By Adam Johnson
http://fair.org/home/election-meddling-bad-if-done-to-usa-bad-to-complain-about-if-done-by-usa/
The Washington Post (8/10/16)
published what has to be one of the most naked examples of projection ever
displayed by a major American paper. The Post’s editorial board, in another
effort
to bash
Russia,
lumped its President Vladimir Putin and Turkey’s increasingly autocratic ruler
President Recep Tayyip Erdogan into a generic “strongman” category, and warned
of their paranoia:
The piece began by mocking
foreign leaders who blame outside influences (the United States, for example)
for interfering in their domestic affairs:
One of the enduring rules of
autocracy is that a strongman must not admit something is amiss inside the
kingdom. Instead, troubles come from enemies outside. This is often used to
distract people from genuine woes at home, and while hardly new, it has been
embraced with fresh enthusiasm by the latest generation of political strongmen.
It betrays a paranoia and insecurity among those who boast of power and
control.
The glaring irony of this
criticism is that the Washington Post has been spent the past several weeks
blaming Russia for interfering in the US elections:
Trump Proves He’s a Putin
Lapdog (7/21/16)
Russia May or May Not Want
President Trump, but Putin Has Made His Feelings About Clinton Very Clear (7/25/16)
Putin’s Suspected Meddling in
a US Election Would Be a Disturbing First (7/25/16)
The Complete Guide to Vladimir
Putin, Donald Trump’s Favorite Autocrat (7/25/16)
Democrats Have Found a Brand
New Running Mate for Donald Trump: Vladimir Putin (7/27/16)
Republicans Have a Problem: Trump-Putin
(7/27/16)
Here’s What We Know About
Donald Trump and His Ties to Russia (7/29/16)
In Endorsing Clinton, Ex-CIA
Chief Says Putin Made Trump His ‘Unwitting Agent’ (8/5/16)
Will Trump’s BFF Putin Stage
Another Attack? (8/11/16)
Alleged Russian Involvement in
DNC Hack Gives US a Taste of Kremlin Meddling (8/13/16)
When US media—to say nothing
of the
leading contender to be the next president of the US—allege that foreign
elements are steering our politics, that’s rational, serious discourse. When
others do it, it’s laughable, unhinged blabbering.
In its August 10 editorial,
the Post scoffs at the idea that then–Secretary of State Hillary Clinton was
involved in anti-Putin protests in 2011 and 2012:
Mr. Putin still holds to the
fallacy that Hillary Clinton, while secretary of State, sparked
the mass street protests against him in 2011 and 2012, conveniently
overlooking the fraudulent attempt to steal that election by his party.
While there’s no evidence
Secretary Clinton “sparked” the 2011 protests, the US certainly influenced
them. It’s not
a secret the US State Department, USAID and other US-linked organizations
supported many dissident groups; it’s openly discussed on the website of the
State Department–funded National Endowment for Democracy. (Here’s an archived
page describing more than 50 groups the NED boasted of supporting in 2011.)
The US government and allied
NGOs routinely meddle in the affairs of other countries; that’s the entire
purpose of their “pro-democracy” efforts. That’s what “soft power” means. As Reuters
(12/13/11)
reported at the time:
The amount of money USAID
allocated to programs in Russia was nearly $55 million, according to a document
on the organization’s website, including around $3 million allocated to
“political competition and consensus-building.”
If the Washington Post had to
argue that US meddling was the good kind of meddling, because it’s a necessary
balance to Putin’s autocratic rule, this nuance would get in the way of the Post’s
simplistic “paranoid strongman vs. good, clean US democracy” dichotomy, so the
reader is left with the ahistoric and childish impression that the US doesn’t
interfere in the domestic affairs of other countries.
In fact, the US has a long
history of intervening in the affairs of countries around the world—not just
Russia. In the interest of brevity, let’s skip over the long decades of gunboat
diplomacy and Cold
War interventionism, and focus instead on Clinton’s four-year tenure at the
State Department, during which time the US:
During this time, USAID (which
operates under the guidance of the State Department) was also involved in two
elaborate plots to undermine the Cuban government, one involving the secret
creation of a fake Twitter-like social media platform, and the other the infiltration
of Cuba’s hip hop scene—both for the purposes of “stirring unrest” on the
socialist island.
The US government doesn’t
occasionally meddle in the domestic affairs of other countries or try to
overthrow their governments—it does so as a matter of course. It’s in its DNA,
its animating ethos.
To omit the endless string of
examples of US interfering in other countries in an editorial about fears of US
interfering in other countries is at best negligent and at worst deliberately
obtuse. It’s hard to describe foreign leaders as being paranoid about US
meddling and coups if you acknowledge that the US has been involved in meddling
and coups for more than a century.
Adam Johnson is a contributing
analyst for FAIR.org. Follow him on Twitter at @AdamJohnsonNYC.
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