Friday, August 30, 2013

Syria War Suck-Ups & Spies, Reuters Runs 26 Grafs for War, 2 Graf Response, After Attacking Smaller Press at UN


By Matthew Russell Lee

UNITED NATIONS, August 30 -- Amid the drum beat on Syria, Reuters hit a new low on Friday with 26 paragraphs from the UN channeling the US and Western view of bombing Syria, followed by a separate piece with two paragraphs of Syria's response. Call it the unfairness doctrine.

  Before quoting from the stories and naming their authors, it must be noted that Reuters' UN bureau has been shown to SPY for the UN, click here, and that Reuters executives when sent the documentation did nothing. Meanwhile they accept largely withheld evidence the US says it has, and allow unnamed "UN diplomats" to say the UN is too slow, the US should just bomb. Call it quid pro quo.

  On the 26 paragraph Reuters piece with unnamed pro-war spin, here, the author is Louis Charbonneau, shown to spy for the UN; among the reporting credits is one who assisted in this and worse.

  On the two paragraph "Syria responses" story, here, the lead credit is Mariam Karouny. Small media Inner City Press, which Reuters tried to get thrown out of the UN, interviewed Syria's Ambassador Bashar Ja'afari exclusively on Friday and ran a story, here, which can be supplemented.
   Earlier in the week much was made of the Syrian government's delay in granting the UN's request for its chemical weapons inspection team to visit al Ghouta.
Inner City Press asked UN spokesperson Farhan Haq at Tuesday's noon briefing when it was that the UN formally requested access to al Ghouta -- on Saturday, August 24 or before? Video here, from Minute 12. Video with captions, on Inner City Press YouTube channel, here and embedded below, with transcript.
Haq read out a press statement from August 22, in which Secretary General Ban Ki-moon said a request is being sent. Then, Haq said, Ban's High Representative on Disarmament Angela Kane "stepped forward with the request" -- on August 24, Saturday.
It was granted the next day.
Inner City Press asked again, was there any formal request by the UN other than Ban's press statement, before August 24? Haq called this "semantics." But when Inner City Press asked Ban's spokespeople to respond to widely circulated press releases about a request being made to Ban, the UN says the actual formal request had not been received yet, and so: no comment. Why should the UN say it must be different for Syria?
How could the UN be so sloppy? Or was it sloppy?

  While the delay to Sunday (or Monday, when the team got out and said, if this YouTube video on which Haq declined comment when Inner City Press asked is not false, that they are not even looking at what type of munition was used in part because they didn't want to put it in their white UN 4 by 4) is now an element in the case for missile strikes, the UN didn't formally ASK until Saturday, in the person of Angela Kane
   Inner City Press covered Kane when she was head of Ban's Department of Management, including an investigation by the UN Office of Internal Oversight Services for favoritism in the UN's so-called UMOJA computer management system.
  When Japan's Yukio Takasu returned after a pause from being his country's Ambassador to the UN to take over Kane's job, Kane's native Germany lobbied for her to get another top UN job. She was offered one in Lebanon, as Inner City Press reported, but did not want it. So she "got" Disarmament.
  So the fact that Germany has expressed a willingness to join a coalition to strike Syria, without UN Security Council approval, and the Germany's Angela Kane's role in the "UN's" chemical weapons inspection team should be noted.
  But by most media covering the UN, it is not. When Inner City Press even mentions Ladsous' and UN Peacekeeping's French connection, Ladsous refuses to answer questions, and some media, including the French wire service Agence France Presse on one of whose management boards Ladsous served, have even filed complaints with the UN against Inner City Press. 
  This is dysfunction, and is now being countered by the Free UN Coalition for Access@FUNCA_info.
  Another major wire service, Reuters, joined in the second of AFP's complaints. On August 26 Reuters based a piece essentially selling or planning for the legality of military strikes on Syria without Security Council or even General Assembly approval around, as lead, a comment by the Council on Foreign Relations' Richard Haass.
  But on that CFR call, as noted by Inner City Press, wasJudith Miller. Given her role during the lead up to the US intervention in Iraq, one might think this would have been included in an overly-long rehash story. But no. 
 Notably, Reuters' UN bureau has been shown to have spied for the UN, handing over an internal anti-Press document of the UN Correspondents Association (which under 2013 president Pamela Falk of CBS hosted Syrian rebel Jarba for what it called a "UN briefing") to UN official Stephane Dujarric. Story hereaudio heredocument here.
This beat just goes on. Watch this site.