong, a former Canadian official, told Sputnik that crater
analysis, which was developed in WWI, is not valid unless one is able
to study the crater up close.
“You
have to actually be at the crater to take meaningful measurements. In
short, some of the satellite imagery isn't any good,” Armstrong
said.
Investigative
journalist and Editor of Consortium News, Robert Parry, known for his
role in covering the Iran-Contra affair, told Sputnik that Bellingcat
was an unreliable source.
“I
don't consider this Bellingcat group to be serious or credible,"
Parry said.
On
Tuesday, Higgins wrote a joint news article with the Guardian's
Diplomatic Editor, Julian Borger, based on a study by Bellingcat,
that claimed, using satellite imagery and social media, Ukraine
military positions came under fire from across the border in Russia
last summer.
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