The U.S.media’s Ukraine bias has been obvious, siding with the Kiev regime and bashing ethnic Russian rebels and Russia’s President Putin. But now – with the scramble to blame Putin for the Malaysia Airlines shoot-down – the shoddy journalism has grown truly dangerous, says Robert Parry.
In the heat of the U.S. media’s latest war hysteria – rushing to pin blame for the crash of a Malaysia Airlines passenger jet on Russia’s President Vladimir Putin – there is the same absence of professional skepticism that has marked similar stampedes on Iraq, Syria and elsewhere – with key questions not being asked or answered.
The dog-not-barking question on the catastrophe over Ukraine is: what did the U.S. surveillance satellite imagery show? It’s hard to believe that – with the attention that U.S. intelligence has concentrated on eastern Ukraine for the past half year that the alleged trucking of several large Buk anti-aircraft missile systems from Russia to Ukraine and then back to Russia didn’t show up somewhere.
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that is such an excellent question - one that I asked myself during the six-month delay between going to the UN before going into Iraq. All that time to truck stuff out to Syria... surely that was caught on satellite as well as me cooking hotdogs in my backyard for the mujahedeen.
ReplyDeleteme cooking hotdogs in my backyard for the mujahedeen.
DeleteI knew something was wrong......:)
But, satellite images did show up of Buk anti-aircraft going from
ReplyDeleteUkraine towards Eastern Ukraine. Always the subterfuge by the gang.
Smells rotten as with everything else in this administration.
Delete