Massamedia VS vergeven van CIA ‘veteranen’, alsof die media nog niet genoeg ‘fake news’ ofwel leugens brengen……..

De laatste jaren vinden ‘veteranen’ van de geheime diensten in de VS hun weg naar de reguliere (massa-) media, die toch al niet te klagen hebben over regeringsgetrouwe berichten brengen, om nog maar te zwijgen over het brengen van een enorme berg ‘fake news’ waarmee die media regeringsbeleid ondersteunen, zoals het illegaal oorlogvoeren in landen waar de VS niets, maar dan ook helemaal niets te zoeken heeft……

Wat betreft het ‘regeringsgetrouwe karakter valt nog wel wat te zeggen: het grootste deel van die media, of beter gezegd de multimiljonairs of grote investeerders die deze media in het bezit hebben, lusten Trump niet, maar staan uiteraard pal achter zijn wanbeleid, of dat nu in het binnen- of buitenland wordt gevoerd…. Zo roert men in die media met grote graagte de verdoemde oorlogstrom en is men dolblij met de meer dan schunnige belastinghervormingen, die alleen de welgestelden en grote bedrijven ten goede komen………

Lees het volgende ontluisterende verhaal van Caitlin Johnstone:

Deep
State’ CIA Veterans Finding New Homes in the Mainstream Media

February
5, 2018 at 3:49 pm

Written
by 
Caitlin
Johnstone

(CN Op-ed) — “Former
CIA director John Brennan has become the latest member of the NBC
News and MSNBC family, officially signing with the network as a
contributor,” chirps a 
recent
article
 by
The Wrap, as though that’s a perfectly normal thing to have to
write and not a ghastly symptom of an Orwellian dystopia.
NBC 
reports that
the former head of the 
depravedlying,
torturing
propagandizingdrug
trafficking
coup-stagingwarmongering Central
Intelligence Agency “is now a senior national security and
intelligence analyst.”

Brennan,
who 
played
a key role
 in
the construction of the establishment’s Russia narrative that has
been used to manufacture public consent for 
world-threatening
new cold war escalations
,
is just the latest addition in an 
ongoing
trend
 of
trusted mainstream media outlets being packed to the gills with
stalwarts from the U.S. intelligence community. Brennan joins CIA and
DoD* Chief of Staff 
Jeremy
Bash
 on
the NBC/MSNBC lineup, who is serving there as a national security
analyst, as well as NBC intelligence/national security reporter
and 
known
CIA collaborator
 Ken
Dilanian.

Former
Director of National Intelligence, 
Russiagate
architect, and known Russophobic racist
 James
Clapper 
was
welcomed to the CNN “family”
 last
year by Chris “
It’s
Illegal to Read WikiLeaks

Cuomo and now routinely appears as an expert analyst for the network.
Last year CNN also 
hired
a new national security analyst in Michael Hayden
**, who has served as CIA Director, NSA Director, Principal
Deputy Director of National Intelligence, and an Air Force
general.

Former
CIA analyst and 
now
paid CNN analyst
 Phil
Mudd, who last year caused Cuomo’s show to have to issue
retraction
and apology
 for
a completely baseless claim he 
made
on national television
 asserting
that WikiLeaks’ Julian Assange is “a pedophile”, is once
again 
making
headlines
 for
suggesting that the FBI is entering into a showdown with the current
administration over Trump’s decision to declassify the
controversial Nunes memo***.

More
and more of the outlets from which Americans get their information
are being filled not just with garden variety establishment
loyalists, but with longstanding members of the U.S. intelligence
community. These men got to their positions of power within these
deeply sociopathic institutions based on their willingness to
facilitate any depravity in order to advance the secret agendas of
the U.S. power establishment, and now they’re being paraded in
front of mainstream Americans on cable news on a daily basis. The
words of these “experts” are consistently 
taken and reported
on
 by
smaller news outlets in print and online media in a way that seeds
their authoritative assertions throughout public consciousness.

The
term “deep state” does not refer to a conspiracy theory but to a
simple concept in political analysis which points to the undeniable
reality that (A) plutocrats, (B) intelligence agencies, (C) defense
agencies, and (D) the mainstream media hold large amounts of power in
America despite their not being part of its elected government. You
don’t need to look far to see how these separate groups overlap and
collaborate to advance their own agendas in various ways. Amazon’s
Jeff Bezos, for example, is deeply involved in 
all
of the aforementioned groups
:
(A) as arguably 
the
wealthiest person ever
 he
is clearly a plutocrat, with a company that is 
trying
to control the underlying infrastructure of the economy
; (B)
he 
is
a CIA contractor
;
(C) he is 
part
of a Pentagon advisory board
;
and (D) his 
purchase
of the Washington Post
 in
2013 gave him total control over a major mainstream media outlet.

Bezos
did not purchase the 
Washington
Post
 (WaPo) because
his avaricious brain predicted that newspapers were about to make a
profitable resurgence; he purchased it for the same reason he has
inserted himself so very deeply into America’s unelected power
infrastructure – he wants to ensure a solid foundation for the
empire he is building. He needs a potent propaganda outlet to
manufacture support for the power establishment that he is weaving
his plutocratic tentacles through. This is precisely the same reason
other 
mass
media-controlling plutocrats
 are
stocking their propaganda machines with intelligence community
insiders.

Time
and again you see connections between the plutocratic class which
effectively 
owns
America’s elected government
,
the intelligence and defense agencies which operate behind thick
veils of secrecy in the name of “national security” to advance
agendas which have nothing to do with the wishes of the electorate,
and the mass media machine which is used to 
manufacture
the consent
 of
the people to be governed by this exploitative power structure.

America
is ruled by an elite class which has slowly created a system where
money increasingly 
translates
directly into political power
,
and which is therefore motivated to maintain economic injustice in
order to rule over the masses more completely. The greater the
economic inequality, the greater their power.

Nobody
would willingly consent to such an oppressive system where wealth
inequality keeps growing as expensive bombs from expensive drones are
showered upon strangers on the other side of the planet, so a robust
propaganda machine is needed.

