comment:
there are some really good points here; and since i'm already accused as being a "Russian operative" or some such nonsense it's useful to look at just how dogmatic our press and actions against the Russian Boogeyman have taken us astray:
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According to this latest lapse into fantasy land, Russia, the Sasquatch beast from the East, deeply feared yet rarely photographed in the wild, has turned its attention to Libya. You know, because Russia doesn't have enough problems already.
According to a combined report from the Guardian and Reuters,
Here we have, once again, lots of very serious assumptions but not a single satellite image, not a single cell-phone picture, not a single verifiable source with a name badge. This sort of reporting may have been acceptable in the early 19th century before the advent of electricity, but certainly not in the high-powered 21st
Egypt, which might know something about what's happening on its territory, also rejected the report.
Now before we blow a gasket, let’s calmly recall exactly how we got to this disastrous point in US-Russia relations.
Reset 'nyet'
Last year, during the most politically divisive US presidential contest in decades, America lost its collective mind as WikiLeaks dumped thousands of explosive emails from the Democratic camp that revealed some less-than-glorious things about the Clinton campaign here and here. Although the emails could easily have been the result of an internal leak, the US media took the conspiracy-theorist highway, accusing Russian hackers of “undermining US democracy,” charges that have less grounding than the swampland Washington was built upon.
An avalanche of other bogus news charges quickly followed in the wake of Trump’s 'unexpected' victory. From attacks on America’s electrical grid, to peddling fake news, to threatening Eastern Europe and the Baltics, the media message was clear: Russia was now America’s arch-nemesis, and woe to those who fail to toe the dangerous narrative.
Perhaps we shouldn’t be surprised that at the same time Washington is forced to admit that Russian intervention in Syria played a significant part in rolling back Islamic State, and that President Bashar Assad’s rule will likely continue as a result, Russia is being accused of attempting to “exert its influence” with the ultimate goal of “undermining US and NATO.”
In other words, the US does not like the idea of Russia interfering any further in their regime change operations.
“The Kremlin's ambitions in the Middle East reach far beyond Syria, according to US officials,” CNN deadpanned, with the rumble of thunder practically audible in the background. “From Afghanistan to Libya, US Pentagon officials are increasingly concerned by mounting Russian military and diplomatic activity they believed is aimed at undermining the US and NATO.”
CNN’s Pentagon correspondent Barbara Starr was then summoned to warn wide-eyed viewers back home that,
This month, US Senator Lindsey Graham, whose political career is heavily indebted to defense sector donations, posed the following yes or no question to US General Thomas Waldhauser during a Senate Armed Service Committee meeting: “Is Russia attempting to do in Libya what they’ve been doing in Syria?”
Waldhauser told Graham exactly what he wanted to hear and, of course, without a shred of documented evidence to seal the deal: “Yes, that’s a good way to characterize it,” he said.
there are some really good points here; and since i'm already accused as being a "Russian operative" or some such nonsense it's useful to look at just how dogmatic our press and actions against the Russian Boogeyman have taken us astray:
++
According to this latest lapse into fantasy land, Russia, the Sasquatch beast from the East, deeply feared yet rarely photographed in the wild, has turned its attention to Libya. You know, because Russia doesn't have enough problems already.
According to a combined report from the Guardian and Reuters,
“US officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said the Washington (sic) had observed what appeared to be Russian special operations forces and drones at Sidi Barrani, about 60 miles (100km) from the Egypt-Libya border.” The report went on to quote yet more publicity-shy officials, this time “Egyptian security sources,” who described a “22-member Russian special forces unit, but declined to discuss its mission.”
Here we have, once again, lots of very serious assumptions but not a single satellite image, not a single cell-phone picture, not a single verifiable source with a name badge. This sort of reporting may have been acceptable in the early 19th century before the advent of electricity, but certainly not in the high-powered 21st
Egypt, which might know something about what's happening on its territory, also rejected the report.
“There is no foreign soldier from any foreign country on Egyptian soil," Egyptian army spokesman Tamer al-Rifai said, as cited by Reuters, no less. "This is a matter of sovereignty.”
Now before we blow a gasket, let’s calmly recall exactly how we got to this disastrous point in US-Russia relations.
Reset 'nyet'
Last year, during the most politically divisive US presidential contest in decades, America lost its collective mind as WikiLeaks dumped thousands of explosive emails from the Democratic camp that revealed some less-than-glorious things about the Clinton campaign here and here. Although the emails could easily have been the result of an internal leak, the US media took the conspiracy-theorist highway, accusing Russian hackers of “undermining US democracy,” charges that have less grounding than the swampland Washington was built upon.
An avalanche of other bogus news charges quickly followed in the wake of Trump’s 'unexpected' victory. From attacks on America’s electrical grid, to peddling fake news, to threatening Eastern Europe and the Baltics, the media message was clear: Russia was now America’s arch-nemesis, and woe to those who fail to toe the dangerous narrative.
Perhaps we shouldn’t be surprised that at the same time Washington is forced to admit that Russian intervention in Syria played a significant part in rolling back Islamic State, and that President Bashar Assad’s rule will likely continue as a result, Russia is being accused of attempting to “exert its influence” with the ultimate goal of “undermining US and NATO.”
In other words, the US does not like the idea of Russia interfering any further in their regime change operations.
“The Kremlin's ambitions in the Middle East reach far beyond Syria, according to US officials,” CNN deadpanned, with the rumble of thunder practically audible in the background. “From Afghanistan to Libya, US Pentagon officials are increasingly concerned by mounting Russian military and diplomatic activity they believed is aimed at undermining the US and NATO.”
CNN’s Pentagon correspondent Barbara Starr was then summoned to warn wide-eyed viewers back home that,
At this point, astute armchair generals should have sat up fast and furious in their LazyBoy recliners, dauntless about spilling beer and corn chips in the process, to challenge the Starr report by asking,“Russia is already moving beyond Syria, launching a new effort in Libya to exert its influence and change the security landscape in a country where there is still no central government five years after Muammar Gaddafi was ousted.”
Judging by the battered “security landscape” in places like Iraq, Libya and Afghanistan, probably not. However, that does not mean Russia has any intention of tackling the job. But just try and convince the hawks in Washington of that.“Would changing the security landscape in Libya really be such a bad thing?”
This month, US Senator Lindsey Graham, whose political career is heavily indebted to defense sector donations, posed the following yes or no question to US General Thomas Waldhauser during a Senate Armed Service Committee meeting: “Is Russia attempting to do in Libya what they’ve been doing in Syria?”
Waldhauser told Graham exactly what he wanted to hear and, of course, without a shred of documented evidence to seal the deal: “Yes, that’s a good way to characterize it,” he said.