Some of the most prominent newspapers across the Western World spent
much of the end of May editing or deleting humiliating headlines and
articles falsely announcing the supposed death of Russian media figure
Arkady Babchenko - who turned up very much alive and well shortly after
the Ukrainian government claimed he was murdered by assassins.
The humiliation suffered across the Western media also stems from the fact that most articles also included preliminary accusations against Russia for the "murder" - a now familiar pattern of assigning immediate and baseless blame, evident after the 2014 downing of Malaysian airliner MH17 and the more recent Skripal affair.
Blame was not limited to the unprofessional and increasingly exposed Western media. The Ukrainian government itself would go as far as directly accusing Russia from the highest levels of political power in Kiev.
The BBC in its article, "Ukraine blames Russia for journalist murder," would note that even Ukraine's prime minster accused Russia of the supposed "murder," stating (emphasis added):
Ukraine's Prime Minister Volodymyr Groysman has accused Russia of being behind the killing in Kiev of the Russian journalist Arkady Babchenko.
"I am confident that the Russian totalitarian machine did not forgive him his honesty and principled stance," the prime minister posted on Facebook. Yet shortly after the announcement of Babchenko's death and as accusations began to mount against Russia - the Ukrainian government announced that his death was staged by Ukrainian security services.
Ukraine's government now claims that the staged murder was in response to an allegedly "genuine" threat to Babchenko's life.
The Guardian would elaborate in their article, "Arkady Babchenko reveals he faked his death to thwart Moscow plot," claiming:
Details of the precise threat to Babchenko’s life were murky. Vasyl Hrytsak, the head of the SBU, said Russia’s spy agencies had contacted a middleman, identified only as G, and paid him $40,000 to arrange the murder. The middleman in turn approached a former Ukrainian volunteer soldier to carry out the hit, together with additional “terrorist acts”, he said.
The middleman was now in custody, Hrytsak said, showing video of a middle-aged, white-haired man being bundled by officers into a van. Hrytsak added that phone intercepts had revealed his contacts in Moscow. Dozens of contract killings had been averted, he suggested, claiming that the list of potential victims in Ukraine stretched to 30 names.
Some Come Up for Air, Others Dive Deeper
Despite Kiev's current crisis of credibility - many members of the Western media still busy editing and deleting humiliating jumps to conclusions - find themselves immediately and unquestioningly accepting the Ukrainian government's explanation - a government who just lied to them about Babchenko's murder in the first place.
Plus, of course, they had finally made the Russians look stupid and themselves look smart. What “chaos”? Who’s a “failure” now? They had convinced the world that Babchenko was dead, pulled off a surprise, caught a criminal. Because the security services are under direct control of the Ukrainian president, they may well have helped him in his coming election campaign, and that may well have been part of the point.
The Babchenko hoax has proven Moscow right on all counts and then some - especially considering the added consequence of exposing the Western media's contempt for facts and its collective rush to baseless, politically convenient conclusions.
It is somewhat ironic that Applebaum also claims in her article that:
Until now, most Western governments have officially avoided the
public trolling and open trickery that the Russians use on a regular
basis. Instead of producing disinformation to counter disinformation,
most mainstream Western journalists have doubled down on facts,
believing that in an increasingly unstable world, they should stick as
far as possible to the truth.
The humiliation suffered across the Western media also stems from the fact that most articles also included preliminary accusations against Russia for the "murder" - a now familiar pattern of assigning immediate and baseless blame, evident after the 2014 downing of Malaysian airliner MH17 and the more recent Skripal affair.
Blame was not limited to the unprofessional and increasingly exposed Western media. The Ukrainian government itself would go as far as directly accusing Russia from the highest levels of political power in Kiev.
The BBC in its article, "Ukraine blames Russia for journalist murder," would note that even Ukraine's prime minster accused Russia of the supposed "murder," stating (emphasis added):
Ukraine's Prime Minister Volodymyr Groysman has accused Russia of being behind the killing in Kiev of the Russian journalist Arkady Babchenko.
"I am confident that the Russian totalitarian machine did not forgive him his honesty and principled stance," the prime minister posted on Facebook. Yet shortly after the announcement of Babchenko's death and as accusations began to mount against Russia - the Ukrainian government announced that his death was staged by Ukrainian security services.
Ukraine's government now claims that the staged murder was in response to an allegedly "genuine" threat to Babchenko's life.
The Guardian would elaborate in their article, "Arkady Babchenko reveals he faked his death to thwart Moscow plot," claiming:
Details of the precise threat to Babchenko’s life were murky. Vasyl Hrytsak, the head of the SBU, said Russia’s spy agencies had contacted a middleman, identified only as G, and paid him $40,000 to arrange the murder. The middleman in turn approached a former Ukrainian volunteer soldier to carry out the hit, together with additional “terrorist acts”, he said.
The middleman was now in custody, Hrytsak said, showing video of a middle-aged, white-haired man being bundled by officers into a van. Hrytsak added that phone intercepts had revealed his contacts in Moscow. Dozens of contract killings had been averted, he suggested, claiming that the list of potential victims in Ukraine stretched to 30 names.
However, the Ukrainian government's claims regarding the
alleged threat to Babchenko's life and the necessity of deceiving to the
entire international community are of course predicated entirely on the
credibility of Kiev - of which it now has none.
Despite Kiev's current crisis of credibility - many members of the Western media still busy editing and deleting humiliating jumps to conclusions - find themselves immediately and unquestioningly accepting the Ukrainian government's explanation - a government who just lied to them about Babchenko's murder in the first place.