And
that’s where John Brennan’s new job comes in. Expect a consistent
fountain of lies to pour from his mouth on NBC, and expect them to
all prop up this exploitative power establishment and advance
its 
geopolitical
agendas
.
And expect clear-eyed rebels everywhere to keep calling it all what
it is.

Op-ed
by 
Caitlin
Johnstone
 /
Republished with permission / 
Consortium
News
 / Report
a typo

*          DoD >> Department of Defence, ofwel het ministerie van Defensie dat zowel in de VS als in de EU, omgedoopt zou moeten worden tot ministerie van Oorlog……

**  Zie: ‘Michael Hayden (ex-CIA en -NSA): ‘collateral damage’, ofwel burgerslachtoffers, moet je willen maken………



*** Zie: ‘Former CIA Analyst of 27 Years: ‘Nunes Memo’ Reveals Felony Crimes at FBI and DOJ

Zie ook: ‘CIA en 70 jaar desinformatie in Europese opiniebladen…………

       en: ‘Russiagate, of: hoe de media u belazeren met verhalen over Russische bemoeienis met de VS presidentsverkiezingen……..‘ 

       en: Publicly Available Evidence Doesn’t Support Russian Gov Hacking of 2016 Election

       en: ‘‘Russiagate’ een verhaal van a t/m z westers ‘fake news…..’

       en: ‘FBI, de spin in het Russiagate web……..

       en: ‘De Russiagate samenzweringstheorie dient de machthebbers………

       en: ‘Fake News van CNN: ‘American Sniper gedood in Syrie….’ ha! ha! ha! ha! ha! ha! ha! ha!

       en: ‘Massamedium CBS (VS) tegen reality check. Logisch wel, gezien de hoeveelheid fake news op die zender…..

      en: ‘Fake News’ hysterie willens en wetens gelanceerd om sociale media tot zwijgen te brengen, Rusland te demoniseren en daarmee de waarheid te verbergen……..

       en: ‘Vandalisme na Super Bowl door massamedia o.a. afgedaan als pure poëzie, waar protesten van gekleurden na zoveelste moord door politie worden afgedaan als terreur………

New York Times met schaamteloze anti-Russische propaganda en ‘fake news….’

Robert Parry legt op Consortium News uit, in een artikel overgenomen door Anti-Media, waar goed journalistiek werk o.a. aan moet voldoen: een teken dat een artikel het product is van slordige of oneerlijke journalistiek, kan gezien worden als de kern van het verhaal als feit wordt neergezet, terwijl dit niet bewezen is, of onderdeel is van een serieuze discussie. Veelal wordt zo’n artikel het fundament voor andere (niet bewezen) claims, waarmee een verhaal ‘wordt gebouwd’, dat gefundeerd is op los zand….

Dergelijke journalistiek zou niet in de reguliere media terecht mogen komen, echter tegenwoordig is het tegendeel vaak de praktijk, zoals we zien in de reguliere westerse (massa-) media. Neem de berichtgeving over de illegale oorlogen van de VS tegen Afghanistan, Irak, Libië en nu weer tegen Syrië. ‘Voldongen’ leugens werden en worden als feiten en de enige waarheid neergezet…….

Hetzelfde geldt voor alle belachelijke claims, dat Rusland de VS verkiezingen zou hebben gemanipuleerd middels hacken en het publiceren van artikelen door o.a. Sputnik en Russia Today (RT). Daarbij worden  naast een ‘tsunami’ aan berichten op Facebook en Twitter, nu ook advertenties genoemd, die werden geplaatst op Facebook……. ha! ha! ha! ha! ha! ha! ha! ha! Voor al deze zogenaamde feiten, is geen nanometer bewijs, maar ze worden desondanks door diezelfde reguliere media en het merendeel van de westerse politici als de enige waarheid gezien, dit terwijl het overtuigende bewijs van het tegendeel terzijde wordt geschoven………

Parry schrijft over een artikel dat afgelopen vrijdag over 3 pagina’s werd geplaatst in the New York Times (NYT). Daarin wordt betoogt dat Rusland ‘een leger van nep-Amerikanen’ heeft gebruikt om de VS verkiezingen te beïnvloeden……. Of wat dacht u van: ‘met een vloed aan Facebook en Twitterberichten hebben bedriegers haat en verdeeldheid gezaaid in de VS…..’ ha! ha! ha! ha! ha! ha! ha! ha! Ja, ze durven wel hè, terwijl die zogenaamde Amerikanen elkaar al een paar eeuwen de strot kunnen afbijten!! (neem alleen al de nog steeds bestaande grove discriminatie van gekleurden in de VS….)

Facebook weigert intussen nog steeds om de advertenties vrij te geven, die volgens haar door de Russische overheid werden geplaatst……. Kortom Facebook beschuldigt een land van uiterst grove handelingen en stelt daarna vrolijk dat men maar moet geloven op de blauwe ogen van de redactie……..

Lees het volgende uitstekende artikel van Parry en zegt het voort!

Has
the New York Times Gone Completely Insane?

September
16, 2017 at 11:31 am

Written
by 
Robert
Parry

Crossing
a line from recklessness into madness, The New York Times published a
front-page opus suggesting that Russia was behind social media
criticism of Hillary Clinton, reports Robert Parry.

(CN) For
those of us who have taught journalism or worked as editors, a sign
that an article is the product of sloppy or dishonest journalism is
that a key point will be declared as flat fact when it is unproven or
a point in serious dispute – and it then becomes the foundation for
other claims, building a story like a high-rise constructed on sand.

This
use of speculation as fact is something to guard against particularly
in the work of inexperienced or opinionated reporters. But what
happens when this sort of unprofessional work tops page one of The
New York Times one day as a major “investigative” article and
reemerges the next day in even more strident form as a major Times
editorial? Are we dealing then with an inept journalist who got
carried away with his thesis or are we facing institutional
corruption or even a collective madness driven by ideological fervor?

