As Casey Michel shows – How Putin Played the Far Left – both Green Party presidential candidate Jill Stein and The Nation, one of the US left's most influential journals, have been happily supporting the Russian line on everything from Ukraine to the evils of US imperialism. It's not just Trump and the right who've been played by Putin.

Then there's Wikileaks:

WikiLeaks is clearly the online epicenter of the 21st-century’s red-brown convergence. How else to account for how an Australian cyber-anarchist has found common cause with a racist millionaire real-estate baron—apart, that is, for their apparent mutual regard for the opposite sex?

WikiLeaks, it is worth recalling, began as a seemingly noble “transparency” organization that sought to help shine a light on post-Soviet autocracies and their human rights abuses. Yet somewhere along the way it saw fit to partner with anti-Semites who delivered leaked U.S. State Department cables to Belarus’s pro-Moscow dictatorship, which used these sensitive documents to chase down dissidents. Nor has this caused WikiLeaks or Assange any moral misgivings. As Vox’s Zack Beauchamp detailed, Assange refused to investigate WikiLeaks’s role in aiding the machinations of Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko, Europe’s last dictator, whose secret police (still known by its Cold War acronym, the KGB) arrested activists and opposition figures.

A quick glimpse through WikiLeaks’s Twitter feed lately is enough to confirm the group’s disconcerting preference for siding with the Putinist narrative, and Kremlin interests, all in the name of anti-Americanism.

Assange has personally run a not-so-subtle rearguard defense for Trump, an overture that has been reciprocated by the president-elect, who now publicly defers to Assange’s analysis of the DNC hacks over that of the U.S. intelligence arms Trump is about to command in little over a week’s time. When not slamming last year’s Panama Papers leak as an “attack story on Putin,” WikiLeaks’s feed, long thought to be personally manned by Assange, has layered Kremlin-friendly conspiracy over everything from the Eurovision Song Contest to, like Stein’s candidacy, the to destruction of MH17. (Little surprise, then, that Stein considers Assange a hero.) Or, as WikiLeaks tweeted on Ukraine, “Cable shows USA was already warned of #Russia’s concerns so it now looks like #Obama is the provocateur; not #Putin.”

Stein, The Nation, and WikiLeaks are hardly outliers on social media or insignificant in their political reach; to their respective audiences, they wield as much influence as Breitbart does with Trump loyalists.

Assange has personally run a not-so-subtle rearguard defense for Trump, an overture that has been reciprocated by the president-elect, who now publicly defers to Assange’s analysis of the DNC hacks over that of the U.S. intelligence arms Trump is about to command in little over a week’s time. When not slamming last year’s Panama Papers leak as an “attack story on Putin,” WikiLeaks’s feed, long thought to be personally manned by Assange, has layered Kremlin-friendly conspiracy over everything from the Eurovision Song Contest to, like Stein’s candidacy, the to destruction of MH17. (Little surprise, then, that Stein considers Assange a hero.) Or, as WikiLeaks tweeted on Ukraine, “Cable shows USA was already warned of #Russia’s concerns so it now looks like #Obama is the provocateur; not #Putin.”

Stein, The Nation, and WikiLeaks are hardly outliers on social media or insignificant in their political reach; to their respective audiences, they wield as much influence as Breitbart does with Trump loyalists….

Ideologically promiscuous and unbound by the orthodoxies of a single party or historical narrative, Putin has cultivated dupes, fellow travelers, and purblind fools among plenty of American progressives who, whether by accident or design, have facilitated the rise of the most extremist and reactionary president this country has ever elected.

Of course the same deranged Russian cheer-leading can be seen in the comments of any recent relevant Guardian CiF piece, where it's impossible to tell apart the Russian bots from the usual anti-American Guardianistas.

Posted in

3 responses to “Siding with the Putinist narrative”

  1. Hal Avatar
    Hal

    Red, brown and “green” (in scare quotes).

    Like

  2. Bob-B Avatar
    Bob-B

    It gets harder and harder to distinguish between the Hard Left and the Hard Right. Increasingly it’s hard to know who falls into which of the two categories. Is Assange Hard Left or Hard Right? And what about Greenwald? Presumably there are some on the Hard Left who still have reservations about the Hard Right, but it looks as though more and more just don’t care. Their main characteristic is that they loathe Western democracy and they will ally with anybody and everybody who shares their loathing.

    Like

  3. Hal Avatar
    Hal

    Both Assange and Greenwald are on the right… at least on the political map that I grew up using. Unlike the Far Right of the first half of the 20th century, they don’t even bother to use the word “socialist” when defining their politics. It’s simply “anti-imperialist”, aka anti-west. I remember reading this – http://www.independent.co.uk/voices/julian-assange-rape-sexual-assault-allegations-a7365911.html – three months ago, but assumed that hell would freeze over before Trump would defeat Clinton. The Democrats ended up winning the popular vote but utterly botched their (Electoral College) campaign, and I suspect that they, like many of us, grossly underestimated the effect of the torrent of “leaks” and cries of “lock her up”.

    Like

Leave a reply to Bob-B Cancel reply