http://www.chroniclesmagazine.org/News/Trifkovic/NewsViews.htm

February 7, 2005

U.S. PAID SCRIBES FOR BALKAN WEBSITE
by Srdja Trifkovic

During the Cold War the U.S. Government subsidized cultural institutions,
activities, and publications that were deemed useful to its objectives. The
Central Intelligence Agency thus ran the Congress for Cultural Freedom (CCF)
that published the Encounter. The cloak-and-dagger stories of spooks
dropping brown envelopes filled with cash on Melvin Lasky's cluttered desk
seems almost endearingly quaint in these post-modern times of ours, however,
with literally hundreds of "NGOs" of all shapes and sizes eager to do their
paymasters' bidding in Kiev, Tbilisi and Belgrade.

It is therefore with some surprise that we learn that the Pentagon's chief
investigator is looking into the U.S. military's practice of paying
journalists to write articles and commentary for a website aimed at
influencing public opinion in the Balkans. According to the AP, the
Pentagon's inspector general, Joseph Schmitz, is reviewing the case at the
request of Lawrence T. Di Rita, chief spokesman for Defense Secretary Donald
H. Rumsfeld. He is also looking more broadly at Pentagon activities that
might involve inappropriate payments to journalists.Pentagon sources say
that the Web project was developed in close coordination with the State
Department.

The Balkans Web site, called Southeast European Times has no immediately
obvious connection to the U.S. government but contains a linked disclaimer
that says that it is sponsored by the U.S. Department of Defense "in support
of the U.N. Security Council Resolution 1244" which ostensibly ended the
Kosovo war in 1999. It has articles and commentary by some fifty journalists
and commentators who are paid by European Command through a private
contractor, Anteon Corp., an information technology company based in
Fairfax, VA.

The Web site is theoretically an example of what the military calls
"information operations"—programs designed to influence public opinion by
countering what the Pentagon considers to be misinformation or lies that
circulate in the target country's news media. Balkantimes.com grew out of
the Clinton-led NATO air war against Serbia in 1999, and sought to counter
what the clintonites called a "Serb propaganda machine" that made effective
use of the Internet. Pentagon sourced say that "information warfare experts"
at European Command do not edit the articles written by contributing
journalists for Southeast European Times, but they review the articles after
they are processed by Anteon editors, and they sometimes change the
headlines.

The trouble with this Southeast European Times is not that it is government
propaganda, but that it is (a) unbelievably bad propaganda, and (b) totally
unnecessary. It is bad (intrinsically, as well as from the standpoint of its
originators' presumed objectives) because it is bland, unimaginative,
boring, predictable, devoid of a single interesting or original idea, mostly
reliant on wire report compilations, and (judging by the Serbian/Croatian
"original" output), poorly written to the point of being semi-literate.

The Pentagon effort is also quite unnecessary because the "pro-Western" view
of post-Yugoslav politics is now largely dominant in the domestic media of
the successor states. In Serbia it is eagerly purveyed by the Soros-financed
or controlled dailies such as Danas ("Today") , the weekly news-magazine
Vreme ("Times") and the radio-TV conglomerate B-92. This view rests on one
basic and several secondary assumptions. The basic assumption of all is that
the Serbs are the chief culprits for everything bad that happened in the
Balkans since at least 1991. The secondary ones are that every ex-Yugoslav
entity must cooperate unconditionally with The Hague War Crimes Tribunal,
that a "multi-ethnic" Bosnia is one of the crowning glories of the
"international community," that Kosovo is on the way to achieving similar
standards, etc, etc, ad nauseam. As has been noted in these pages some
months ago,

"These new janissaries, just like those of the Ottoman army of old, have to
prove their credentials by being more zealous than the master himself; as
the Balkan proverb has it, 'a convert is worse than a Turk.' Nobody is more
insanely vehement in his insults against the Serbian people and their
history, religion, art, and suffering than a dozen Serb-born columnists who
are on [their] payroll . . . "

They invariably parrot the post-modern "Western" views and ambitions. Those
media outlets have a tough job of selling The Hague Tribunal and other bad
and inherently absurd notions to the Serbian public, but they have to try in
order to earn their upkeep. They are doing their propaganda work
professionally and, thanks to an abundance of funds, they have attracted a
number of journalists and other media professional ready to sell their body
and soul to the highest bidder. The Pentagon's Southeast European Times
looks, reads and feels ridiculously amateurish, or, worse still,
diletante-ish by comparison.

Back in the Encounter days the CIA set editorial policy, presumably
excluding articles inconvenient to its political agenda. Direct intervention
was infrequent, however, because it had its "trusties" in the editorial
saddle, and, in any case, the non-communist intelligentsia shared the
political and cultural assumptions of "the West" and operated unbidden
within the boundaries of "Western" opinion. Today, however, the
post-national intelligentsia of the post-communist East needs no tight
supervision as it knows what is required. The recent engineering of Viktor
Yushchenko's victory in the Ukraine illustrates the point: the
U.S.-sponsored "Community of Democracies" was an effective conveyor-belt for
a multi-million-dollar campaign of propaganda and disinformation
underwritten and supported by the State Department. It has a symbiotic
relationship with dozens of NGOs through which Washington promotes
"democracy" in foreign countries—meaning people, parties and causes favored
by the leftist foreign policy bureaucracy inherited from Clinton. These NGOs
(see this list) include the Open Society Institute , a few creatures of the
National Endowment for Democracy (e.g., http://www.wmd.org) and numerous
Soros spin-offs (e.g., http://www.demcoalition.org/html/home.html). CD is
itself handing out U.S. taxpayers' money to these NGOs, and even had
advertized a solicitation in the run-up to the show in Kiev.

The Pentagon's silly and wasteful Southeast European Times shows yet again
that governments are invariably worse than the private sector in delivering
a professional service at a reasonable price, when it comes to disseminating
propaganda to the Balkans no less than, say, assassinating Castro,
maintaining a viable Social Security program, or providing a decent
education to American children.




                                   Serbian News Network - SNN

                                        news@antic.org

                                    http://www.antic.org/

Reply via email to