What
is stunning about the 
lede
story
 in
last Friday’s print edition of The New York Times is that it offers
no real evidence to support its provocative claim that – as the
headline states – “To Sway Vote, Russia Used Army of Fake
Americans” or its subhead: “Flooding Twitter and Facebook,
Impostors Helped Fuel Anger in Polarized U.S.”

In
the old days, this wildly speculative article, which spills over
three pages, would have earned an F in a J-school class or gotten a
rookie reporter a stern rebuke from a senior editor. But now such
unprofessionalism is highlighted by The New York Times, which boasts
that it is the standard-setter of American journalism, the nation’s
“newspaper of record.”

In
this case, it allows reporter Scott Shane to introduce his thesis by
citing some Internet accounts that apparently used fake identities,
but he ties none of them to the Russian government. Acting like he
has minimal familiarity with the Internet – yes, a lot of people do
use fake identities – Shane builds his case on the assumption that
accounts that cited references to purloined Democratic emails must be
somehow from an agent or a bot connected to the Kremlin.

For
instance, Shane cites the fake identity of “Melvin Redick,” who
suggested on June 8, 2016, that people visit DCLeaks which, a few
days earlier, had posted some emails from prominent Americans, which
Shane states as fact – not allegation – were “stolen … by
Russian hackers.”

Shane
then adds, also as flat fact, that “The site’s phony promoters
were in the vanguard of a cyberarmy of counterfeit Facebook and
Twitter accounts, a legion of Russian-controlled impostors whose
operations are still being unraveled.”

The
Times’ Version

In
other words, Shane tells us, “The Russian information attack on the
election did not stop with the hacking and leaking of Democratic
emails or the fire hose of stories, true, false and in between, that
battered Mrs. Clinton on Russian outlets like RT and Sputnik. Far
less splashy, and far more difficult to trace, was Russia’s
experimentation on Facebook and Twitter, the American companies that
essentially invented the tools of social media and, in this case, did
not stop them from being turned into engines of deception and
propaganda.”

Besides
the obvious point that very few Americans watch RT and/or Sputnik and
that Shane offers no details about the alleged falsity of those “fire
hose of stories,” let’s examine how his accusations are backed
up:

An
investigation by The New York Times, and new research from the
cybersecurity firm FireEye, reveals some of the mechanisms by which
suspected Russian operators used Twitter and Facebook to spread
anti-Clinton messages and promote the hacked material they had
leaked. On Wednesday, Facebook officials disclosed that they had shut
down several hundred accounts that they believe were created by a
Russian company linked to the Kremlin and used to buy $100,000 in ads
pushing divisive issues during and after the American election
campaign. On Twitter, as on Facebook, Russian fingerprints are on
hundreds or thousands of fake accounts that regularly posted
anti-Clinton messages.”

Note
the weasel words: “suspected”; “believe”; ‘linked”;
“fingerprints.” When you see such equivocation, it means that
these folks – both the Times and FireEye – don’t have hard
evidence; they are speculating.

And
it’s worth noting that the supposed “army of fake Americans”
may amount to hundreds out of Facebook’s 
two
billion or so monthly users
 and
the $100,000 in ads compare to the company’s annual ad revenue
of 
around
$27 billion
.
(I’d do the math but my calculator doesn’t compute such tiny
percentages.)

So,
this “army” is really not an “army” and we don’t even know
that it is “Russian.” But some readers might say that surely we
know that the Kremlin did mastermind the hacking of Democratic
emails!

That
claim is supported by the Jan. 6 “intelligence community
assessment” that was the work of what President Obama’s Director
of National Intelligence James Clapper called “hand-picked”
analysts from three agencies – the Central Intelligence Agency,
National Security Agency and Federal Bureau of Investigation. But, as
any intelligence expert will tell you, if you hand-pick the analysts,
you are hand-picking the conclusions.

Agreeing
with Putin

But
some still might protest that the Jan. 6 report surely presented
convincing evidence of this serious charge about Russian President
Vladimir Putin personally intervening in the U.S. election to help
put Donald Trump in the White House. Well, as it turns out, not so
much, and if you don’t believe me, we can call to the witness stand
none other than New York Times reporter Scott Shane.

Shane wrote at
the time: “What is missing from the [the Jan. 6] public report is
what many Americans most eagerly anticipated: hard evidence to back
up the agencies’ claims that the Russian government engineered the
election attack. … Instead, the message from the agencies
essentially amounts to ‘trust us.’”

So,
even Scott Shane, the author of last Friday’s opus, recognized the
lack of “hard evidence” to prove that the Russian government was
behind the release of the Democratic emails, a claim that both Putin
and WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange, who published a trove of the
emails, have denied. While it is surely possible that Putin and
Assange are lying or don’t know the facts, you might think that
their denials would be relevant to this lengthy investigative
article, which also could have benefited from some mention of Shane’s
own skepticism of last January, but, hey, you don’t want
inconvenient details to mess up a cool narrative.

Yet,
if you struggle all the way to the end of last Friday’s article,
you do find out how flimsy the Times’ case actually is. How, for
instance, do we know that “Melvin Redick” is a Russian impostor
posing as an American? The proof, according to Shane, is that “His
posts were never personal, just news articles reflecting a
pro-Russian worldview.”

As
it turns out, the Times now operates with what must be called a
neo-McCarthyistic approach for identifying people as Kremlin stooges,
i.e., anyone who doubts the truthfulness of the State Department’s
narratives on Syria, Ukraine and other international topics.

Unreliable
Source

In
the article’s last section, Shane acknowledges as much in citing
one of his experts, “Andrew Weisburd, an Illinois online researcher
who has written frequently about Russian influence on social media.”
Shane quotes Weisburd as admitting how hard it is to differentiate
Americans who just might oppose Hillary Clinton because they didn’t
think she’d make a good president from supposed Russian operatives:
“Trying to disaggregate the two was difficult, to put it mildly.”

According
to Shane, “Mr. Weisburd said he had labeled some Twitter accounts
‘Kremlin trolls’ based simply on their pro-Russia tweets and with
no proof of Russian government ties. The Times contacted several such
users, who insisted that they had come by their anti-American,
pro-Russian views honestly, without payment or instructions from
Moscow.”

