“Progressive” Mainstream Media Supports the Destabilization and Balkanization of Syria
Global Research, July 24, 2013
Url of this article:
http://www.globalresearch.ca/progressive-mainstream-media-supports-the-destabilization-and-balkanization-of-syria/5343789
http://www.globalresearch.ca/progressive-mainstream-media-supports-the-destabilization-and-balkanization-of-syria/5343789
Since
the onset of the Syrian crisis, Martin Chulov of the Guardian has
continuously been one of the most prominent “journalists” whose
coverage, to put kindly, has been skewed beyond any recognition of
objective journalism. His narratives have systematically relied on
sectarian overtones and cherry picked “activist” quotes from such
bastions of objectivity as the UK-based Syrian Observatory for Human
Rights. Chulov has gone to great to lengths to portray the conflict in
simplistic and sectarian terms: “Assad the Alawite, versus the Sunni
majority.”
The large part of Syrian society
that ardently support their president has gone largely unmentioned in
his coverage. The larger still part of Syrian society that simply want
the war to end, and the militants to leave their towns and villages so
they can attempt to rebuild their lives have been callously brushed
aside by war-profiteers such as Chulov; who willingly ignore the much
larger sections of Syrian society that don’t abide his bias narrative.
Chulov perniciously attempts to lead the reader to believe the whole
Syrian public is fighting against a regime and its security
infrastructure. The simple fact that the majority of men fighting the
Salafi/Jihadi dominated rebels within the Syrian Army itself are Sunni
Syrians belies his whole false sectarian narrative.
Chulov’s latest article is no exception.
The sectarian melodrama is set in the title: “Sunnis fear Assad wants
to ethnically cleanse Alawhite heartland”, in usual fashion, Chulov
plays on manufactured sectarian fear and a growing western narrative
that Assad is planning on building an “Alawite enclave” in the western
provinces of Syria reaching to the Mediterranean coast, the heartland of
Assad’s Alawite sect.
The sub-title, illuminates Chulovs simplistic rendering and the basis for his “Alawite enclave” theory:
“Homs land registry fire and handing out of arms to villagers fuel concerns that an Alawite-Shia enclave is being formed in Syria.”
Chulov lays the foundations of
his theory with these basic facts, Assad is arming “farmers and
villagers”, ie: Syrian men of military age, that are willing to fight
the extremist dominated insurgency Chulov has propagated and promoted
for the best part of two years. Yet Chulov is eager to portray these
farmers and villagers (Syrians) as “evil Shabiha” intent on sectarian
cleansing.
And, lo and behold, the land
registry in Homs has burnt down! It seems Chulov has forgotten Homs has
been a conflict zone for quite some time, constantly under bombardment
from either rebels, or the SAA attempting to remove them. This includes a
massive air and artillery campaign on the SAA’s part. Again, it is
beyond Chulov’s wildest imaginations that this particular building may
well be under government auspices, therefore a prime target for his
beloved rebels. Indeed, since the very first week of the crisis in
Daraa, militants attacked Government buildings and offices – often
setting them ablaze. In Chulovs investigative mind, there is only one
explanation: “the “Shabiha” set the land registry ablaze to remove proof
of land-ownership, his anonymous source, in an almost Sherlock-Watson
moment of journalistic drama confirms Chulovs suspicions: (my emphasis)
“What else could be going on?” asked one resident who refused to be identified. “This is the most secure area of the city and it is the only building that has been burned. A conspiracy is underway.”
Once more Chulov relies on
anonymous sources and vague rhetoric to underline that the fire was
undoubtedly set by “regime forces”. Chulov tells us “eyewitnesses” (no
names of course) and “employees” (employees of who exactly he is not
clear) recall seeing flames in the upper floors of the ministry and
regime forces in the floors below. The regime forces couldn’t possibly
have been stationed there, inside a government building, or maybe even
attempting to put the flames out. No, the only plausible explanation is
that regime forces set the blaze then dutifully stood around in the
floors below waiting for the ceiling to collapse, in public view of
everyone, even “employees”!
Chulov takes us on his sectarian
fantasy of Homs, he leads us to believe that regime controlled areas are
no longer multi-ethnic towns under the auspice of government, (as they
have been for decades) these towns have morphed into “Alawhite only”
areas. Chulov fails to even mention that since the ontset of the crisis
it has been predominantly the “rebels” he that have ethnically cleansed
virtually every town or village they have entered, the examples are long
and numerous. On the odd occasion rebel “liberated” towns and villages
havent been completely emptied of civilian residents, the rebels have
quickly laid sectarian demands upon Christian and Shi’a communities;
engaged in summary executions, torture, imprisonment, and forced
displacement, all on the basis of sect.
