Wednesday, January 16, 2013

Hagel's Controversial Foreign Connections and Backers

CLIFF KINCAID January 16, 2013
Two seemingly unrelated events-Obama's nomination of Chuck Hagel as Pentagon chief and the sale of Al Gore's Current TV to Al Jazeera-are coming together in  a way that illustrates the role that the foreign propaganda channel can and will play if Congress lets the television deal go through.
House Homeland Security Committee chairman Rep. Michael McCaul is being encouraged by a group of media critics, journalists, academics, and national security and Middle East experts, to open hearings into Al Jazeera's media power play on American soil.

In regard to Hagel, Breitbart blogger William Bigelow notes that Al Jazeera seems to be having a love affair with the Obama nominee. Bigelow wrote, "Al Jazeera is rejoicing in his nomination for Secretary of Defense." Aaron Klein of WorldNetDaily notes that Hagel gave Al Jazeera an interview in 2009 arguing that the U.S. and Russia should phase out their nuclear weapons.
It also turns out that Hagel appeared on Russia Today (RT), an official mouthpiece for the Vladimir Putin regime.
At the time, Dmitry Medvedev, a Putin puppet, was the president of Russia. Asked if there was "something special" about Obama and Medvedev, Hagel said they were both young men who were "different" and "not captive to the Cold War generation."  
Obama told Medvedev in 2012 that he would have more "flexibility" to make concessions to the Russians after he was re-elected. That time is now and the Hagel nomination appears to be part of the pro-Russia strategy of making those concessions.
It is Hagel's possible impact on the Middle East, however, that is getting most of the attention so far.
The Al Jazeera story on Hagel was titled, "Obama defeats the Israel Lobby." The author, MJ Rosenberg, is identified as a former "Senior Foreign Policy Fellow with Media Matters Action Network," the George Soros-funded group.
But if Al Jazeera likes Hagel, the feeling is mutual. The Washington Free Beacon has posted a clip from the Al Jazeera interview, in which Hagel agrees with the observation from a viewer that America has an image as "the world's bully." He clearly enjoyed the appearance on the Qatar-owned propaganda channel and thought nothing about bashing his own country.
At the very least, as the favorable coverage of Hagel shows, the new "Al Jazeera America" network that is supposed to replace Al Gore's Current TV will be extremely left-wing in its political orientation, possibly further to the left than MSNBC.
Based on what is known about the channel and its existing Arabic and English versions, even more extreme elements will be integrated into the programming over time, once the channel gains some hoped-for traction in the media marketplace. This deception will depend on continuing inaccurate coverage of the channel's real agenda.
The truth about Al Jazeera's new entry into the U.S. media market is being deliberately obscured by such reporters as Dylan Byers of Politico, who cites claims about editorial independence for the new channel without bothering to note, as documented in the State Department's own human rights report, that "the government [Qatar] exercised editorial and programmatic control of the channel through funding and selection of the station's management."
Qatar is an Islamic state, governed by Sharia, which supports foreign Jihadists committed to the destruction of Israel and America.
Hagel appeared on Al Jazeera as a representative of the Global Zero advocacy group. This is significant for two reasons-one of the main funders of Global Zero was the Soros-funded Connect U.S. Fund, and press relations for the group was handled by Trevor FitzGibbon, a former vice president at Fenton Communications who had also supervised media relations and strategy for MoveOn.org. He now runs FitzGibbon Media.
All of these entities deserve some comment.
MoveOn.org was created as a political force, which used the Internet to save Bill Clinton from impeachment over his lies in the Monica Lewinsky affair and grew into a formidable left-wing organization active in various domestic and foreign issues, such as the Iraq War.  
Fenton Communications represented Soros in 2004 when he spent millions of dollars to defeat George W. Bush for president. The firm has also represented a Who's Who of the left, including Marxist governments in Grenada and Nicaragua, the communist guerrillas in El Salvador, and CIA defector Philip Agee.
The Connect U.S. Fund, a project of the Tides Center, provided grants to pro-U.N. groups around the country, in order to create the appearance of public support for more U.S. involvement in the U.N.
"In just a few hours," the FitzGibbon media website says, "FitzGibbon strategists can transform a client's news into a story on the front page of Huffington Post, book your principals on MSNBC, and schedule interviews on NPR."
This helps explain why The Huffington Post ran the article, "Why Chuck Hagel Should Be Secretary of Defense," on January 7. The client in this case was the author, Rick Jacobs of the Courage Campaign, a new "progressive alliance" designed to push U.S. policies further left. Jacobs chaired Howard Dean's 2003 presidential campaign in California.
Responding to the charge that Hagel once opposed homosexuality, Jacobs assures his audience, "Chuck, like most Americans, has evolved, has changed his views on homosexuality."
On the matter of policy toward Iran, Jacobs says, "Had America wanted an administration committed to war with Iran, we had our chance. We want and need a defense policy that defends American interests."
The implication is that destroying Iranian nuclear weapons would only benefit Israel, and that the Obama-Hagel approach is to live with a nuclear Iran.

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