That the CIA maintains a sustained and concerted effort to put out news stories to its liking and also to disrupt legitimate stories is no surprise. Essentially this network has to be in place in the event they need it. In the meantime they use it to disrupt potentially embarrassing lines of inquiry.
That includes knocking down legitimate investigations with false labeling.
Obviously this can be abused politically as well. It needs powerful supervision.
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The Major Purveyor of ‘Fake News’ is the CIA-Corporate Complex
By Wayne Madsen
28 November 2016
http://www.strategic-culture.org/news/2016/11/28/major-purveyor-fake-news-cia-corporate-complex.html
The US corporate media, its strings pulled by the modern version
of the Central Intelligence Agency’s old Operation MOCKINGBIRD media
influencing operation, is laughably accusing Russia of generating «fake
news» to influence the outcome of the American presidential election. In
a November 24, 2016, article in the CIA-connected Washington Post,
reporter Craig Timberg reported:
«Russia’s increasingly sophisticated
propaganda machinery — including thousands of botnets, teams of paid
human ‘trolls,’ and networks of websites and social-media accounts —
echoed and amplified right-wing sites across the Internet as they
portrayed Clinton as a criminal hiding potentially fatal health problems
and preparing to hand control of the nation to a shadowy cabal of
global financiers». The Post’s article is worthy of the CIA-generated
propaganda spun by the paper at the height of the Cold War-era
MOCKINGBIRD.
Contrary to what the Post reported about right-wing accounts of
Hillary Clinton’s ties to «a shadowy cabal of global financiers, the
vanquished Democratic presidential nominee and her husband, via the
slush fund known as the Clinton Foundation, was
closely linked to a variety of «shadowy global financiers», including
those who serve as executives of Goldman Sachs and J P Morgan Chase. The
Clinton cabal was more at home in the gatherings of the secretive
syndicates of the Bilderberg Group, Bohemian Club, and the Council on
Foreign Relations than they were at labor union and student meetings.
The Post was clearly fed its poorly-sourced and anecdotal-based
article on Russian «fake news» by the usual suspects of Russia-bashers
and CIA mouthpieces, including The Daily Beast; former US ambassador to
Moscow Michael McFaul; Rand Corporation; George Washington University’s
Elliott School of International Affairs; the Foreign Policy Research
Institute in Philadelphia; and a website called «PropOrNot.com» or «Is
It Propaganda Or Not?», which is linked not only to George Soros-funded
anti-Russia websites but also to conveyors of CIA disinformation like
Snopes.com. The Post article is nothing more than an advertisement for
PropOrNot.com, which bills itself as a «Propaganda Identification
Service, since 2016».
The media influencing operation targeting Russia appears to be an
outgrowth of the US State Department’s Counter-Information Team of the
Bureau of International Information Programs. The team, established
under the George W. Bush administration, was a resurrection of the Cold
War-era US Information Agency’s (USIA) Bureau of Information, which was
designed to counter «Soviet» disinformation. The truth of the matter was
that many of the news reports from TASS, Radio Moscow, and Novosti,
branded as «Soviet disinformation» by USIA, were, in fact, truthful
reports on CIA covert operations, including political assassinations,
biological warfare, and weapons and narcotics smuggling. Today, the
media mouthpieces for the CIA and Soros replace Soviet-era media outlets
as their main targets for derision with RT television and Sputnik News.
In 2013, Amazon signed a $600 million contract with the CIA to provide cloud computing services to the agency. Amazon’s owner, Jeff Bezos, also happens to own The Washington Post.
Considering the long close relationship between the newspaper and the
CIA, the Post is the last media outlet that should be writing about fake
news. In 1981, the Post published a fake news story about a 7-year old
heroin addict named «Jimmy». Not only was the story fake, but
the Post’s assistant managing editor, Bob Woodward of Watergate infamy,
submitted the fake Jimmy story to the Pulitzer Prize award committee.
The Post reporter who wrote the piece, Janet Cooke, did receive a
Pulitzer but had to return it after the story was deemed to be fake.
Cooke was fired by the paper but Woodward, a longtime US intelligence
mouthpiece, kept his job. So much for The Washington Post and fake news.
In its piece on «fake news», the Post linked to a «blacklist» of
alleged «fake news sites» maintained by the mysterious PropOrNot.com. A
November 25, 2016, article in Fortune magazine by Mathew Ingram
rightfully criticized the Post’s reliance on PropOrNot.com for its
story. Ingram wrote: «PropOrNot’s Twitter account, which tweets and
retweets anti-Russian sentiments from a variety of sources, has only
existed since August of this year. And an article announcing the launch
of the group on its website is dated last month».
It is very likely that PropOrNot.com is a creation of The Washington Post’s cloud
computing business partner, the CIA. PropOrNot.com calls itself a group
of «concerned American citizens with a wide range of backgrounds and
expertise, including professional experience in computer science,
statistics, public policy, and national security affairs». There are
more than enough CIA employees who possess such «professional
experience».
