BBC spin on 'NATO vs Russia'

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Richard Moore

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Aug 19, 2008, 8:43:07 PM8/19/08
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Friends,

It is educational to observe the subtleties of spin, the ways lies can at the same time be nearly true. And it's informative to notice which parts of the story get distorted, and which come through more or less straight.  This reveals concerns and intentions on the part of the spinners – the mouthpieces of the New World Order. In the current onslaught of propaganda re/Russia we find many examples. Here are a few from this article from BBC (below):

Russia has dismissed a warning by Nato that normal relations are impossible while its troops remain inside Georgia.

This seems like a statement of fact, but the result is to imply that Russia is to blame for the denormalization of its relationship with NATO. In fact, NATO in partnership with the Pentagon, has made normal relations increasingly impossible by its aggressive actions, such as their sponsorship of the South Ossetia Massacre, the placement of first-strike weapons systems in Poland and the Czech Republic, and a general campaign to surround Russia with bases and hostile neighbors. The myth is being created that Russia is the cause of the new Cold War to come, a Cold War that the US & NATO have been fashioning for many years. 


The conflict broke out on 7 August when Georgia launched an assault to wrest back control of the Moscow-backed breakaway region of South Ossetia, triggering a counter-offensive by Russian troops who advanced beyond South Ossetia into Georgia's heartland.

Well no this isn't true, though it's almost true. Yes, control would eventually have been 'wrested back' following the attack, if Russia had not intervened, but if the goal had been to wrest back control, the approach would have been take over the key infrastructures, not bomb them to bits. A truer version of the above statement would be, "The conflict broke out on 7 August when Georgia massacred some 2,000 unarmed civilians, many of them Russian citizens, seeking to force Russia to respond".

Sergei Lavrov accused Nato of being "unobjective and biased". "It appears to me that Nato is trying to portray the aggressor as the victim, to whitewash a criminal regime and to save a failing regime," he said.

Here BBC includes a Russian view, giving the impression of 'showing both sides'. But we see only conclusions, no mention of supporting evidence he might have in mind. Given the distorted evidence presented in the overall article, the Russian statements don't make a lot of sense. Hence part of the spin is to build a myth that the Russians are unreasonable and needn't be listened to.

In some sense, the Georgian Episode has the earmarks of becoming like a new 9/11 – a day that everything changed. This time the new enemy is Russia, rather than Muslims, and again the whole thing is a pack of lies – the self-appointed policemen are themselves the perpetrators. Only religious belief in the veracity of mainstream sources, on the part of masses, can enable these kinds of scams to succeed. 

With 9/11, we lost civil liberties and we got two shooting wars, still on the go. With Operation Georgia, we get a new Cold War and perhaps a new Iron Curtain, once again Western initiatives being blamed on the victim. By insisting that Russia must fully restore the pre-Massacre status quo, Washington is making a demand that it knows full well Russia will not comply with. By convincing NATO to go along with this demand, the US is creating an atmosphere of mistrust and mutual hostility. 

With the US putting missiles in Poland, Russia has no choice but to take countermeasures, including the re-targeting of its own missiles to take out the Polish-based missiles, which are part of a comprehensive first-strike system aimed at Russia.  That response by Russia will be played up as "Russia responding disproportionally again", and anti-Russian sentiment will be further reinforced in the media-consuming masses, and in Eastern Europe. 

rkm
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http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/7571104.stm
[maps & video in original]


Russia hits back at Nato warning

Russia has dismissed a warning by Nato that normal relations are impossible while its troops remain inside Georgia.

Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov accused Nato of bias and of trying to save the "criminal regime" in Tbilisi.

He insisted Moscow was not occupying Georgia and had no plans to annex the separatist region of South Ossetia.

Earlier, Nato demanded that Russia pull out its troops from Georgia as agreed in an EU-brokered ceasefire plan signed by both parties at the weekend.

Russian President Dmitri Medvedev told his French counterpart Nicolas Sarkozy in a phone call that the pull-out would be complete by 21-22 August, with the exception of some 500 troops, who will be installed in peacekeeping posts on either side of South Ossetia's border.

France later tabled a US-backed draft resolution at the UN Security Council, demanding full compliance with the ceasefire and calling on Moscow to withdraw its forces to the positions held before the conflict.

Russia's UN ambassador, Vitaly Churkin, rejected the text. He objected to language on Georgia's territorial integrity, saying South Ossetia and Abkhazia did not want to be part of Georgia.

Some Russian troops have been seen leaving Gori, the largest Georgian town close to the South Ossetia border.

But BBC correspondents on the ground say there are still Russian artillery positions in place. In addition, there are Russian checkpoints close to the Georgian capital, Tbilisi.

The conflict broke out on 7 August when Georgia launched an assault to wrest back control of the Moscow-backed breakaway region of South Ossetia, triggering a counter-offensive by Russian troops who advanced beyond South Ossetia into Georgia's heartland.

Both sides have accused the other of violating the peace plan, and correspondents say there has so far been little sign of any large-scale withdrawal.

Following crisis talks in Brussels, Nato's 26 foreign ministers said in a joint statement that they could not have normal relations with Russia as long as Moscow had troops in Georgia.

PEACE PLAN

No more use of force
Stop all military actions for good
Free access to humanitarian aid
Georgian troops return to their places of permanent deployment
Russian troops to return to pre-conflict positions
International talks about security in South Ossetia and Abkhazia

"The Alliance is considering seriously the implications of Russia's actions for the Nato-Russia relationship," the statement said, read out by Nato Secretary General Jaap de Hoop Scheffer.

"We have determined that we cannot continue with business as usual."

Mr de Hoop Scheffer added that he could not see how the Nato-Russia Council - set up in 2002 as a framework for dialogue - could convene at this time.

But he said lines of communication would not be abandoned.

He also said that the member states had agreed to set up a Nato-Georgia commission to strengthen ties with Tbilisi, but stopped short of giving a timetable for Georgia's accession to Nato.

In a televised address, Russia's foreign minister underlined Moscow's view that Russian troops only entered South Ossetia after Georgia tried to reintegrate the breakaway region by force.

Sergei Lavrov accused Nato of being "unobjective and biased".

"It appears to me that Nato is trying to portray the aggressor as the victim, to whitewash a criminal regime and to save a failing regime," he said.

Earlier, the Russian military warned that the withdrawal would be slow until the weekend at least, and that troops would remain in an undefined buffer zone around South Ossetia.

It said such a move was permitted under the ceasefire deal which allowed Russia to take additional security measures until international peacekeepers were deployed.

But Georgia accused Moscow of going much further, saying Russian troops have seized control of a key commercial port in Poti in an attempt to cripple the Georgian economy.

In an apparent goodwill gesture Russia exchanged 15 Georgian prisoners for five of its own troops at a Russian checkpoint in Igoeti, about 30km (18 miles) from Georgia's capital.

Georgian officials told the BBC's Helen Fawkes, who was at the scene, that two of the Russian prisoners were airmen who had been shot down by Georgian forces about two weeks ago.

Meanwhile, the Organisation for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE) said Russia and Georgia had agreed to allow 20 extra military observers to be deployed in and around South Ossetia.

In total, the OSCE said it would send up to 100 additional monitors to join the handful it already has in Georgia.

The OSCE has had a presence in South Ossetia since the end of a civil war there in the early 1990s, which resulted in de facto independence for the region.

It also supports a UN-led peace process in Georgia's other separatist region of Abkhazia.

















Story from BBC NEWS:

Published: 2008/08/19 23:02:35 GMT

© BBC MMVIII


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