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Resistance See other Resistance Articles Title: Down the Memory Hole: NYT Erases CIA’s Efforts to Overthrow Syria’s Government The New York Times depicts a sad Obama to accompany its story claiming that he trained Syrian rebels against his better judgment. (photo: Manuel Balce Ceneta/AP) FAIR has noted before how Americas well-documented clandestine activities in Syria have been routinely ignored when the corporate media discuss the Obama administrations hands-off approach to the four-and-a-half-year-long conflict. This past week, two piecesone in the New York Times detailing the finger pointing over Obamas failed Syria policy, and a Vox explainer of the Syrian civil wardid one better: They didnt just omit the fact that the CIA has been arming, training and funding rebels since 2012, they heavily implied they had never done so. First, lets establish what we do know. Based on multiple reports over the past three-and-a-half years, we know that the Central Intelligence Agency set up a secret program of arming, funding and training anti-Assad forces. This has been reported by major outlets, including the New York Times, The Guardian, Der Spiegel and, most recently, the Washington Post, whichpartly thanks to the Snowden revelationsdetailed a program that trained approximately 10,000 rebel fighters at a cost of $1 billion a year, or roughly 1/15th of the CIAs official annual budget. In addition to the CIAs efforts, there is a much more scrutinized and far more publicized program by the Department of Defense to train moderate rebels, of which only a few dozen actually saw battle. The Pentagon program, which began earlier this year and is charged with fighting ISIS (rather than Syrian government forces), is separate from the covert CIA operation. It has, by all accounts, been an abysmal failure. One thing the DoDs rebel training program hasnt been a failure at, however, is helping credulous reporters rewrite history by treating the Pentagon program as the only US effort to train Syrian rebelsnow or in the past. As the USs strategy in Syria is publicly debated, the CIAs years-long program has vanished from many popular accounts, giving the average reader the impression the US has sat idly by while foreign actors, Iranian and Russian, have interfered in the internal matters of Syria. While the White House, Congress and the Pentagon cant legally acknowledge the CIA training program, because its still technically classified, theres little reason why our media need to entertain a similar charade. Lets start with Peter Bakers New York Times piece from September 17 and some of its improbable claims: Finger-Pointing, but Few Answers, After a Syria Solution Fails By any measure, President Obamas effort to train a Syrian opposition army to fight the Islamic State on the ground has been an abysmal failure. The military acknowledged this week that just four or five American-trained fighters are actually fighting. Notice the sleight-of-hand. There may only be four or five American-trained fighters
fighting expressly against ISIS, but there is no doubt thousands more American-trained fighters are fighting in Syria. The DoDs statement is manifestly false, but because the New York Times is simply quoting the militarywhich, again, cannot not legally acknowledge the CIA programit is left entirely unchallenged. This is the worst type of officials say journalism. The premise, while ostensibly critical of US foreign policy, is actually helping advance its larger goal of rewriting US involvement in the Syrian civil war. A four-year-long deliberate strategy of backing anti-Assad forceswhich has helped fuel the bloody civil war and paved the way for the rise of ISISis reduced to a cheesy bumbling bureaucrat narrative. Baker went on: But the White House says it is not to blame. The finger, it says, should be pointed not at Mr. Obama but at those who pressed him to attempt training Syrian rebels in the first place a group that, in addition to congressional Republicans, happened to include former Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton. At briefings this week after the disclosure of the paltry results, Josh Earnest, the White House press secretary, repeatedly noted that Mr. Obama always had been a skeptic of training Syrian rebels. The military was correct in concluding that this was a more difficult endeavor than we assumed and that we need to make some changes to that program, Mr. Earnest said. But I think its also time for our critics to fess up in this regard as well. They were wrong. In effect, Mr. Obama is arguing that he reluctantly went along with those who said it was the way to combat the Islamic State, but that he never wanted to do it and has now has been vindicated in his original judgment. The I-told-you-so argument, of course, assumes that the idea of training rebels itself was flawed and not that it was started too late and executed ineffectively, as critics maintain. The sleight-of-hand continues: The article presents the training of rebels as a way to combat the Islamic State, but repeatedly speaks in general of training Syrian rebels as something Obama always had been a skeptic ofwhich flies in the face of the fact that he did so, to the tune of $1 billion a year over four years, with 10,000 rebels trained. But the piece goes on to make clear that when its talking about training Syrian rebels, its referring not only to the anti-ISIS program but to efforts to overthrow Syrias government as well: The idea of bolstering Syrian rebels was debated from the early days of the civil war, which started in 2011. Mrs. Clinton, along with David H. Petraeus, then the CIA director, and Leon E. Panetta, then the Defense secretary, supported arming opposition forces, but the president worried about deep entanglement in someone elses war after the bloody experience in Iraq. In 2014, however, after the Islamic State had swept through parts of Syria and Iraq, Mr. Obama reversed course and initiated a $500 million program to train and arm rebels who had been vetted and were told to fight the Islamic State, not Mr. Assads government. This is outright false. These two paragraphs, while cleverly parsed, give the reader the impression Obama parted with the CIA and Mrs. Clinton on arming opposition forces, only to reverse course in 2014. But the president never reversed course, because he did exactly what Panetta, Petraeus and Clinton urged him to do: He armed the opposition. Once again, the Pentagons Keystone Kop plan is being passed off by journalists who should know better as the beginning and end of American involvement in the Syrian rebellion. Nowhere in this report is the CIAs plan mentioned at all. The whitewashing would get even worse: Some Syrian rebels who asked for American arms in 2011 and 2012 eventually gave up and allied themselves with more radical groups, analysts said, leaving fewer fighters who were friendly to the United States. But the US did get arms to Syrian rebels in 2012. In fact, Bakers own publication reported this fact in 2012 (6/21/12): CIA Said to Aid in Steering Arms to Syrian Opposition Indeed, according to a rather detailed New York Times infographic from 2013 (3/23/13), shipments began, at the latest, in January 2012: Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 1.
#1. To: Ada (#0)
The JYT covers certain subjects, and "covers" others.
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