medialens | There are always convenient news-hooks on which corporate journalists
can hang their power-friendly prejudices about the West being 'the good guys'
in world affairs. Channel 4 News is not immune from this chauvinism.
For example, Matt Frei introduced a report about last month's elections
in Iraq with this propaganda bullet:
'Now, America once invaded Iraq so that, in large part, Iraqis could do what they did today – go to the polls.' (Channel 4 News, April 30, 2014)
Frei was, in fact, diligently reading out the first line of a blog piece by his colleague Jonathan Rugman, C4 News foreign affairs correspondent. The actual overriding reason
for the West's war of aggression – strategic geopolitical dominance,
including control of valuable hydrocarbon resources in the Middle East –
was simply brushed aside. As ever, 'we' must be seen to be acting out
of benign intent and pure desire to bring democracy to people around the
globe. The reality is that 'we' must stifle other countries'
independent development and, if required, bomb them into submission to
Western state-corporate hegemony.
Frei acting as a mouthpiece to Rugman's bizarrely skewed perspective
on the Iraq War was yet another case of sticking to the editorial line
from the C4 News 'team you know and trust'.
When we asked C4 News correspondent Alex Thomson whether he agreed with
this particular editorial monstrosity from his team he ducked out:
'whoah - I'm surfing right now and staying well out of this one!'
To be fair to Thomson, that was his jovial way of not defending his colleagues. He knows we know, and we know he knows we know, where his sympathies lie on that one.
Whereas Thomson has enough savvy to see behind much US-UK government
rhetoric, he is aware that he must rein in any expressed scepticism to
hang on to his job. As a general rule, journalists in the public eye are
constrained to direct scepticism in one direction only: towards the
propaganda output of officially declared enemies.
Thus, BBC Moscow correspondent Steve Rosenberg was free to make this observation via Twitter:
'Dominating the Russian airwaves, Moscow's lexicon for the Ukraine conflict: "junta", "fascists", "Banderovtsy", "genocide", "extremists"'
That's fine. But when has Rosenberg, or any of his colleagues, ever
highlighted how 'our' airwaves are dominated by 'London's lexicon' and
'Washington's lexicon'? Why is it the job of a supposedly impartial BBC
journalist to expose 'Moscow's lexicon', but not that emanating from
London or Washington? Rosenberg ignored us when we asked him those questions on Twitter.
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