One
of Weisburd’s “Kremlin trolls” turned out to be 66-year-old
Marilyn Justice who lives in Nova Scotia and who 
somehow
reached the conclusion
 that
“Hillary’s a warmonger.” During the 2014 Winter Olympics in
Sochi, Russia, she reached another conclusion: that U.S. commentators
were exhibiting a snide anti-Russia bias perhaps because they indeed
were exhibiting a snide anti-Russia bias.

Shane
tracked down another “Kremlin troll,” 48-year-old Marcel Sardo, a
web producer in Zurich, Switzerland, who dares to dispute the West’s
groupthink that Russia was responsible for shooting down Malaysia
Airlines Flight 17 over Ukraine on July 17, 2014, and the State
Department’s claims that the Syrian government used sarin gas in a
Damascus suburb on Aug. 21, 2013.

Presumably,
if you don’t toe the line on those dubious U.S. government
narratives, you are part of the Kremlin’s propaganda machine. (In
both cases, there actually are serious reasons to doubt the Western
groupthinks which again lack real evidence.)

But
Shane accuses Sardo and his fellow-travelers of spreading “what
American officials consider to be Russian disinformation on election
hacking, Syria, Ukraine and more.” In other words, if you examine
the evidence on MH-17 or the Syrian sarin case and conclude that the
U.S. government’s claims are dubious if not downright false, you
are somehow disloyal and making Russian officials “gleeful at their
success,” as Shane puts it.

But
what kind of a traitor are you if you quote Shane’s initial
judgment after reading the Jan. 6 report on alleged Russian election
meddling? What are you if you agree with his factual observation that
the report lacked anything approaching “hard evidence”? That’s
a point that also dovetails with what Vladimir Putin has been saying
– that “IP addresses can be simply made up. … This is no
proof”?

So
is Scott Shane a “Kremlin troll,” too? Should the Times
immediately fire him as a disloyal foreign agent? What if Putin says
that 2 plus 2 equals 4 and your child is taught the same thing in
elementary school, what does that say about public school teachers?

Out
of such gibberish come the evils of McCarthyism and the death of the
Enlightenment. Instead of encouraging a questioning citizenry, the
new American paradigm is to silence debate and ridicule anyone who
steps out of line.

You
might have thought people would have learned something from the
disastrous groupthink about Iraqi WMD, a canard that the Times and
most of the U.S. mainstream media eagerly promoted.

But
if you’re feeling generous and thinking that the Times’ editors
must have been chastened by their Iraq-WMD fiasco but perhaps had a
bad day last week and somehow allowed an egregious piece of
journalism to lead their front page, your kind-heartedness would be
shattered on Saturday when the Times’ editorial board penned 
a
laudatory reprise
 of
Scott Shane’s big scoop.

Stripping
away even the few caveats that the article had included, the Times’
editors informed us that “a startling investigation by Scott Shane
of The New York Times, and new research by the cybersecurity firm
FireEye, now reveal, the Kremlin’s stealth intrusion into the
election was far broader and more complex, involving a cyberarmy of
bloggers posing as Americans and spreading propaganda and
disinformation to an American electorate on Facebook, Twitter and
other platforms. …

Now
that the scheming is clear, Facebook and Twitter say they are
reviewing the 2016 race and studying how to defend against such
meddling in the future. … Facing the Russian challenge will involve
complicated issues dealing with secret foreign efforts to undermine
American free speech.”

But
what is the real threat to “American free speech”? Is it the
possibility that Russia – in a very mild imitation of what the U.S.
government does all over the world – used some Web sites
clandestinely to get out its side of various stories, an accusation
against Russia that still lacks any real evidence?

Or
is the bigger threat that the nearly year-long Russia-gate hysteria
will be used to clamp down on Americans who dare question fact-lite
or fact-free Official Narratives handed down by the State Department
and The New York Times?

By Robert
Parry
 /
Republished with permission / 
Consortium
News
 / Report
a typo

=================================

Zie ook: ‘JULIAN ASSANGE OFFERS U.S. GOVERNMENT PROOF RUSSIA WASN’T SOURCE OF DEMOCRATIC PARTY LEAKS, SAYS WSJ‘ (op Stan van Houcke die het overnam van Global Research)

Koenders: NYT en Ass. Press gaven toe dat Russia-gate een canard is, waar blijft jouw openlijke schuldbekentenis?

Associated Press (AP) en de New York Times (NYT) hebben toegegeven dat de bewering als zouden alle 17 geheime diensten in de VS achter de claim staan, dat Rusland de VS presidentsverkiezingen zouden hebben beinvloed t.b.v. van het beest Donald Trump.

De directeur van de National Intelligence (DNI), Clapper, die over alle geheime diensten gaat, zou hebben bedoeld dat het om 3 diensten ging, de CIA, de FBI en de NSA. Echter daar deze directeur over 17 diensten gaat, nam men aan, dat het de bevinding van 17 diensten was, dat Rusland de verkiezingen t.g.v. het beest Trump had beïnvloed……..

De democratische kandidaat, hare kwaadaardigheid Clinton stelde dat er geen twijfel is als alle 17 diensten hetzelfde stellen……….

Eerlijk gezegd snap ik al niet, dat er nog iemand is, die ook maar gelooft wat welke geheime VS dienst dan ook verklaart, daarvoor hebben deze diensten, om het zachtjes te stellen, iets te vaak laten zien, dat liegen één van hun belangrijkste eigenschappen is……….

Het is dan ook aan politici als Koenders en Rutte en de reguliere westerse media te danken dat de leugens van de bedoelde VS diensten hier als waarheid worden verkocht…….

