Everything
They’re Telling Us About Syria… Is False?
by Russ Baker
WhoWhatWhy.com
Recently
by Russ Baker: A
Surprise Ending on Watergate’s 40th Anniversary
Friday, we
read in the New
York Times and elsewhere about one of Syrian President
Bashar al-Assad’s most important supporters and allies having defected.
The impression one gets is that Assad’s government is in a state
of collapse and this gives credibility to those pushing for
Assad to turn over power.
But what the
media are not mentioning is that Brigadier General Manaf Tlass did
not defect directly from the Assad inner circle. He had already
fallen into disfavor early in the uprising and lost his command
in May 2011 14 months ago. If you had that additional piece
of information, you would interpret the news reports in a totally
different way.
When a piece
of evidence that contradicts the overall impression is absent from
the reportage, the reportage itself is almost worthless.
As are reports
of horrific events without adequate fact-checking and follow-up.
Remember the Houla massacre? Who carried that out?
Houla
Whoops
The media told
us that more than 100 people, including women and children, were
brutally slaughtered at close range in the village of Houla in late
May. The bloodshed, reported around the world,
was ascribed to a militia, the Shabiha, which is loyal to Assad.
Here’s an
example, from the BBC website:
Survivors
of the massacre in Syria's Houla region have told the BBC of their
shock and fear as regime forces entered their homes and killed their
families….
[snip]
Most
witnesses who spoke to the BBC said they believed that the army
and shabiha militiamen were responsible.
"We
were in the house, they went in, the shabiha and security, they
went in with Kalashnikovs and automatic rifles," said survivor Rasha
Abdul Razaq.
Later, a dribble
of accounts cast doubt on this, since the people killed were, by
and large, themselves supporters of Assad. But few heard about these.
The BBC report did not say who Rasha was, or provide any evidence
that she actually was there, or that if she was, she had any basis
for saying that the killers were identifiable as to their affiliation.
BBC quoted one other source, who did not provide a name. Despite
the thinness of this material, the BBC story was picked up all over
the world, and became perhaps the definitive account.
Hence, you
probably were unaware of an article from the Frankfurter Allgemeine-Zeitung,
a traditional and serious German newspaper for whom I’ve
written in the past. It published a report a month ago from
a correspondent who got eyewitness accounts from people who he says
had visited the Houla area. The correspondent, Rainer Hermann, says
that these eyewitnesses were Assad opponents, yet discovered that
government backers were not responsible for the massacre.
Hermann’s
sources described the events as follows: anti-Assad rebels
attacked army roadblocks just outside Houla, which had been intended
to protect villages, where the majority are members of Assad’s Alawi
sect, from Sunni militias. The soldiers at the roadblocks, overwhelmed,
called for backup, which led to a 90-minute battle, in which both
sides sustained extensive fatalities.
It was in this
time frame that the unidentified militias entered Houla.
As Hermann
wrote
June 7:
“According
to eyewitness accounts…those killed were almost exclusively from
families belonging to Houla’s Alawi and Shia minorities. Over 90%
of Houla’s population are Sunnis. Several dozen members of a family
were slaughtered, which had converted from Sunni to Shia Islam.
Members of the Shomaliya, an Alawi family, were also killed, as
was the family of a Sunni member of the Syrian parliament who is
regarded as a collaborator. Immediately following the massacre,
the perpetrators are supposed to have filmed their victims and then
presented them as Sunni victims in videos posted on the internet.
…“Their
findings contradict allegations of the rebels, who had blamed the
Shabiha militias which are close to the regime.”
Thus, Hermann
seemingly was able to do something that most of the Western reporters
have been unable to do: find opponents of Assad who nevertheless
may be willing to provide accounts that do not serve their own interests.
Of course,
we could do with more information on Hermann’s sources. How do we
know they were really in Houla? How do we know they are really opponents
of Assad, not just pretending to be? Their story of inter-communal
strikes makes more sense than the one that went around the world
and turned so many people who had not been paying attention into
supporters of toppling Assad. But nevertheless, everyone needs to
provide more detail so we can try to ascertain what is true.