Like a deep sea diver whose air tanks have run out - some have sensibly
rushed to the surface - denouncing Ukraine's antics as deceitful,
dangerous, and self-defeating. Others - however - are inexplicably
diving deeper in the belief that an alternative source of air exists
somewhere in the abyss of lies below now being constructed to defend
Kiev's actions and the Western media's reaction to them.
One example comes from Washington Post's Anne Applebaum in her article
titled, "Ukraine's government just faked a journalist's death. Will it
be worth the cost?" It claims:
Babchenko was not dead. His murder had been staged in order to catch a
contract killer who had been paid $40,000 to assassinate him and who
was planning to kill others. Babchenko walked into the room. People
cheered. The security services gloated: They had, they said, used the
fake murder to catch the middleman who paid the would-be assassin.Plus, of course, they had finally made the Russians look stupid and themselves look smart. What “chaos”? Who’s a “failure” now? They had convinced the world that Babchenko was dead, pulled off a surprise, caught a criminal. Because the security services are under direct control of the Ukrainian president, they may well have helped him in his coming election campaign, and that may well have been part of the point.
Applebaum never fully explains how the Ukrainian operation made "Russians look stupid."
Over the years following a US-organized putsch to seize power in Kiev, Russia has consistently maintained that the Ukrainian government is deceitful, untrustworthy, and illegitimate in the way it seized and now maintains power in Ukraine.
Over the years following a US-organized putsch to seize power in Kiev, Russia has consistently maintained that the Ukrainian government is deceitful, untrustworthy, and illegitimate in the way it seized and now maintains power in Ukraine.
The Babchenko hoax has proven Moscow right on all counts and then some - especially considering the added consequence of exposing the Western media's contempt for facts and its collective rush to baseless, politically convenient conclusions.
It is somewhat ironic that Applebaum also claims in her article that:
Yet the entire exercise Applebaum claimed on social media, "outplayed Putin at his own game,"
proved definitively that Western "journalists" are entirely indifferent
to facts. Even as it was revealed that the murder was staged and that
Kiev was guilty of deceiving the international community - "journalists"
like Applebaum continue to remain indifferent.
And as members of the Western media like Applebaum dive deeper in into
the abyss of lies and the same pattern of unprofessional conduct that
teed most of the Western media up for this unprecedented humiliation in
the first place - this final point regarding the Western media's lack of
credibility is driven home even further.
What Was Kiev Thinking?
The full story regarding the Babchenko hoax is still unfolding. Had the hoax not been revealed, and Babchenko hidden away - it is likely the same scenarios that unfolded after the downing of MH17 and following the more recent Skripal affair would have been repeated once again.
There would have been sustained accusations and condemnation of Russia - the implementation of further sanctions, the further justification of NATO expansion along Russia's borders, and further pressure placed upon Russian positions in Syria.
The unraveling of the Babchenko hoax so far remains unexplained. Kiev's explanation is both implausible and lacks any credibility considering Kiev just intentionally lied to the international community. Was it a botched, staged provocation? Or something else?
The full story regarding the Babchenko hoax is still unfolding. Had the hoax not been revealed, and Babchenko hidden away - it is likely the same scenarios that unfolded after the downing of MH17 and following the more recent Skripal affair would have been repeated once again.
There would have been sustained accusations and condemnation of Russia - the implementation of further sanctions, the further justification of NATO expansion along Russia's borders, and further pressure placed upon Russian positions in Syria.
The unraveling of the Babchenko hoax so far remains unexplained. Kiev's explanation is both implausible and lacks any credibility considering Kiev just intentionally lied to the international community. Was it a botched, staged provocation? Or something else?
The United States and its NATO allies find themselves relying upon the
lowest common denominator within any targeted nation. The US and NATO
itself have suffered for years from a crisis of credibility. Those
willing to work for a discredited and unsustainable geopolitical project
like NATO would only do so because they lacked sound judgement and
other human qualities associated with responsible leadership.
Many in the Western media reeling from Babchenko's "return from the
dead" have noted themselves that Kiev already suffers from a lack of
public trust because of its serial incompetence, deceit, and
corruption.
Anne Applebaum herself in her Washington Post article would note (emphasis added):
But the means — the fictitious death, the staged public reports — will reduce even further the already microscopically low levels of trust that Ukrainians have in their government and their media.
But the means — the fictitious death, the staged public reports — will reduce even further the already microscopically low levels of trust that Ukrainians have in their government and their media.
Kiev is just one of many unreliable allies scattered across the multiple
conflicts and crises NATO presides over. Many of these allies have
proven themselves to be more of a liability than an asset to NATO and
its global agenda.
Because of this, those faithfully working within the system NATO represents - like Anne Applebaum of the Washington Post - find themselves cleaning up after messes like the one recently made by Kiev.
Because of this, those faithfully working within the system NATO represents - like Anne Applebaum of the Washington Post - find themselves cleaning up after messes like the one recently made by Kiev.
Were the Babchenko hoax just a "sting operation" as Ukraine and many in
the Western media are trying to claim it was, was it really necessary
for the Ukrainian prime minister himself to comment on what he knew was a
staged "murder," and even accuse Russia at the cost of his credibility?
This seems unlikely.
Did Kiev take it upon itself to unilaterally carry out their own
rendition of the UK's Skripal affair - with its NATO minders distrusting
their ability to see it through and forcing them to humiliatingly end
the operation by publicly announcing Babchenko's murder as a hoax? This
seems much more likely.
Time will answer these questions in full.
Time will answer these questions in full.
Tony Cartalucci, Bangkok-based geopolitical researcher and writer, especially for the online magazine“New Eastern Outlook”.