The oft-referenced town of Qusair
is possibly the prime example of the duplicity inherent in reports from
western “journalists” such as Chulov. He failed to show an ounce of
“concern” back in 2012 when rebels entered Qusair and immediately
forcibly removed all Christians living there (the vast majority of
residents left at the same time, as has been the case in most rebel
“liberated” areas). Indeed, he failed to even report on the rebel
cleansing of Qusair. Chulov would find it extremely difficult to find a
single town or village “liberated” by the extremist dominated rebels
that hasn’t seen some form of ethnic cleansing, but these uncomfortable
truths do not fit with his skewed narrative.
In fairness Chulov does attempt
to offer some “balance” in his article, one whole sentence alludes to
the mass exodus of Alawite’s from rebel held areas in the north of Syria
(he doesn’t mention the thousands of Christians that have also been
ethnically cleansed, nor the thousands of Sunnis that have left
rebel-held areas due to the fundamentalist doctrine of the Salafi/Jihadi
rebels forced upon them). Chulov explains this minimal episode of
ethnic cleansing as a result of northern Syria being dominated by
jihadists, giving the reader the false impression that rebels in other
regions are not the jihadi type.
Literally every piece of
information Chulov uses to bolster his “Alawite enclave” narrative is a
secondary source form a rebel leader/militant, an activist, or an
anonymous source. He again tells us that the whole of the North of Homs
has been “emptied of Sunni’s” and replaced with Alawites, the empirical
evidence he provides? “Local leaders claim”. Leaders of what and whom
Chulov fails to reveal. The sectarian narrative Chulov has relied upon
bears fruit once more, and again in the form of an “activist” account:
(my emphasis)
“There have been obvious examples of denominational cleansing in different areas in Homs,” said local activist, Abu Rami. “It is denominational cleansing; part of a major Iranian Shia plan, which is obvious through the involvement of Hezbollah and Iranian militias. And it’s also part of Assad’s personal Alawite state project.”
One must seriously take this man
for his word, obviously an “activist” (a common euphemism for armed
opposition rebel in western media) is in a prime position to understand
the workings of “Iranian Shia plans” and Assads “personal projects”.
Maybe the Syrian Observatory told him, just after Assad and Ayatollah
Khamenei relayed their plans to the man in Coventry. Chulov once again
offers zero empirical evidence to back these claims and is quite
literally engaging in opposition stenography. (a favourite pastime of
Chulov’s going by his work on Syria for the past two years.)
Chulov spends the remainder of
the article theorising and speculating on the regimes alleged sectarian
motives, all on the basis of his vague and anonymous “sources”. He tells
us, quite incredibly and with no shame in the lack of journalistic
integrity that “diplomatic sources in the region” – presumably the same
“diplomatic sources” that have erroneously declared such falsehood as
“Assads days are numbered”, which Chulov has dutifully repeated in his
articles ad nauseam – have relayed that Assad is not only planning an
“Alawite rump state” in the west of Syria, but the first countries Assad
is making overtures toward to secure this “rump state” are his biggest
enemies: (my emphasis)
Over the past six months, diplomats in the region have claimed that contingency planning for a rump state to protect Syrian Alawites has involved diplomatic contact being made by senior Syrian officials with enemy states. A mediator – a well-known diplomatic figure – is understood to have been asked by Assad to approach the former Israeli foreign minister, Avigdor Lieberman, late last year with a request that Israel not stand in the way of attempts to form an Alawite state, which could have meant moving some displaced communities into the Golan Heights area.
It seems Chulov is unwilling to
acknowledge, or realise, that Israel is the only regional state that has
overtly and opportunistically attacked Syria since the crisis erupted.
It makes absolutely no sense for Assad to make overtures and relay plans
to one of his biggest threats, and a state that actively conspires with
the jihadi dominated opposition. Chulov also conveniently omits the
fact that the “plan” he so eagerly propagates Assad is intent upon is
the exact “optimal scenario” Israeli military leaders have put forward for their ideal outcome of the Syrian crisis.
How very convenient that the
“optimal scenario” for Israel (and its allies in their attack on the
Syrian state) just happens to be the precise narrative Chulov and others
are going to great lengths to propagate. Let me be clear,
Western/Israeli media is propagating the idea that Assad is attempting
to build an “Alawite enclave”, because that is the exact scenario the
west and its allies who are attacking Syria are intent upon. If Assad
cannot be removed – which is becoming more and more unlikely without
overt western intervention – then the US, Israel and their Gulf allies
will attempt to “Balkanise” the Syrian state.the Syrian state.