In
this short clip from Crosstalk the imitable Pepe Escobar ecapsulates
the way western media has been behaving since Russia’s successes
against the Islamic State
“Ten
ways of not being seen” - the Pythonesque behaviour of western
media
Here is the sketch Pepe refers to -
Quite apart from the Russians are "bombing the moderate rebels to bolster an evil dictator" line this is the latest being ignored by the western media.
Report: Iraq Authorizes Russia to Strike ISIS Convoys
Aims to Weaken ISIS Supply Lines
According
to a statement from Iraq’s Defense Committee leader Hakim al-Zamli,
the government has formally authorized Russia to carry
out airstrikes against ISIS convoys that have crossed into
Iraqi territory from Syria, a move he says is key to weakening supply
lines.
The
move comes amid a solid week of US officials warning Russia away from
any involvement in Iraq, and threats to punish Iraq if they dared to
accept any help from Russia, insisting
Iraq had to choose between
the two potential partners in the war.
It’s
unclear, however, if this authorization is a direct violation of US
demands, since it appears to be limited just to operations in the
immediate area around the border. Given how much of ISIS territory in
Iraq is along the Syria border, however, it may be a subtle
distinction.
It
may be sufficient, however, to avoid any public US retaliation, as it
is clear the Obama Administration never seriously intended to end the
war just because they weren’t getting their way, and can likely
spin this as a concession from Iraq
We are being told by the Pentagon to expect more raids by US troops while all the while the US continues to have "no boots on the ground"
Even the media is confused.
Sometimes it is difficult to keep up the officicial line and there is an occasional slip of the tongue
A wonderful example of citizen journalism. The Guardian is caught out by its own readers.
The newspaper's response? Close down comments.
Guardian
Spikes Own Readers’ Drone Exclusive
by
David Parker
24
October, 2015
The drone supposedly
shot down in Turkey on Friday, October 16, is Ukrainian, Guardian
online commenters revealed exclusively last Monday, outsmarting the
world’s press and “military sources” who the paper reported
had “said it is likely that it belonged to the Russian military”.
And
the paper’s response? Discussion was closed within minutes of the
posting of a translation showing that the plane was developed at
Ukraine’s Zhytomyr Military Institute and produced in large numbers
in the Dnipropetrovsk area for missions against pro-Russian forces to
the east.
Friday’s
downed craft had immediately been suspected of being the latest in a
series of Russian violations of Turkey’s airspace alleged by the
government in Ankara, which has opposed Russia’s intervention in
Syria’s civil war on the side of president Bashar al-Assad.
Anti-Russia
commenters on the Guardian website seized upon the report as evidence
of Russian mischief, with one going so far as to suggest that the
unarmed 5ft plane should trigger collective NATO military action
against Russia in support of Turkey’s right-wing government, an
alliance member accused of allowing arms to reach jihadist fighters
in Syria.
But
photographic evidence shows that the wreckage in Turkey is identical
to an aircraft shown on 19 August 2014 on the website of Ukraine’s
Zhitomyr Journal website. The
accompanying article reported
that Ukraine expected to produce 30-40 such drones every month.
How
Friday’s wrecked vehicle made it from Ukraine to Turkey remains a
mystery. But it follows the release of a recording in which current
Turkish prime minister Ahmet Davutoglu and security chiefs discussed
creating grounds for cross-border operations.
In the
tape, released in March 2014,
intelligence chief Hakan Fidan is heard to propose, “I send four
men to the other side. I get them to fire eight missiles into
empty and.”
The
tape’s authenticity appeared to be confirmed by then premier (and
now Turkish president) Tayyip Erdogan who shortly afterward declared
of opponents, “They even leaked a national security meeting… Who
are you serving by doing audio surveillance of such an important
meeting?”
But
the quest by the Guardian’s readers to identify the mystery
aircraft unearthed indications of a potentially still more sinister
use by Ukraine in its 2014 conflict with pro-Russian separatists. The
drone was the very same model alleged by Ukraine’s own security
agency to have carried possible chemical agents.
The
aircraft reported by Turkey last Friday is identical to one
supposedly brought down by Ukrainian air defences on 28 May 2014
during armed clashes with separatists in Donetsk and Lugansk
districts, and claimed by the Security Service of Ukraine to be
carrying an “unknown chemical substance”.
It
is unclear whether Ukraine’s security service knew at the time of
its announcement that the downed craft came from its own side. At the
very least its allegation of the possible presence of chemical
materials seems a spectacular own goal.
The
same might be said of the Guardian, which was handed an international
scoop by its own online readers but chose instead to prevent further
revelations and to persist with its own disproved story of an alleged
Russian airspace violation
I will finish with the other great piece that has great relevance - "don't mention the war!"
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