The Lies of our (Financial) Times Precipitated
Catastrophic Political and Economic Losses
By James Petras
Al-Jazeerah, CCUN,
October 11, 2018
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Introduction
The leading financial publications have misled their political and
investor
subscribers of emerging crises and military defeats which
have precipitated catastrophic
political and economic losses.
The most egregious example is the Financial Times (FT) a publication
which is
widely read by the business and financial elite.
In this essay we will proceed by outlining the larger political
context that sets the
framework for the transformation of the FT
from a relatively objective purveyor of world
news into a propagator
of wars and failed economic policies.
In part two we will discuss several case studies which illustrate the
dramatic shifts
from a prudent business publication to a rabid
military advocate, from a well-researched
analyst of economic
policies to an ideologue of the worst speculative investors.
The decay of the quality of its reportage is accompanied by the
bastardization of
language. Concepts are distorted; meanings are
emptied of their cognitive sense; and
vitriol covers crimes and
misdemeanors.
We will conclude by discussing how and why the ‘respectable’ media
have
affected real world political and market outcomes for citizens
and investors.
Political and Economic Context
The decay of the FT cannot be separated from the global political and
economic
transformations in which it publishes and circulates. The
demise of the Soviet Union, the
pillage of Russia’s economy
throughout the 1990’s and the US declaration of a unipolar
world
were celebrated by the FT as great success stories for ‘western values’.
The US
and EU annexation of Eastern Europe, the Balkan and Baltic
states led to the deep
corruption and decay of journalistic
narratives.
The FT willing embraced every violation of the Gorbachev-Reagan
agreements
and NATO’s march to the borders of Russia. The
militarization of US foreign policy was
accompanied by the FT
conversion to a military interpreter of what it dubbed the
‘transition to democratization’.
The language of
the FT reportage combined democratic rhetoric with an embrace
of
military practices. This became the hallmark for all future coverage and
editorializing.
The FT military policies extended from Europe to the
Middle East, the Caucasus, North
Africa and the Gulf States.
The FT joined the yellow press in describing military power grabs,
including the
overthrow of political adversaries, as ‘transitions to
democracy’ and the creation of ‘open
societies’.
The unanimity of the liberal and rightwing publications in support of
western
imperialism precluded any understanding of the enormous
political and economic costs
which ensued.
To protect itself
from its most egregious ideological foibles, the FT included
‘insurance clauses’, to cover for catastrophic authoritarian outcomes.
For example they
advised western political leaders to promote
military interventions and, by the way ,with
‘democratic
transitions’.
When it became evident that US-NATO wars did not lead to happy
endings but
turned into prolonged insurgencies, or when western
clients turned into corrupt tyrants,
the FT claimed that this was
not what they meant by a ‘democratic transition’ – this was
not
their version of “free markets and free votes”.
The Financial and Military Times (?)
The militarization of the FT led it to embrace a military definition
of political
reality. The human and especially the economic costs,
the lost markets, investments and
resources were subordinated to the
military outcomes of ‘wars against terrorism’ and
‘Russian
authoritarianism’.
Each and every Financial Times report and editorial promoting western
military
interventions over the past two decades, resulted in large
scale, long-term economic
losses.
The FT supported the US war against Iraq which led
to the ending of important
billion-dollar oil deals (oil for food)
signed off with President Saddam Hussein. The
subsequent US
occupation precluded a subsequent revival of the oil industry. The US
appointed client regime pillaged the multi-billion dollar
reconstruction programs –
costing US and EU taxpayers and depriving
Iraqis of basic necessities.
Insurgent militias, including ISIS,
gained control over half the country and
precluded the entry of any
new investment.
The US and FT backed western client regimes organized rigged election
outcomes and looted the treasury of oil revenues, arousing the wrath
of the population
lacking electricity, potable water and other
necessities.
The FT backed war, occupation and control of Iraq was an unmitigated
disaster.