Hier kan nog het volgende punt bij opgeteld worden: NB de NSA heeft bewezen ingebroken in computers en telefoons van regeringen in het buitenland, zelfs van haar partners zoals Duitsland (en gegarandeerd ook in Nederland), m.a.w. de zwarte pot verwijt een niet zwarte ketel zwart te zijn!!! Daarnaast is de VS sinds 1945 verantwoordelijk voor een flink aantal staatsgrepen (ook voor 1940, ‘maar goed….’)……

Moet je nagaan, hoeveel onzinnige energie en hysterie er al in de valse claim is gestoken, dat Rusland alles en iedereen zou hacken en manipuleren…….. Als gevolg waarvan men geen maatregelen nam, de boel beter te beveiligen, zo bleek onlangs weer met de 2 ransomware aanvallen…….

Benieuwd hoe lang figuren al Hubert Smeets, Rob de Wijk, Han ten Broeke (VVD hufter), Arend Jan Boekestijn (ook al VVD, maar dan een echte sufferd) en vele anderen uit de politiek en de reguliere westerse media, de leugen blijven volhouden dat Rusland de VS (en andere) verkiezingen heeft gemanipuleerd…….

New
York Times and AP Finally Retract False Claims on Russia Hacking

July
2, 2017 at 7:54 am

Written
by 
Jason
Ditz

(ANTIWAR.COM) — Among
the most oft-repeated claims of the entire Russia election hacking
scandal is that of absolute unanimity among US intelligence agencies,
with media and politicians regularly claiming that “
all
17 US intelligence agencies have agreed that Russia tried to
influence the 2016 election to benefit Donald Trump
.”
It’s not true.

Nearly
a year into the hacking scandal, both the 
New
York Times
 and
the 
Associated
Press
 are
finally copping to the fact that this allegation is untrue, and
retracting it outright. The AP confirmed falsely making the claim in
at least four distinct articles, 
most
recently on Thursday
.

What
actually happened? The Director of National Intelligence made the
allegation, claiming it was based on information from three US
agencies, the CIA, FBI, and NSA. The Director of National
Intelligence nominally represents all 17 intelligence agencies, and
that was quickly and incorrectly extrapolated into all 17 agencies
being in consensus.

In
practice, however, the DNI is an increasingly politicized office, and
their publications aren’t necessarily in line with actual reality,
let alone proof of a consensus among the intelligence agencies.
Indications are that the overwhelming majority of the US intelligence
agencies were never even involved in assessing the Russia hacks.

Nor
would they be expected to be. It would be bizarre if the Pentagon’s
intelligence agency, for example, was probing US elections, or if the
National Reconnaissance Office, which operates spy satellites looking
for missile launches, was chiming in on the Trump Campaign.

It
sounded better, particularly for those trying to make this into a
bigger scandal, however, to claim that “all 17” US intelligence
agencies had agreed on the narrative, because this would give the
impression that it’s indisputable fact, as opposed to a heavily
politically-motivated assertion backed up by limited circumstantial
evidence dug up by a couple of US spy agencies.

By Jason
Ditz
 /
Republished with permission / 
AntiWar.com / Report
a typo

===============================================

Hier een bericht van Information Clearting House, geschreven door Robert Parry, dat iets uitgebreider bericht over deze zaak (onder dat artikel kan u klikken voor ‘een Dutch vertaling’):

NYT
Finally Retracts Russia-gate Canard
A
founding Russia-gate myth is that all 17 U.S. intelligence agencies
agreed that Russia hacked into and distributed Democratic emails, a
falsehood that The New York Times has belatedly retracted, reports
Robert Parry.
By
Robert Parry

June
30, 2017 “Information
Clearing House
” – The New York Times has finally admitted
that one of the favorite Russia-gate canards – that all 17 U.S.
intelligence agencies concurred on the assessment of Russian hacking
of Democratic emails – is false.

On
Thursday, the Times appended 
a
correction to a June 25 article
 that
had repeated the false claim, which has been used by Democrats and
the mainstream media for months to brush aside any doubts about the
foundation of the Russia-gate scandal and portray President Trump as
delusional for doubting what all 17 intelligence agencies supposedly
knew to be true.

In
the Times’ White House Memo of June 25, correspondent Maggie
Haberman mocked Trump for “still refus[ing] to acknowledge a basic
fact agreed upon by 17 American intelligence agencies that he now
oversees: Russia orchestrated the attacks, and did it to help get him
elected.”

However,
on Thursday, the Times – while leaving most of Haberman’s
ridicule of Trump in place – noted in a correction that the
relevant intelligence “assessment was made by four intelligence
agencies — the Office of the Director of National Intelligence, the
Central Intelligence Agency, the Federal Bureau of Investigation and
the National Security Agency. The assessment was not approved by all
17 organizations in the American intelligence community.”

The
Times’ grudging correction was vindication for some Russia-gate
skeptics who had questioned the claim of a full-scale intelligence
assessment, which would usually take the form of a National
Intelligence Estimate (or NIE), a product that seeks out the views of
the entire Intelligence Community and includes dissents.

The
reality of a more narrowly based Russia-gate assessment
was 
admitted in
May by President Obama’s Director of National Intelligence James
Clapper and Obama’s CIA Director John Brennan in sworn
congressional testimony.

Clapper testified before
a Senate Judiciary subcommittee on May 8 that the Russia-hacking
claim came from a “special intelligence community assessment” (or
ICA) produced by selected analysts from the CIA, NSA and FBI, “a
coordinated product from three agencies – CIA, NSA, and the FBI –
not all 17 components of the intelligence community,” the former
DNI said.

Clapper
further acknowledged that the analysts who produced the Jan. 6
assessment on alleged Russian hacking were “hand-picked” from the
CIA, FBI and NSA.

Yet,
as any intelligence expert will tell you, if you “hand-pick” the
analysts, you are really hand-picking the conclusion. For instance,
if the analysts were known to be hard-liners on Russia or supporters
of Hillary Clinton, they could be expected to deliver the 
one-sided
report
 that
they did.

Politicized
Intelligence

In
the history of U.S. intelligence, we have seen how this selective
approach has worked, such as the phony determination of the Reagan
administration pinning the attempted assassination of Pope John Paul
II and other acts of terror on the Soviet Union.

