By Robert Parry
Source: https://consortiumnews.com/2017/09/26/the-rise-of-the-new-mccarthyism/
Make no mistake about it: the United States has entered an era
of a New McCarthyism that blames nearly every political problem on Russia and
has begun targeting American citizens who don’t go along with this New Cold War
propaganda.
Sen. Joseph McCarthy, R-Wisconsin, who led the “Red Scare”
hearings of the 1950s.
A difference, however, from the McCarthyism of the 1950s is that
this New McCarthyism has enlisted Democrats, liberals and even progressives in
the cause because of their disgust with President Trump; the 1950s version was
driven by Republicans and the Right with much of the Left on the receiving end,
maligned by the likes of Sen. Joe McCarthy as “un-American” and as Communism’s
“fellow travelers.”
The real winners in this New McCarthyism appear to be the
neoconservatives who have leveraged the Democratic/liberal hatred of Trump to
draw much of the Left into the political hysteria that sees the controversy
over alleged Russian political “meddling” as an opportunity to “get Trump.”
Already, the neocons and their allies have exploited the
anti-Russian frenzy to extract tens of millions of dollars more from the
taxpayers for programs to “combat Russian propaganda,” i.e., funding of
non-governmental organizations and “scholars” who target dissident Americans
for challenging the justifications for this New Cold War.
The Washington Post, which for years has served as the flagship
for neocon propaganda, is again charting the new course for America, much as it
did in rallying U.S. public backing for the 2003 invasion of Iraq and in
building sympathy for abortive “regime change” projects aimed at Syria and
Iran. The Post has begun blaming almost every unpleasant development in the
world on Russia! Russia! Russia!
For instance, a Post editorial
on Tuesday shifted the blame for the anemic victory of German Chancellor Angela
Merkel and the surprising strength of the far-right Alternative for Germany
(AfD) from Merkel’s austerity policies, which have caused hardship for much of
the working class, or from her open door for Mideast refugees, which has
destabilized some working-class neighborhoods, to – you guessed it – Russia!
The evidence, as usual, is vague and self-interested, but sure
to be swallowed by many Democrats and liberals, who hate Russia because they
blame it for Trump, and by lots of Republicans and conservatives, who have a
residual hatred for Russia left over from the Old Cold War.
The Post cited the Atlantic Council’s Digital Forensic Research
Lab, which has been pushing much of the hysteria about alleged Russian
activities on the Internet. The Atlantic Council essentially is NATO’s think
tank and is financed
with money from the U.S. government, Gulf oil states, military contractors,
global financial institutions and many other sources which stand to gain
directly or indirectly from the expanding U.S. military budget and NATO
interventions.
Blaming Russia
In this New Cold War, the Russians get blamed for not only
disrupting some neocon “regime change” projects, such as the proxy war in
Syria, but also political developments in the West, such as Donald Trump’s
election and AfD’s rise in Germany.
Russian President Vladimir Putin addresses UN General Assembly
on Sept. 28, 2015. (UN Photo)
The Atlantic Council’s digital lab claimed, according to the
Post editorial, that “In the final hours of the [German] campaign, online
supporters of the AfD began warning their base of possible election fraud, and
the online alarms were ‘driven by anonymous troll accounts and boosted by a
Russian-language bot-net.’”
Of course, the Post evinces no evidence tying any of this to the
Russian government or to President Vladimir Putin. It is the nature of
McCarthyism that actual evidence is not required, just heavy breathing and dark
suspicions. For those of us who operate Web sites, “trolls” – some volunteers
and some professionals – have become a common annoyance and they represent many
political outlooks, not just Russian.
Plus, it is standard procedure these days for campaigns to issue
last-minute alarms to their supporters about possible election fraud to raise
doubts about the results should the outcome be disappointing.
The U.S. government has engaged in precisely this strategy
around the world, having pro-U.S. parties not only complain about election
fraud but to take to the streets in violent protests to impugn the legitimacy
of election outcomes. That U.S. strategy has been applied to places such as
Ukraine (the Orange Revolution in 2004); Iran (the Green Revolution in 2009);
Russia (the Snow Revolution in 2011); and many other locations.
Pre-election alerts also have become a feature in U.S.
elections, even in 2016 when both Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton raised
questions about the legitimacy of the balloting, albeit for different reasons.
Yet, instead of seeing the AfD maneuver as a typical ploy by a
relatively minor party – and the German election outcome as an understandable
reflection of voter discontent and weariness over Merkel’s three terms as
Chancellor – the Atlantic Council and the Post see Russians under every bed and
particularly Putin.
Loving to Hate Putin
In the world of neocon propaganda, Putin has become the great
bête noire, since he has frustrated a variety of neocon schemes. He helped head
off a major U.S. military strike against Syria in 2013; he aided President
Obama in achieving the Iran nuclear agreement in 2014-15; Putin opposed and –
to a degree – frustrated the neocon-supported coup in Ukraine in 2014; and he
ultimately supplied the air power that defeated neocon-backed “rebel” forces in
Syria in 2015-17.
President Barack Obama meets with President Vladimir Putin of
Russia on the sidelines of the G20 Summit at Regnum Carya Resort in Antalya,
Turkey, Sunday, Nov. 15, 2015. National Security Advisor Susan E. Rice listens
at left. (Official White House Photo by Pete Souza)
So, the Post and the neocons want Putin gone – and they have
used gauzy allegations about “Russian meddling” in the U.S. and other elections
as the new propaganda theme to justify destabilizing Russia with economic
sanctions and, if possible, engineering another “regime change” project in
Moscow.
None of this is even secret. Carl Gershman, the neocon president
of the U.S.-government-funded National Endowment for Democracy, publicly proclaimed the
goal of ousting Putin in an op-ed in The Washington Post, writing:
“The United States has the power to contain and defeat this danger. The issue
is whether we can summon the will to do so.”
