When the west was destroying Mosul and Raqqa it was war and dead
civilians were just unavoidable casualties...the world said nothing! Not
a word! Not even a UN meeting. Now....It’s Assad is bad. Russia is bad.
Let’s have a UN meeting to sanction Assad some more. Hypocrite that’s
what the west has become...
‘Truth is the 1st casualty of war’: Syria’s East Ghouta battleground distorted by MSM propaganda
RT : 23 Feb, 2018
The information battle on the E. Ghouta front is turning into Aleppo
2.0, with Western media, often relying on dubious sources, describing –
in unison – the Syrian regime atrocities while nearly glorifying
terrorists’ resistance.
Over the last few days, mainstream media have simultaneously turned
their attention to the ongoing anti-terrorist operation in Eastern
Ghouta, a militant-controlled suburb of Damascus, which is seeing a new
wave of clashes between Syrian government forces and Islamist factions.
While
the army aims to clear the area of such terrorist units as Jaysh
al-Islam, Jabhat Fatah al-Sham (formerly known as al-Nusra Front), Ahrar
al-Sham and Failaq al-Rahman, Western media, often relying on
militant-embedded sources, continue to paint an ominous picture, in
which the government troops are deliberately slaughtering civilians.
“Right
now we see very concerted Western media attempt to paint the Syrian
government as the bad guy, the evil, and giving breathing space for the
terrorists who are having the last bastion,” Kaveh Afrasiabi, a former adviser to Iran’s nuclear negotiation team, explained to RT. “The Syrian government has the legitimate security concerns because of the daily shelling of its capital city by the rebels.”
A naive viewer might imagine that Assad was just bombing civilians
for the hell of it because the jihadi fighters are totally absent from
the picture. And the pictures are literally provided by the jihadists
themselves,” Peter Ford, former UK ambassador to Syria and Bahrain,
told RT, referring to the controversial White Helmets, who have long
been hailed by the mainstream western media as heroes. However, the
UK-backed NGO has been plagued by allegations of having close ties with
terrorist groups.
Before the Syrian government forces intensified operations against
jihadist factions in the area, Russia had been trying to broker a deal
with armed groups to stop using civilians as human shields and surrender
their weapons. Moscow has also been working relentlessly to allow
humanitarian aid in. On Thursday, however, Russia had to reject a
Western-backed UN resolution for a 30-day ceasefire in Syria as “utopian,” with Russia’s envoy Vassily Nebenzia pointing out that the “propaganda-driven” approach to the coverage of the conflict was only encouraging militants to continue their armed provocations.
“As the saying goes, truth is the first casualty of war,” Afrasiabi laments. The New York Times on Tuesday, for instance, published
a piece based on the information provided by the Syrian Observatory for
Human Rights (SOHR), a one-man Britain-based war-monitoring group. The
piece paints the Assad regime as pure evil, whose only intention is to
butcher civilians. The British Guardian newspaper, meanwhile, went as
far as to compare the civilian suffering in Eastern Ghouta to Bosnia’s Srebrenica.
Russia
has also been repeatedly attacked for the failure of its de-escalation
zone initiative and its support of Damascus. Together with Iran and
Turkey, Russia is tasked with enforcing the ceasefire in Eastern Ghouta,
one of the de-escalation zones established as a result of the Astana
talks in May 2017. Despite the ongoing armed provocations, the Russian
Center for Reconciliation in Syria enabled the militants to leave the
area, but the proposal was rejected.
What is also being downplayed
is the Syrian and Russian resolve to end the Ghouta crisis, similar to
the one during the Battle of Aleppo, where special corridors were
organized to evacuate civilians out of the city, before extending the
offer to terrorists for a mass exodus. NYT and the Guardian are not the
only western media sources to have shown bias in reporting the events in
Eastern Ghouta. A number of experts have pointed out that the Western
media coverage of the current events follows a pattern developed in
covering the operation to liberate Aleppo, which ended in July 2016.
