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Accusations leveled by US are not based on reality

By Tom Fowdy | China Daily Global | Updated: 2022-03-18 08:59
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Photo taken on Feb 27, 2022 shows smoke rising in the sky in Kyiv, Ukraine. [Photo/Xinhua]

A report that appeared in the Financial Times on Monday and soon spread to the rest of the Western mainstream media claimed that Russia had requested "military equipment and other assistance" from China in the Ukraine crisis.

The claims-denied by both Moscow and China's Foreign Ministry, which branded it as "disinformation"-were attributed to unnamed United States officials.

On Monday, United States National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan discussed bilateral ties, among other issues, with senior Chinese diplomat Yang Jiechi in Rome. During the meeting, Sullivan said there would be "significant consequences" should Beijing offer support to Moscow.

The accusations are not based on reality. The US is attempting to use the situation in Ukraine and smear China while attempting to force it to take a side in line with its preferences.

China's Foreign Ministry and media have made it clear that Beijing supports a peaceful resolution and negotiations and continues to have a policy on the situation in Ukraine premised on attaining stability, while affirming its long-standing principles of noninterference in the internal affairs of other countries and respect for national sovereignty and territorial integrity.

When the US government makes a claim or statement, the Western media have a habit of reporting whatever it says as a fact, as opposed to assessing the political agenda that may be behind it, or the evidence to back up such a claim.

While claims by countries such as China are subject to frequent attacks and scrutiny, or are dismissed as "propaganda" or "misinformation", everything the US says is reported as fact. This allows Western media to repeat the US narrative as it pleases without questioning it, which the Western public subsequently believes.

Recognizing this issue, US government officials have developed a pattern of propaganda whereby they provide "anonymous leaks" to certain Western newspapers, which then publish such unverified claims under the tag of an "exclusive story".

It benefits these newspapers in terms of readership, while allowing the US to establish a narrative rapidly with plausible deniability.

This phenomenon functions through "patron-client" relationships between members of the administration and specific reporters, who then "carry water" for the official while boosting their own journalistic credentials by gaining "insider" stories.

For example, Financial Times reporter Demetri Sevastopulo, who reported the claims that Russia requested military assistance from China, has also reported many other stories from government insider sources, including unverified claims of "hypersonic missile" tests.

While this advances his career, it also makes him an effective medium for the agenda of US officials.

Similarly, the previous US administration also had its associated reporters who were used to push government propaganda on issues such as Xinjiang, as well as the lab leak conspiracy theory about COVID-19.

The greatest benefit of this attack is that it makes false stories appear legitimate and credible, when these are otherwise false and politically motivated.

Given this situation, claims that Russia asked China for military assistance is a politically motivated story, and its primary objective is to try to isolate Moscow while pressuring Beijing to align with Western preferences in the war by branding it as complicit.

The secondary objective is to attempt to further smear China's reputation among its own allies by tying it to the conflict, framing it as worthy of distrust and unreliable, and this manufactures greater consent for strategic confrontation, decoupling and Cold War politics.

The US has already used the Ukraine situation to influence Germany's foreign policy, dismantle former chancellor Angela Merkel's legacy and further extend its influence in Europe. It has a long-running ambition to forge greater unity against China, both in Europe and beyond.

Given this, China must be robust in combating US-led disinformation against it, while remaining diplomatically proactive in defending its own interests.

In practice, China's long-standing goal has been to improve ties with Europe and forge a stable, positive and cooperative relationship.

The public should be extremely skeptical of all claims by anonymous US officials to the mainstream media that seek to misrepresent China's positions, views and interests. An official source does not equate to an honest, fair or impartial source, and herein is the media angle of deception.

The author is a British political and international relations analyst.

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