But the way neocon propaganda works is that the U.S. and its
allies are always the victims of some nefarious enemy who must be thwarted to
protect all that is good in the world. In other words, even as NED and other
U.S.-funded operations take aim at Putin and Russia, Russia and Putin must be
transformed into the aggressors.
“Mr. Putin would like nothing better than to generate doubts,
fog, cracks and uncertainty around the German pillar of Europe,” the Post
editorial said. “He relishes infiltrating chaos and mischief into open
societies. In this case, supporting the far-right AfD is extraordinarily
cynical, given how many millions of Russians died to defeat the fascists seven
decades ago.”
Not to belabor the point but there is no credible evidence that
Putin did any of this. There is a claim by the virulently anti-Russian Atlantic
Council that some “anonymous troll accounts” promoted some AfD complaint about
possible voter fraud and that it was picked up by “a Russian-language bot-net.”
Even if that is true – and the Atlantic Council is far from an objective source
– where is the link to Putin?
Not everything that happens in Russia, a nation of 144 million people,
is ordered by Putin. But the Post would have you believe that it is. It is the
centerpiece of this neocon conspiracy theory.
Silencing Dissent
Similarly, any American who questions this propaganda
immediately is dismissed as a “Kremlin stooge” or a “Russian propagandist,” another ugly
campaign spearheaded by the Post and the neocons. Again, no evidence
is required, just some analysis that what you’re saying somehow parallels
something Putin has said.
The Washington Post building in downtown Washington, D.C. (Photo
credit: Washington Post)
On Tuesday, in what amounted to a companion piece for the
editorial, a Post article
again pushed the unproven
suspicions about “Russian operatives” buying $100,000 in Facebook
ads from 2015 into 2017 to supposedly influence U.S. politics. Once again, no
evidence required.
In the article, the Post also reminds its readers that Moscow
has a history of focusing on social inequities in the U.S., which gets us back
to the comparisons between the Old McCarthyism and the new.
Yes, it’s true that the Soviet Union denounced America’s racial
segregation and cited that ugly feature of U.S. society in expressing
solidarity with the American civil rights movement and national liberation
struggles in Africa. It’s also true that American Communists collaborated with
the domestic civil rights movement to promote racial integration.
That was a key reason why J. Edgar Hoover’s FBI targeted Martin
Luther King Jr. and other African-American leaders – because of their
association with known or suspected Communists. (Similarly, the Reagan
administration resisted support for Nelson Mandela because his African National
Congress accepted Communist support in its battle against South Africa’s
Apartheid white-supremacist regime.)
Interestingly, one of the arguments from liberal national
Democrats in opposing segregation in the 1960s was that the repression of
American blacks undercut U.S. diplomatic efforts to develop allies in Africa.
In other words, Soviet and Communist criticism of America’s segregation
actually helped bring about the demise of that offensive system.
Yet, King’s association with alleged Communists remained a
talking point of die-hard segregationists even after his assassination when
they opposed creating a national holiday in his honor in the 1980s.
These parallels between the Old McCarthyism and the New
McCarthyism are implicitly acknowledged in the Post’s news article on Tuesday,
which cites Putin’s criticism of police killings of unarmed American blacks as
evidence that he is meddling in U.S. politics.
“Since taking office, Putin has on occasion sought to spotlight
racial tensions in the United States as a means of shaping perceptions of
American society,” the article states. “Putin injected himself in 2014 into the
race debate after protests broke out in Ferguson, Mo., over the fatal shooting
of Michael Brown, an African American, by a white police officer.
“‘Do you believe that everything is perfect now from the point
of view of democracy in the United States?’ Putin told CBS’s ’60 Minutes’
program. ‘If everything was perfect, there wouldn’t be the problem of Ferguson.
There would be no abuse by the police. But our task is to see all these
problems and respond properly.’”
The Post’s speculative point seems to be that Putin’s response
included having “Russian operatives” buy some ads on Facebook to exploit these
racial tensions, but there is no evidence to support that conspiracy theory.
However, as this anti-Russia hysteria spreads, we may soon see
Americans who also protest the police killing of unarmed black men denounced as
“Putin’s fellow-travelers,” much as King and other civil rights leaders were
smeared as “Communist dupes.”
Ignoring Reality
So, instead of Democrats and Chancellor Merkel looking in the
mirror and seeing the real reasons why many white working-class voters are
turning toward “populist” and “extremist” alternatives, they can simply blame
Putin and continue a crackdown on Internet-based dissent as the work of
“Russian operatives.”
German Chancellor Angela Merkel with her hands in the
characteristic Merkel-Raute position. (Photo from Wikipedia)
Already, under the guise of combating “Russian propaganda” and
“fake news,” Google, Facebook and other tech giants have begun introducing algorithms to
hunt down and marginalize news that challenges official U.S.
government narratives on hot-button issues such as Ukraine and Syria. Again, no
evidence is required, just the fact that Putin may have said something similar.
As Democrats, liberals and even some progressives join in this
Russia-gate hysteria – driven by their hatred of Donald Trump and his
supposedly “fascistic” tendencies – they might want to consider whom they’ve
climbed into bed with and what these neocons have in mind for the future.
Arguably, if fascism or totalitarianism comes to the United
States, it is more likely to arrive in the guise of “protecting democracy” from
Russia or another foreign adversary than from a reality-TV clown like Donald
Trump.
The New McCarthyism with its Orwellian-style algorithms might
seem like a clever way to neutralize (or maybe even help oust) Trump but – long
after Trump is gone – a structure for letting the neocons and the mainstream
media monopolize American political debate might be a far greater threat to
both democracy and peace.
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