CIA
Director William Casey and Deputy Director Robert Gates 
shepherded
the desired findings through the process
 by
putting the assessment under the control of pliable analysts and
sidelining those who objected to this politicization of intelligence.

The
point of enlisting the broader intelligence community – and
incorporating dissents into a final report – is to guard against
such “stove-piping” of intelligence that delivers the politically
desired result but ultimately distorts reality.

Another
painful example of politicized intelligence was President George W.
Bush’s 2002 National Intelligence Estimate on Iraq’s WMD
that 
removed
State Department and other dissents
 from
the declassified version that was given to the public.

Since
Clapper’s and Brennan’s testimony in May, the Times and other
mainstream news outlets have avoided a direct contradiction of their
earlier acceptance of the 17-intelligence-agencies canard by simply
referring to a judgment by “the intelligence community.”

That
finessing of their earlier errors has allowed Hillary Clinton and
other senior Democrats to continue referencing this fictional
consensus without challenge, at least in the mainstream media.

For
instance, on May 31 at a technology conference in California, 
Clinton
referred
 to
the Jan. 6 
report,
asserting that “Seventeen agencies, all in agreement, which I know
from my experience as a Senator and Secretary of State, is hard to
get. They concluded with high confidence that the Russians ran an
extensive information war campaign against my campaign, to influence
voters in the election.”

The
failure of the major news organizations to clarify this point about
the 17 agencies may have contributed to Haberman’s mistake on June
25 as she simply repeated the groupthink that nearly all the
Important People in Washington just knew to be true.

But
the Times’ belated correction also underscores the growing sense
that the U.S. mainstream media has joined in a political vendetta
against Trump and has cast aside professional standards to the point
of repeating false claims designed to denigrate him.

That,
in turn, plays into Trump’s Twitter complaints that he and his
administration are the targets of a “witch hunt” led by the “fake
news” media, a grievance that appears to be energizing his
supporters and could discredit whatever ongoing investigations
eventually conclude.

Investigative
reporter Robert Parry broke many of the Iran-Contra stories for The
Associated Press and Newsweek in the 1980s. You can buy his latest
book, 
America’s
Stolen Narrative,
 either
in 
print
here
 or
as an e-book (from 
Amazon and barnesandnoble.com).

Click
for
 SpanishGermanDutchDanishFrench,
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==============================

Op 18 december 2017 heb ik de kop en een het label AP aangepast. Waar eerder AP stond, staat nu Ass. Press, (Associated Press), daar de letters ‘AP’ al werden gebruikt voor de Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens.

NSA breidt bemoeienis met buitenlandse verkiezingen uit, vanwege ‘angst voor Russische hackers…’ ha! ha! ha! ha! ha! ha! ha! ha! ha! ha!

Anti-Media publiceerde gisteren een artikel waarin duidelijk wordt gemaakt, dat de NSA (in samenwerking met de CIA, al wordt dit niet gesteld in dit artikel) zich al jaren bemoeit met verkiezingen in het buitenland.

Nu de hysterie over Russische hacks en manipulaties in de VS op haar top is, gebruikt de NSA deze hysterie, om haar bemoeienis met verkiezingen in binnen en buitenland verder uit te breiden, zogenaamd om landen te helpen tegen de ‘duivelse Russen…..’

Als er over Russische hacks en manipulaties in buitenlandse verkiezingen wordt gesproken door de NSA en CIA, gaat het telkens weer om verkiezingen waarbij VS-marionetten het onderspit delven. Mooi voorbeeld: de onlangs gehouden Franse verkiezingen. Vlak voordat deze verkiezingen plaatsvonden sprak het team van Macron ook over Russische inmenging (mede ingegeven door NSA, zoals het Anti-Media artikel aangeeft), een verhaal waar niets van overbleef, na de winst van Macron!! ‘Vreemd genoeg’ werd er daarna in de reguliere, zogenaamd onafhankelijke media niet meer over gesproken, terwijl men dit ‘nieuws’ (nep nieuws, of ‘fake news’, wat u wilt) met chocoladeletters bracht……….

De FBI bood de Russische hacker Nikulon het staatsburgerschap van de VS, geld en een gratis appartement, als hij wilde bevestigen, dat hij opdracht had gekregen van de Russische overheid om de verkiezingscampagne van Hillary Clinton te hacken……. Dit terwijl de FBI, de NSA en de CIA keer op keer durfden te zeggen, dat ze bewijzen hadden voor deze hacks in opdracht van de Russische regering…………

Uit de Vault 7 documenten op Wikileaks blijkt duidelijk, dat de CIA zich grootschalig bezig houdt met hacken en daarmee met machinaties van zaken in een groot aantal buitenlanden. Dat ook de NSA zich daarmee bezig hield en houdt, werd bewezen met het hacken van bevriende naties, waarbij zelfs de ‘slimme telefoon’ van de Duitse premier Merkel werd gehackt en getapt……..

Nogmaals, ondanks dit alles wijst men met de vieze vingers nog steeds naar Rusland voor deze zaken, terwijl daar tot op heden, nul komma nada bewijs voor werd geleverd……..

Overigens al totaal belachelijk dat men de beschuldigingen van de FBI, NSA en CIA nog serieus neemt, terwijl deze diensten zo onnoemlijk veel hebben gelogen in het verleden……….

Lees en oordeel zelf:

NSA
To Expand Surveillance Of US, Foreign Elections Over “Russian
Hacker” Fears

NSA To Expand Surveillance Of US, Foreign Elections Over “Russian Hacker” Fears

May
17, 2017 at 9:35 am

Written
by 
Anti-Media
News Desk

(MPNLast
Tuesday, during
 his
testimony
 to
the Senate Armed Services Committee, National Security Agency
director Admiral Mike Rogers echoed 
the
previous testimonies
 given
by former Director of National Intelligence James Clapper and other
U.S. law enforcement and intelligence officials, who have sought to
use the “Russian hacking” narrative as leverage to justify a
greater role for their own agencies in supervising U.S. elections.

