Western disinformation about Iran is the kind that starts wars
By: Rachel Marsden
A baseless claim that Tehran ordered the execution of 15,000 protesters was repeated by politicians and celebrities
“We cannot allow falsehoods and disinformation about Russia’s invasion of
Ukraine to continue spreading in Canada. That’s why we asked the CRTC to review
Russia Today’s presence on Canadian airwaves,” Canadian Prime Minister Justin
Trudeau tweeted back in March, as he followed the lead of allies in the EU in
censoring Russian media outlets, while failing to cite any actual evidence of
fake news to justify the crackdown on freedom of speech and information.
All too often, Western ‘democracies’ evoke ‘disinformation’ as a pretext to
deprive the public of information and analysis that could raise doubts about the
official establishment narrative. But despite positioning himself as a
gatekeeper of truth, Trudeau spread some fake news of his own this week.
“Canada denounces the Iranian regime’s barbaric decision to impose the death
penalty on nearly 15,000 protestors,” Trudeau tweetedon November 15 (the tweet
has since been deleted). Iranian regime change advocate, former Secretary of
State and CIA Director Mike Pompeo, followed suit. “Barbaric, but not
surprising,” Pompeo said, reposting the Newsweek article that started the ball
rolling on November 8.
US Senator Mitt Romney tweeted that “the tyrannical actions of Iranian leaders
in moving to execute detained protesters must be condemned by the global
community. Sham trials should be halted and protesters released.” Even Hollywood
celebs like X-Men actress Sophie Turner and Oscar winner Viola Davis got in on
the action of spreading the mantra that Iran was sentencing 15,000 anti-hijab
protesters to death. On November 15, geopolitical analyst and Eurasia Group
founder Ian Bremmer noted that something was off. “It’s been brought to my
attention that a post I shared yesterday about capital punishment in Iran for
14,000 protesters is unverifiable & likely untrue,” he admitted, to his credit.
It turns out that he was right.
The original Newsweek article referred to an Iranian parliamentary vote to
execute protesters. The piece cites a tweet, posted by a murky source on
November 8, relaying that “Iran’s parliament voted by a majority (227 out of
290) to execute all protesters.” Except that there was no such vote.
Curiously, on November 6 – two days before the Newsweek article and the tweet on
which its based was published, Iranian activist Masih Alinejad tweeted, “227
members of the 290-seat parliament in Iran have called on the judiciary to issue
death sentences for people arrested during the ongoing uprising.” Newsweek
explicitly cited Alinejad’s Tweet, before later deleting it. The
parliamentarians did issue a statement to the judiciary encouraging it to deal
with protesters “decisively,” but there was no such parliamentary vote to
execute them en masse. It took about a week for Newsweek to amend its article
and remove reference to the Iranian parliament voting for death sentences. Iran
does have the death penalty as an option in sentencing by courts, just like in
the US, but from there, the assumption became that anyone and everyone arrested
at protests was going to simply be executed.
No doubt it’s just a coincidence that Alinejad happens to be the lucky recipient
of $628,000 in US State Department funding over the past eight years, according
to the online US federal contract database. She has also worked as an anchor for
the US government’s Voice of America Persian language media service. Back in
January 2020, as the Trump administration was ramping up Iranian regime-change
rhetoric in the final weeks of Donald Trump’s term after losing to Joe Biden,
Washington’s Institute for Responsible Statecraft ran a photo of Alinejad with
Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and denounced the Western press for platforming
Alinejad to promote Iranian regime change without disclosing her State
Department funding.
It wouldn’t be the first time that Iranian regime change was powered by fake
news. In 1953, the CIA overthrew the government of Prime Minister Mohammad
Mosaddegh in the wake of his nationalization of Iranian oil to keep it out of
the hands of Western multinationals. The CIA’s Operation Mockingbird, which ran
from 1948 to 1976, infiltrated the press to promote disinformation and
propaganda that greased the skids for its foreign policy objectives – including
in Iran, as declassified documents have since revealed.
Surely it’s just happenstance that Joe Biden said at the beginning of November,
“Don’t worry, we’re gonna free Iran.”
So now that crusading anti-disinformation gatekeepers like Trudeau and Pompeo
have been busted violating their own standards, are they going to ban themselves
from media platforms before they can reoffend and do any more damage and dupe
more Westerners into cheerleading in favor of yet another war? Where’s the EU to
denounce this blatant disinformation peddling and ban the source like they’re so
quick to do every time any Russian official or media outlet says something that
merely dares to contradicts their own narrative?
Speaking of which, if Trudeau, Pompeo, and others would so easily spread fake
news that suited their narrative, how credible are they on anything else? One
can only imagine the policy decisions that they’ve adopted based on equally
dodgy takes presented to the public as fact.
COPYRIGHT 2022 RACHEL MARSDEN