Football: New Front for NATO’s Hybrid War on Russia
"The
singling out of Russian football for punitive action also betrays a
biased political and media agenda."
Finnian
Cunningham
15
June, 2016
Originally
appeared atStrategic
Culture Foundation
15
June, 2016
Russia’s
threatened disqualification from
the Euro 16 Football Championship over fan violence fits into a
pattern of systematically demonizing Russia in the Western media on a
host of other issues.
For
the past two years, Russia has been blamed for annexing countries,
invading others and threatening the entire geopolitical architecture
of European security.
Moscow
has been vilified for having a sinister role in the shooting down of
a civilian
airliner over
Ukraine in July 2014, with the loss of 298 lives.
And
according to Western media narrative, Russia is flexing its muscles
in Syria to prop up the "tyrannical regime" of Bashar
al-Assad, and likewise throwing its military weight around to
intimidate former Soviet states in the Baltic region and in Central
Asia. See this report in
CIA-sponsored outlet Radio Free Europe about how Russia is
allegedly slapping Turkmenistan around over gas trade.
Russia’s
international image has also been tarnished in other more insidious
ways. Western claims that its Olympic athletes have been using
performance-boosting drugs, with tacit approval from the authorities,
has added to the image of Russia being a lawless state.
The
banning of Russian tennis star Maria Sharapova over her alleged use
of a banned substance has also played into the same theme of
blackening Russia, even though she plausibly claims an innocent
mistake.
Then
there is a litany of personal attacks on Russian President Vladimir
Putin with high-flown allegations of him sanctioning violence against
political opponents and being involved in financial corruption.
Recall the Panama Papers kerfuffle directed at Putin and how that
quickly died a death from lack of credibility. None of these claims
are ever upheld with evidence. They are nevertheless unceasingly
thrown out with the maxim that if enough mud is slung then some of it
will at least eventually stick.
All
in all, those "damned Russians" are just so nefarious, so
the inculcated narrative, or more bluntly, propaganda brainwashing,
goes. This is hybrid warfare, which paradoxically Washington and its
European NATO allies bombastically accuse Russia of engaging in. The
very transgressions that Russia is accused of are actually far more
applicable to the US and NATO.
The
threat to international security stems from NATO’s dramatic
military buildup in the Baltic, Black Sea and Eastern Europe, where
this week it is holding the biggest-ever military exercises since the
end of the Cold War, with over 31,000 American, British, German and
other troops marching across Poland towards Russia.
As
for "annexation", the Black Sea territory of Crimea voted
in a legally held referendum to join the Russian Federation only
after the NATO powers backed a military coup d’état in Ukraine in
February 2014, installing a fascist regime which then proceeded to
wage a war of aggression on the ethnic Russian people in eastern
Ukraine, killing at least 9,000 people and displacing over a million
others.
Paradoxically,
and laughably, hybrid warfare is the term used by NATO generals,
think tanks and politicians accusing Russian of deploying a myriad of
offensive techniques, including open military power, covert
destabilization, exerting financial or trade leverage, as well as
informational subversion and public perception management.
In
each of these categories of alleged Russian aggression, it is the
NATO powers who can be much more substantially indicted as the
perpetrators. Astoundingly, it is US and NATO troops that are
amassing on Russia’s borders; it is Washington and its European
allies that destabilized Ukraine, Syria, Libya and Georgia, and Iraq
and Afghanistan before them; it is the Western powers who instigated
economic sanctions on Russia. And it is Western countries and their
media who continually churn out pejorative stories of Russian
malfeasance.
The
latest episode is depraved soccer violence by Russian fans at the
Euro 16 Championships being held in France this month. The Russian
Football Union is to be fined €150,000 by the tournament’s
organizing body UEFA. Russia has also been given a suspended
disqualification whereby the national team will be ejected from the
competition if its fans commit further violence.
Reading
some of the British media headlines on
the violence that broke out in the southern French city of Marseille
last weekend one could be forgiven for suspecting that Russian
special forces had been dispatched by the Kremlin to wreak havoc.
Readers were told that Russian hooligans were "well trained in
combat", that they acted with "military organization"
and were "tooled up" with gum shields and "telescopic
truncheons".
This
is the same kind of wild-eyed Western media innuendo that has imputed
Russia with covert destabilization in Ukraine and other Eastern
European countries.
The
singling out of Russian football for punitive action also betrays a
biased political and media agenda.
This
is not to absolve Russian hooligans from violence in France this past
week. Video footage clearly shows Russian fans in the match against
England in Marseille’s Velodrome Stadium making what appears to be
a gratuitous charge on their opponents. The French prosecutor
later estimated that
"150 Russian individuals" were associated with incitement.
That’s out of a total of 12,000 Russian football fans who are
believed to have travelled to France to support their team. Or about
1 per cent of the total. It doesn’t seem fair or logical that a
whole nation is punished for the wanton actions of a tiny few, whose
behavior by the way was vehemently condemned by the Russian
authorities.
Moreover,
there are reliable reports that England and local French soccer
hooligans – known as "ultras" – were also involved in
inciting at least some of the violence in Marseille. But,
illogically, UEFA said it was limiting its assessment to only those
events that occurred inside the stadium. British media reports even
published photographs of England fans being arrested by French
police, yet that didn’t stop these same outlets from continuing to
trumpet their "Russian-thugs" narrative.
In
a separate incident in the other southern French city of Nice,
several Northern Ireland supporters were injured when they were
reportedly attacked on the streets by French ultras.
Following
the violence in Marseille and Nice, arrest figures released by the
French authorities showed that most of those held in custody were
English and French nationals.
There
were also critical comments by fans themselves that the UEFA
organizers did not sufficiently segregate rival fans near the soccer
venues. That was particularly pertinent in the case of England’s
encounter with Russia, even though both countries have a reputation
among police for supporter violence. Furthermore, many fans said that
the French police greatly exacerbated the violence by using
indiscriminate and extremely heavy-handed techniques against crowds
who had nothing to do with initial disturbances.
However,
out of all the melee so far during the Euro 16 tournament it is
Russia that has been singled out for blame and punishment.
But
should we be surprised? This distorted focus on football violence is
exactly in keeping with much else distorted focus regarding Russia in
the Western media as directed by Washington and its allied NATO
governments.
Russia
is blamed for everything: from global insecurity to inciting war,
from shooting down civilian airliners to annexing neighboring
countries.
And
so violence flares up during Euro 16, and right away countries with
notorious fan hooliganism – England and France – immediately turn
to brand Russia as the sole source of mayhem.
This
is just more NATO hybrid warfare, with a populist football pin.
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