‘US is allowed to meddle’: Democracy promotion is ‘US policy’, TV panel concludes
22/2/18
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The United States Capitol in Washington DC |
Citing dozens of well-documented cases of direct US interference in foreign lands is just Russian
whataboutism and also very unfair, because democracy promotion is a “stated US
policy,” according to the sharp sticks at MSNBC.
During a not-at-all predictable discussion on MSNBC’s
‘Deadline White House’, host Nicolle Wallace pressed her guests to weigh-in on
former US
ambassador to Russia Michael McFaul’s recent twitter accusation.
McFaul said that Fox News
host Sean Hannity was using “American alleged interference in other countries’
elections” to deflect
criticisms of alleged Russian attempts at “violating our sovereignty.” According to McFaul, Americans who are
naive enough to think that decades of US foreign meddling should factor into
hysterical discussions about alleged Russian interference in the 2016
presidential elections have fallen victim to a “whataboutism
argument Putin’s TV channels make.”
As if momentarily
hypnotized by a KGB electromagnetic wave weapon, New York Times journalist Jim
Rutenberg conceded that "there is some truth to the fact that the United
States has engaged in election meddling over its history,” but then quickly
came to his senses, clarifying that American meddling is usually nothing more
than altruistic attempts to help democratic movements defeat evil foreign
despots. “What Ambassador McFaul is onto is
that it's not always the same thing,” Rutenberg said.
Not missing a beat, Wallace, who served as director of media
affairs at the White House under George W. Bush before becoming a fancy
television host, plunged head-first into US government talking points, as if
magically transported back to 2003.
Rutenberg eagerly agreed,
then bemoaned that, while Hannity was broadcasting highly discourteous truths
about US
foreign policy, "the Russian behavior that we're talking about
now is ongoing, it's probably iterating. We're coming into the mid-terms and
we're still trying to find out what happened in 2016.”
Not everyone was swayed by MSNBC’s ‘expert panel,’ however.
“It’s nonsensical,” radio host Jon Gaunt told RT. “We need to ask the people of Libya: Are they
happy with the involvement of the Americans?” He added that “America [is] much more guilty than Russia” of interfering in “other people’s
interests.”
The Intercept’s Glenn
Greenwald, an outspoken critic of US media echo chambers, took to the
twitterverse to air his own grievances about the MSNBC segment.
"Oh my god. This is an actual, full
discussion on MSNBC about how it's totally different when the US interferes
in elections and other countries' politics because we only do it to help
bolster democracy and fight despots. Did these people ever move beyond 4th
grade US
history? Nope," Greenwald
tweeted.
According to the Los Angeles Times, the US has attempted to influence presidential elections in other countries at
least 81 times between 1946 and 2000, but this figure does not include military
coups and regime change efforts to remove democratically-elected foreign
leaders that Washington
did not like.
Of course, the US has exported incalculable tons
of “democracy” since
2000. But, as McFaul stated in one of his many recent tweets, although the US "invaded
Iraq, bombed Libya,
intervened militarily and gave military assistance to Syrians,"the
term "meddling" was
not the right word to describe those actions. So please be advised.
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