Robert Parry criticizes both US policies in the Middle East and Afghanistan, going back to the 1980s and the US mediaâs sycophantic coverage of it, noting that some of the same reporters who beat the drums for Iraq war are doing the same regarding Syria, ignoring that facts on the ground showing US to be in a defacto alliance with Al Qaeda in the battle for Aleppo. a fact also ignored by US politicians including Clinton whose plan to implement a âno-flyâ zone over Syria risks another war.
Acknowledging that there are no clean hands, or âgood guysâ in such situations, he contrasts the coverage of Aleppo and what appears to be staged propaganda images of victims in the Al-Qaeda run Eastern Aleppo while ignoring the casualties in government controlled Western Aleppo caused by Western supported jihadist shelling.
Parry reexamines the operation to overthrow Khadaffi in Libya, lobbied for by Clinton, in which US, French, and British forces destabilized the one country in the region that offered advanced public services to its people and now is hopelessly divided, as a result of the exaggeration by US media of Khadaffiâs threats to the population of Benghazi. He also speaks of other reasons that France and the others wanted him removed, including his growing influence and willingness to assist lesser developed countries in Sub-Sahran Africa.
He also speaks of the pro-Russian secular government of Afghanistan before the US joined forces with the Saudis to create the mujahedeen that overthrew it and produced both Al Qaeda and the Taliban; how women had rights to go to school, to wear whatever they want, and enjoyed freedoms that were taken away with the rise of the Taliban; and the hypocrisy of the US which claims it is supporting the rights of women there.