Following
a question from Senator Mazie Hirono (D-HI) during the hearing,
Rogers stated, “If we define election infrastructure as critical to
the nation and we are directed by the president or the secretary, I
can apply our capabilities in partnership with others – because we
won’t be the only ones, the Department of Homeland Security, the
FBI – I can apply those capabilities proactively with some of the
owners of those systems.”

In
response, Sen. Hirono asked, “You are still awaiting direction from
the president for everyone to coordinate efforts to stop this kind of
thing from Russia’s part?,” referencing statements made by Rogers
and others that have blamed Russia for interfering in elections in
the U.S. and elsewhere. However, neither Rogers nor any U.S.
intelligence agency has yet to release any proof of these
allegations.


When
Rogers 
responded
that there was no “defined mission”
 to
stop alleged Russian interference, Hirono responded, “We need to do
that for everybody to come together.”

Rogers
is not only pitching for the NSA to have a greater role in upcoming
U.S. elections but also in elections in other nations, namely France
and the United Kingdom. After a question from Senator Kirsten
Gillibrand (D-NY), Rogers stated, “We [NSA] had talked to our
French counterparts prior to the public announcements of the events
publicly attributed this past weekend and gave them a heads up.
‘Look, we’re watching the Russians. We’re seeing them penetrate
some of your infrastructure’.”

He
then added, “We’re doing similar things with our German
counterparts, with our British counterparts, they have an upcoming
election sequence.”

While
Rogers, along with several senators, are pushing for greater
oversight of the U.S. and foreign elections due to the possible
threat of “Russian hackers,” an examination of elections held
over the past year suggests that the specter of Russian interference
only emerges when the U.S. establishment’s preferred candidate or
outcome does not prevail.

Russian
specter fails to appear – except in U.S. and other elections

In
2016, elections in Iceland, Spain, Hungary, Australia and Croatia all
had outcomes that were not favorable for Russia, as the results led
to wins for pro-EU and pro-NATO interests. The Russian hacking
narrative only emerged in the U.S. election after leaks derailed
Hillary Clinton’s presidential campaign, as well as in subsequent
elections in Bulgaria and Moldova where pro-Russian candidates won.

Another
complication for the narrative is
 the
curious case of Russian hacker Yevgeny Nikulin
,
who stands accused of hacking U.S. corporations. According to
Nikulin, FBI agents offered him money, U.S. citizenship and a free
apartment in exchange for confessing to hacking Clinton’s campaign
and claiming that he did so under direct orders from Russian
President Vladimir Putin. If U.S. law enforcement and intelligence
agencies were so assured that Russians hacked Clinton’s emails, why
would they make offers such as this to a Russian hacker who they were
pursuing on unrelated charges?

However,
the greatest complication for those who have accused Russian hackers
of leaking Democratic National Committee (DNC) emails to Wikileaks
came yesterday. 
Separate
reports
 of
a federal investigator and a former DC homicide detective essentially
proved that Wikileaks came into possession of DNC emails through Seth
Rich, a DNC employee who – not long after he allegedly passed
emails to Wikileaks – was gunned down last July. 
The
substantial evidence
 that
the leaks came from a DNC insider and were not “hacked”
effectively demolishes the Russian hacker narrative.

Yet,
the most glaring admission from Rogers’ testimony is the fact that
the U.S. is already deeply embedded in the foreign nations they have
offered to help protect from potential election interference. As
revelations released by NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden showed, the
NSA infiltrated the communication systems of France, the UK and
Germany long ago, including those used by their political leadership.
In addition, the NSA’s “Tailored Access Operations” (TAO) unit
is known to
 infiltrate
computers around the world
 in
order to aid in “foreign intelligence collection.”

In
looking at the concrete evidence available regarding past election
interference, the U.S. emerges as the most likely culprit – not the
Russians. For instance, in the 2016 election, 
the
state of Georgia reported
 multiple
hacking attempts targeting its election infrastructure, 
as
did other states
 like
Kentucky and West Virginia. These attempts were not linked to a
foreign government, but to the Department of Homeland Security.

In
addition, Wikileaks’ publications of the CIA’s “Vault 7”
hacking tools 
have
revealed
 the
intelligence agency’s ability to carry out cyber attacks that leave
digital fingerprints that can be tied to foreign state actors who are
not actually responsible for the attacks – the digital equivalent
of a “false flag” attack. 
Some
have suggested
 that
this tool was used in the recent French hack of French President
Emmanuel Macron’s emails, as Russian metadata and the names of
Russian intelligence contractors were carelessly left inside files
that were linked to the hack.

Who thinks Russian hackers are stupid enough to leave Russian tags in their hack?
So it definitely was NOT Russia.
Could be CIA

Surprise! The files include several tags in Russian (as noted by )

12 replies123 retweets121 likes


Given
that the U.S. is confirmed to have interfered in 
81
elections since 1946
,
it seems likely that the “Russian hacker” excuse is just a foil
for the U.S. deep state to gain greater control over U.S. elections
and those of its allies, making any future U.S.-led election
interference that much easier to accomplish.

By Whitney
Webb
 /
Republished with permission / 
MintPress
News
 / Report
a typo

========================

Zie ook: ‘Egregious Lies and Crimes Are The Foundation of Western Foreign Policy‘ (met mogelijkheid tot vertaling onder dat ICH artikel).

       en: ‘It Is Fakenews Day >> One Day, Three Serious News Stories That Turn Out To Be False ‘ (met mogelijkheid tot vertaling)

Klik voor meer berichten n.a.v. het bovenstaande, op één van de labels, die u onder dit bericht terug kan vinden.

RT, waarom de heersende macht en de massamedia dit media orgaan vrezen en haten……..

Gisteren bracht Information Clearing House een artikel dat eerder door theDuran werd gepubliceerd. Adam Garrie betoogt hierin dat RT geen propaganda orgaan is van Rusland, zoals u sinds enige tijd bijna dagelijks wordt voorgehouden. Het is dan ook niet de bedoeling, dat de gewone bevolking twijfelt aan de leugens die de westerse politici en reguliere westerse media hen dagelijks voorhouden……

RT houdt zich duidelijk niet aan de stilzwijgende afspraak binnen de reguliere (massa-) media (voor het overgrote deel in handen van grote bedrijven en/of miljardairs), de uiterst agressieve VS buitenlandpolitiek te verdedigen en het overheersende ijskoude, inhumane neoliberalisme uit te dragen.