Almost all
of the accounts in major news organization stories are characterized
as being from the opposition, almost all portray everything as caused
solely by the regime, and almost all add the disclaimer that the
information “could not be independently verified.”
Talking
Turkey
Though conventional
journalism likes to advertise that it is “objective” and doesn’t
take sides, I don’t recall hearing much from the Syrian regime’s
point of view, beyond general and unconvincing denials following
reports of regime wrongdoing. One almost gets the impression that
the Syrian government does not wish to be heard.
But that turns
out not to be the case.
With Syria’s
neighbor Turkey increasingly the leading edge for NATO on toppling
Assad, it’s interesting that a Turkish newspaper was willing to
hear what the Syrian leader had to say:
In an interview
with the Turkish daily Cumhuriyet, Bashar Assad went after Turkey’s
Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan with an extraordinarily interesting
critique. A version translated into English by the Syrian news agency,
SANA, shows Assad stressing his goodwill toward the Turkish people
in the first
part of the interview, then
raising questions about the motives of the alliance seeking
to overthrow him:
Assad:
…. Today, Erdogan is shedding the tears of hypocrites for the Syrian
people. Why hasn’t he cried for those killed in some Gulf countries,
although they are innocent, peaceful and unarmed? Why isn’t he speaking
about democracy in some Gulf countries?
Journalist:
Which country?
Assad:
Qatar, for instance. Why didn’t he do anything after the Marmara
ship incident except shouting? Why did he challenge Israel, and
then suddenly agreed to deploy the missile shield in Turkey? Did
he deploy it in order to protect Turkey from the attack of a hostile
country? Did America build these bases in order to protect itself
against this region? Which country in the region has the capability
to threaten America? No country.
[snip]
You don’t have
to be a fan of Assad (and who is?) to find it worthwhile to read
his comments. Hearing, almost for the first time, from the other
side in a conflict gives one a rush reminds me of a rule
we were taught in journalism school but which never seemed to come
up again, except in the most superficial ways: To find out what
is really going on, make a real effort to speak to both sides.
All
Hillary, All the Time
While the Western
media simply ignores statements from the Syrian establishment, it
functions as the flip side of the Syrian government press agency,
publishing a relentless stream of declarations from the establishment
trying to bring Assad down. For example, again from The Times,
Hillary Clinton’s well-covered remarks on Tlass:
Later
at a news conference, Mrs. Clinton said that General Tlass’s reported
defection and those of other senior military officials had sent
a powerful message that Mr. Assad’s government was on its way out.
She described General Tlass as “a very close and longtime ally”
of Mr. Assad and his father.
So what you
have is Hillary Clinton being willing to distort the Tlass development,
and the media only too happy to go along.
There’s a growing
body of evidence/ that we Americans are being lied to by our government,
with nary a peep from the people’s representatives in the press.
That’s one development, sadly, that really is not news.
Reprinted
from WhoWhatWhy.com.
July
10, 2012
Russ
Baker is an award-winning investigative reporter. He has written
for The New Yorker, Vanity Fair, The Nation,
The New York Times, The Washington Post, The Village
Voice and Esquire and dozens of other major domestic and
foreign publications. He has also served as a contributing editor
to the Columbia Journalism Review. Baker received a 2005
Deadline Club award for his exclusive reporting on George W. Bush’s
military record. He is the author of Family
of Secrets: The Bush Dynasty, the Powerful Forces That Put It in
the White House, and What Their Influence Means for America
(Bloomsbury Press, 2009); it was released in paperback as Family
of Secrets: The Bush Dynasty, America’s Invisible Government and
the Hidden History of the Last Fifty Years. For more information
on Russ’s work, see his sites, www.familyofsecrets.com
and www.russbaker.com.
Copyright
© 2012 WhoWhatWhy.com
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