Similar outcomes resulted from the FT support for the
invasions of Afghanistan,
Libya, Syria and Yemen.
For example the FT propagated the story that the Taliban was
providing sanctuary
for bin Laden’s planning the terror assault in
the US (9/11).
In fact, the Afghan leaders offered to turn over the US suspect, if
they were
offered evidence. Washington rejected the offer, invaded
Kabul and the FT joined the
chorus backing the so-called ‘war on
terrorism which led to an unending , one trillion
dollar war.
Libya signed off to a disarmament and
multi-billion-dollar oil agreement with the
US in 2003. In 2011 the
US and its western allies bombed Libya, murdered Gadhafi,
totally
destroyed civil society and undermined the US/EU oil agreements. The FT
backed the war but decried the outcome. The FT followed a familiar
ploy; promoting
military invasions and then, after the fact,
criticizing the economic disasters.
The FT led the media charge
in favor of the western proxy war against Syria:
savaging the
legitimate government and praising the mercenary terrorists, which it
dubbed ‘rebels’ and ‘militants’ – dubious terms for US and EU
financed operatives.
Millions of refugees, resulting from western
wars in Libya, Syria, Afghanistan
and Iraq fled to Europe seeking
refuge. FT described the imperial holocaust – the
‘dilemmas of
Europe’.
The FT bemoaned the rise of the anti-immigrant parties but never
assumed responsibility for the wars which forced the millions to flee to
the west.
The FT columnists prattle about ‘western values’ and
criticize the ‘far right’ but
abjured any sustained attack of
Israel’s daily massacre of Palestinians. Instead readers
get a dose
of weekly puff pieces concerning Israeli politics with nary a mention of
Zionist
power over US foreign policy.
FT: Sanctions, Plots and Crises: Russia, China and Iran
The FT like all the prestigious media propaganda sheets have taken a
leading role
in US conflicts with Russia, China and Iran.
For years the scribes in the FT stable have discovered (or invented)
“crises” in
China’s economy- always on the verge of economic
doomsday. Contrary to the FT ,
China has been growing at four times
the rate of the US; ignoring the critics it built a
global
infrastructure system instead of the multi-wars backed by the journalist
war
mongers.
When China innovates the FT harps on techno
theft, ignoring US economic
decline.
The FT boasts it writes “without fear and without favor” which
translates into serving
imperial powers voluntarily.
When the US sanctions China we are told by the FT that Washington is
correcting
China’s abusive statist policies. Because China does not
impose military outposts to
match the eight hundred US military
bases on five continents, the FT invents what it calls
‘debt
colonialism” apparently describing Beijing’s financing large-scale
productive
infrastructure projects.
The perverse logic of the FT extends to Russia..To cover up for the
US financed
coup in the Ukraine it converted a separatist movement
in Donbass into a Russian land
grab. In the same way a free election
in Crimea is described as Kremlin annexation.
The FT provides the
language of the declining western imperial empires .
Independent, democratic Russia, free of western pillage and electoral
meddling is
labelled “authoritarian”; social welfare which serves to
decrease inequality is denigrated
as ‘populism’ ---linked to the far
right. Without evidence or independent verification, the
FT
fabricates Putinesque poison plots in England and Bashar Assad poison
gas
conspiracies in Syria.
Conclusion
The FT has chosen to adopt a
military line which has led to a long series of
financially
disastrous wars. The FT support of sanctions has cost oil companies
billions
of dollars, euros and pounds The sanctions it has backed
have broken global networks.
The FT has adopted ideological postures
that threaten supply chains between the
West , China, Iran and
Russia. The FT writes in many tongues but it has failed to inform
its financial readers that it bears some responsibility for markets
which are under siege.
There is unquestionably a need to overhaul the
name and purpose of the FT. One
journalist who was close to the
editors suggests it should be called the “Military Times” –
the voice
of a declining empire.
https://petras.lahaine.org/b2-img/PetrasLiesFinancialTimes.pdf
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