PropOrNot.com published a list that would make disgraced Senator
Joseph McCarthy, the purveyor of «red lists» of Communists in the 1950s,
very proud. PropOrNot.com lists 200 sites, which it claims are «routine
peddlers of Russian propaganda». On the list are Strategic
Culture.org, globalresearch.ca, drudgereport.com, counterpunch.com,
wikileaks.com, wikileaks.org, wikispooks.com. zerohedge.com, and
truthdig.com. RT.comand Sputniknews.com also appear on the list. Not on the list are media outlets that have notoriously engaged in fake news reporting. These include The New York Times, USA Today, NBC News, CBS News, The New Republic, CNN, and the Atlanta Journal-Constitution.
Outrageously, the blacklist includes USSLIBERTYVETERANS.org, a
website maintained by survivors of the willful and unprovoked 1967
Israeli air and naval attack on the US intelligence ship «USS Liberty»
in the eastern Mediterranean. The attack killed 34 American Navy sailors
and intelligence personnel and the website, in part, is dedicated to
their memory. The inclusion of the Liberty veterans’ website strongly
suggests the involvement of pro-Israeli shills, all neoconservatives,
who nest within a number non-profit think tanks in Washington, DC and
may be associated with PropOrNot.com.
The inclusion of some white nationalist «hate sites» on the
PropOrNot.com list is reminiscent of the tactics of the misnamed
«Southern Poverty Law Center» (SPLC) in Montgomery, Alabama. The center
is neither «Southern» or suffering from poverty since it has $175
million in the bank and owns two buildings in Montgomery, both of which
have been dubbed by critics as «Poverty Palaces». The Washington
Post often quotes SPLC officials in attacking president-elect Donald
Trump and his advisers.
PropOrNot.com utilizes a very subjective methodology to come up with
its black list: «it does not matter whether the sites listed here are
being knowingly directed and paid by Russian intelligence officers, or
whether they even knew they were echoing Russian propaganda at any
particular point: If they meet these criteria, they are at the very
least acting as bona-fide ‘useful idiots’ of the Russian intelligence
services, and are worthy of further scrutiny». And who does PropOrNot.com propose
for placing other websites on its blacklist and putting them under
«further scrutiny?» Perhaps they want the CIA, National Security Agency,
Federal Bureau of Investigation, or US Cyber Command to engage in
harassment in violation of the First Amendment of the US Constitution.
Other alleged «Russian propaganda» websites included on the blacklist are infowars.com,
intrepidreport.com, intellihub.com, informationclearinghouse.info,
corbettreport.com, moonofalabama.org, floridasunpost.com, opednews.com,
oilgeopolitics.com, gatesofvienna.net, blackagendareport.com,
mintpressnews.com, ahtribune.com, thefreethoughtproject.com,
consortiumnews.com, washingtonsblog.com, asia-pacificresearch.com,
filmsforaction.com (which advances the rights of Native Americans), thirdworldtraveler.com, and activistpost.com.
Many of the blacklisted websites have something in common: they
supported Trump for president. The Washington Post heartily endorsed
Hillary Clinton for president, which makes the blacklist appear to be,
in part, nothing more than sour grapes on the part of the Post and its
unnamed «experts» working for PropOrNot.com.
PropOrNot.com also managed to salt its list with a few obvious fake news websites, including www.superstation95.com,
which purports to be a New York FM radio station; baltimoregazette.com;
and veteranstoday.com. This has the effect of tarnishing the legitimate
sites on the list by associating them with fabulists and
cyber-grifters.
Two members of the Ronald Reagan administration, Director of the Office of Management and Budget David Stockman (davidstockmanscontracorner.com) and Assistant Secretary of the Treasury for Economic Policy Paul Craig Roberts (paulcraigroberts.org) find their websites on the blacklist. Also blacklisted is former Republican presidential candidate Ron Paul (ronpaulinstitute.org).
The blacklist highlighted by The Washington Post appears to be more
of a censorship target list developed for the not-to-be Hillary Clinton
administration. For the Post to engage in blacklisting other press
outlets merely because it does not care for their news content is
shameful beyond belief. If any outlet should be ordered to cease its
operations for not acting in the public interest, it is The Washington
Post for grossly distorting the news and misleading the public from the
end of World War II to the present day.
If one wants «fake news» the intelligence-corporate complex is the
place to go. From corporate media reports about bogus Iraqi weapons of
mass destruction and the Pentagon’s hiring of British public relations
firm Bell Pottinger to create fake news stories about terrorist attacks
in Iraq to the use of a group called the «White Helmets» that pumps out
fake stories regarding the Syrian government, the corporate media is
full of «fake news» fed to it by an omnipresent US intelligence-run
psychological warfare infrastructure.
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