“We have seen this kind of atrocity level pulled over and over again a few months ago, with Aleppo for example,” Jim Jatras, political analyst, and media and government affairs specialist, told RT. “Every
time the Al Qaeda linked groups are on the ropes and the Syrian army is
on the verge of liberating territory, then we hear all these horror
stories, some of which may have a basis in truth, some not, about how
civilians are suffering but nothing on who the terrorists are who are
controlling these areas and oppressing the people who live there.”
The Aleppo campaign, initially backed by Russian airstrikes, received
mostly one-sided, negative coverage in the Western media, with
reporters and politicians accusing Moscow of “war crimes” and causing a “humanitarian disaster,”
despite the fact that Moscow and Damascus maintained a 'no-fly zone'
over the city. The liberation of the city was presented as its “fall” and “destruction,”
as media outlets chose footage of shelled-out buildings rather than
scenes of Aleppo civilians celebrating in the streets. Eventually, that
narrative fell apart as tens of thousands of refugees started returning
to the city and rebuilding of ruined areas began.
Now the same tactic is being used by the Western media today.This week, CNN used
a 15-year-old, Muhammad Najem, and selfie videos he posted on social
media, to base their report on the bloody atrocities allegedly committed
by the government forces in Damascus suburbs. “The children of Ghouta die every day by the bombing of the Assad regime and Russia,” Najem says, in a segment featured on CNN.
The Syrian boy with flawless English serves as a stark reminder of a seven-year-old Bana al-Abed, who became the “voice”
of many civilians trapped under the government siege in Aleppo. While
many had only fondness and concern for the Aleppo girl, to others her
accounts raised doubt and were seen as a directed propaganda effort.
“We
saw this very much with Aleppo. We saw the same kind of coverage from
the Western media. Atrocities were being predicted and reported and it
turned out that most of those, if not all of them, were actually false
propaganda claims. And we are seeing the repeat of this situation
again,” Charles Shoebridge, a security analyst and former UK army officer, pointed out.
In
a stark contrast, any concern over civilians’ fate miraculously
disappeared from Western media coverage during the US-led coalition’s
‘liberation’ of Raqqa and Mosul.
“There was actually no coverage of the situation of Raqqa and Mosul. There were occasional articles,” Shoebridge told RT. “The
reason why these things are not being covered is because it is not
conducive to supporting UK and US foreign policy which is, of course,
still, even now, to destabilize and undermine the Assad government.”
“The Western media are so closely linked to information or
misinformation coming out of their governments that it is really
misleading the public in the Western countries,” Jim Jatras added.
Real
images of destruction from Raqqa and Mosul were there for British and
American media outlets to beat the drums of a humanitarian catastrophe.
Yet most outlets stayed silent to the indiscriminate bombing of
civilians in Syrian and Iraqi cities by the US-led Inherent Resolve
coalition. No objection was voiced to the lack of civilian evacuation or
the refusal to negotiate a ceasefire with the hardcore Islamists
holding civilians as human shields.
“There were no calls ... for a ceasefire to take place” during the British and the American led bombardment of Mosul and of Raqqa, Shoebridge noted. “The US bombardment and sieges of these areas were causing immense suffering and loss of life among civilian populations.” Yet any remote calls to have a ceasefire so that civilians could leave the besieged cities were met with the response “no, this would help terrorists who are occupying that area,” Shoebridge added.
The
same selective anti-Assad coverage is continuing in East Ghouta, where
the Western media continues to neglect the atrocities committed by the
jihadists in the region.
“What the media failed to point out
also is that the Islamic State is one of the groups which hold Yarmuk
camp, which is one corner of Ghouta, and then you have an affiliate of
Al Qaeda which is holding another corner,” former ambassador Ford points out. “So
these are really bad guys. Exactly the guys that were wrinkled out of
Mosul and Raqqa, with many civilian casualties in the process.”
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