False
Narratives, Not ‘Fake News,’ Are the Real Cold-War Problem (Audio
Podcast)
Any
détente initiatives by President-elect Trump must break with
spurious US accounts of the new Cold War.
To hear podcast GO HERE
Nation
Contributing Editor Stephen F. Cohen and John Batchelor continue
their weekly discussions of the new US-Russian Cold War.
Cohen
laments the escalation of neo-McCarthyism as exemplified by a
November 25 Washington Post front-page article alleging
that an array of American Internet sites have been propagating
Russian-inspired “fake news.” The article even implies that these
“peddlers of Russian propaganda” should be prosecuted. (For an
exposé of the Post’s baseless allegations and First Amendment
transgressions, see Ben Norton and Glenn Greenwald at The
Intercept, November 26.) Still worse, these kinds of censorious
assaults on democratic discourse, which became torrential in the
summer of 2016, have been coming from self-professed “liberals,”
including the failed Clinton campaign and other mainstream
publications and outlets aligned with the Democratic Party, such
as The Washington Post, the The New York Times, and MSNBC.
As
dangerous as this neo-McCarthyism is for our civil liberties,
conventional false narratives of the new Cold War are no less
dangerous for US national security and in particular the détente
policies toward Russia that Trump has suggested he might pursue.
Cohen identifies five that directly bear on the necessary rethinking
and revision of US policy, which he and Batchelor then discuss:
1.
That Russian President Vladimir Putin is solely responsible for the
new Cold War and its growing dangers on several fronts, from the
confrontation over Ukraine to Syria. If this is true, there is no
need for Washington to rethink or change any of its policies, but it
is not true.
2.
That President Obama’s declared intention, in 2014, to “isolate
Putin’s Russia” in international affairs has been successful, and
therefore Putin is desperate to be released from the political
wilderness. This too is untrue. Since 2014, Putin has been perhaps
the busiest national leader of any major power on the world stage,
from China and India to the Middle East and even Europe. Arguably,
the world is changing profoundly, and Putin is more attuned to those
changes than is the bipartisan US foreign-policy establishment.
3.
That Washington’s Cold War policies toward Russia have strengthened
the vaunted US-European “transatlantic alliance,” as exemplified
by NATO’s buildup on Russia’s Western borders. In reality, a
growing number of European countries are trending away from
Washington’s hard-line policies toward Moscow, among them France,
Austria, The Netherlands, Italy, Hungary, and others, perhaps even
including Germany. And this does not include Brexit, which removed
hard-line London from European policymaking. Cohen emphasizes that
this does not mean these countries are becoming “pro-Russian” but
instead less anti-Russian for the sake of their own national
interests.
4.
That “Russia’s aggression,” even its “invasion,” is the
primary cause of the Ukrainian crisis, still the political epicenter
of the new Cold War. In reality, the underlying cause is a civil war
that grew out of Ukraine’s diverse history, politics, social
realities, and culture. This means that negotiations, not more war,
are the only solution.
5.
The orthodox US narrative of the Syrian civil war has, on the other
hand, suddenly changed. While Obama was negotiating with Putin for
joint US-Russian military action in Syria, “terrorists” were said
to be entrenched in Aleppo and other anti-Assad strongholds. Since
that diplomacy failed, The New York Times, The Washington
Post, CNN, and other mainstream media have rewritten the narrative to
pit Syrian, Russian, and Iranian forces against benign anti-Assad
“rebels” and “insurgents,” while in Iraq, in Mozul, the
US-led war is being waged against “terrorists” and “jihadists.”
Thus, in Aleppo, Russia is said to be committing “war crimes”
while in Mozul these are called “collateral damages.”
All
of us, Cohen points out, live according to the stories we tell
ourselves. When policymakers act according to false narratives, the
result is grave dangers, as we are now experiencing with the new Cold
War. To escape these dangers, Washington must first get the history
right, particularly its own role in creating them. Whether or not
President Trump and his national security team are ready for this
kind of rethinking is not yet clear.
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