Zoals betoogd, in onderstaand artikel: RT brengt geen onversneden Russische propaganda, als RT dit wel zou doen, zouden er bij lange na niet zoveel mensen zijn, die deze zender volgen. RT brengt feitelijk nieuws en zoals eerder op deze plek betoogd, ik heb RT tot nu toe niet kunnen betrappen op het brengen van ‘nepnieuws’, zoals de reguliere westerse media organen deze keer op keer brengen, neem de smerige berichtgeving over Oost-Aleppo…….

Nieuwsorganen als RT brengen hoop voor de honderden miljoenen mensen, die wereldwijd middels oorlogen en keihard neoliberalisme tot de verstotenen op ons aller aarde zijn gaan behoren….. Dat is dan ook het ‘grote gevaar’ voor de huidige machthebbers en de reguliere (massa-) media, die de bevolking voorliegen dat oorlogen en arbeidshervormingen noodzakelijk zijn….. Noodzakelijk respectievelijk voor het brengen van democratie (lees: het overnemen van de macht over grondstoffen, dan wel strategische belangrijke plekken) en voor ‘de noodzakelijke economische groei’ (een groei die uiteraard helemaal niet noodzakelijk is….).

Zoals gezegd, dit is een artikel van theDuran, dus helaas zonder mogelijkheid tot vertaling, die u overigens wel middels uw besturingssysteem kan aanmaken.

Here’s
why the US elite fear RT

Adam
Gerrie 5 januari jl.

RT
has given a voice to patriotic Americans who have been isolated from
events in their own political system due to an establishment that
relied on mainstream media to shut them up.

James
Clapper, the US Director of National Intelligence, on the basis of
his 
comments
to the Senate committee on Thursday about RT
,
would appear to agree with Alex Jones in thinking ‘there’s a war
on for your mind’.

 I happen to disagree. I think there’s a race to the bottom, in order to see how much the American deep state and Congressional supporters of Obama’s neo-liberal ideology can condescend to ordinary Americans.

The truth behind the ‘media wars’ is far less exotic, let alone dramatic than the powers that be would like people to believe.

In business there is something known as the 80/20 Rule which states that 80% of all effects stem from 20% of all causal occurrences. When applied to retail it can mean that 80% of all revenue comes from 20% of one’s customer base. It can also mean that 80% of sales are derived from 20% of one’s inventory.

In media, one can apply this rule in the following ways: 80% of a media outlet’s viewership comes from 20% of a population who broadly agree with the editorial line of the outlet in question. Indeed, most viewers of media tune in and turn on to hear recent facts (and in some cases fake facts) which help to bolster their inherent views of the world. Clinton voters will watch CNN for reassurance, anti-Zionists will do with same with Press-TV, and neo-liberal globalists will put on BBC World.

RT isn’t an exception here. If someone broadly questions the globalist agenda and the militarist/interventionist narrative of the west, he or she will find many analysts on RT whose views correspond with their own.

There is however one big league exception. Prior to the launch of RT, there was no large media outlet broadcasting in the West which offered a critical view of the mainstream, establishment narrative. Whilst CNN and Fox bickered over hair-splitting interpretations of the ‘West is best’ agenda, no one offered a real opposing view.

RT has changed that. RT doesn’t have an anti-America view as Mr. Clapper implied. RT simply offers people in America and around the world an opportunity to question whether the establishment’s view of how America should rule the world actually makes the lives of ordinary Americans better or worse.

Increasingly those who feel that globalism, neo-liberalism and constant war are making their lives worse do things like watch RT and vote for Donald Trump. It is not a cause, it is an effect.

Few media outlets change minds but they do have the ability to give a voice to those which already exist. Globalists, liberals and war-hawks have had a voice in the American media market for decades. But unless one went to a local book-club where Pat Buchannan was giving a talk to a room of 80 people those opposed to the post-Cold War globalist hegemony of the US elite had no voice. RT has given them one, and the open contempt of those in the establishment, upset with RT for giving a voice to the voiceless, is staggering.

The tale told by the likes of Clapper and John Kerry before him isn’t one of a propaganda war. Ordinary people are not as stupid as many in the establishment would like to think. If RT was as propagandistic as they say, no one would watch it.  Instead millions do watch it, some for reassurance and others to find out new perspectives so they can ‘question more’.

Perhaps many in the establishment are as shocked that they have as much patriotic American opposition as they have. The millions of Americans who watch RT however aren’t semi-retired KGB agents; they are patriotic, thinking, concerned Americans, many of whom are middle-aged and remember the Cold War well.

And this is what frightens the likes of Clapper, McCain and Kerry. They thought that they could keep a lid on home grown all-American moderate opposition with a little help from their good friends in the mainstream media. But now they can’t.

What does it say about modern America that it took a station founded in Moscow to ignite the spirit of America’s First Amendment and ‘make free speech great again’?

For the record, I have appeared on RT many times and have never been told what to say nor how to say it. I wouldn’t have it any other way and I’m happy that the people at RT feel the same.

=============

Zie ook: ‘‘Nepnieuws’ blokkeren, is de onderliggende boodschap……… Het lijkt Turkije, Egypte of Saoedi-Arabië wel!!

       en: ‘Irak, gekleurde berichtgeving van WDR…….

       en: ‘Mosul, een verslag van Hans Jaap Melissen (uiteraard ’embedded’ en in kevlar!) buiten die stad…..

       en: ‘Fallujah en Aleppo, twee belegerde steden, een opvallend verschil in berichtgeving door de reguliere media……… ‘ Klik ook op de links onder dat bericht!

Voor meer berichten n.a.v. het bovenstaande, klik op één van de labels, die u onder dit bericht terug kan vinden, dit geldt niet voor de labels: Clapper, Garrie en A. Jones,