http://www.aljazeera.com/indepth/opinion/2016/12/whitewashing-assad-allies-challenged-161223135228023.html

Whitewashing Assad and his allies must be challenged

When we leave whitewashers to continue their campaigns unchecked, we
put our own voices at risk of being marginalised.

Any international conversation to stop killing in Syria must first
plainly identify those who are committing the majority of these
crimes, writes Chabkoun [Reuters]

by Malak Chabkoun
Malak Chabkoun is an independent Middle East researcher and writer
based in the US.

In the past few months, three Western women have gone to Syria, two of
them by invitation and the third on a regime-approved reporting trip.
The first two are now on "speaking tours" to explain "what's really
happening in Syria" to the Western public. The third one, however, was
kicked out of Syria by the Bashar al-Assad regime. Her crime? "Untrue
reporting" in the form of sharing tweets containing photos and witness
accounts from people in besieged Eastern Aleppo, because the regime
wouldn't give her or the other journalists with her access to that
part of the city.

The three women are Eva Bartlett, Vanessa Beeley and Cecilia Udden.
Udden is the one who was removed from Syria by the Assad regime for
her willingness to at least acknowledge the suffering of eastern
Aleppo's citizens.

The first two of these women, however, call themselves independent
journalists, yet post gushing photos of themselves posing with Bashar
al-Assad on social media, appear on Russian state television to peddle
the Assad regime's lines and travel across the United States to accuse
anyone opposing Assad of being an al-Qaeda sympathiser.


The Listening Post - Journalists in exile: Getting the news back into
Syria (8:33)

Channel 4, Snopes, EA Worldview and Pulse Media and others have done
thorough fact-checking debunking Bartlett in particular. There is no
need to rehash their findings.

But there is a great need to address why people like Bartlett are
problematic, particularly because it's not just her - Robert Fisk, Tim
Anderson and pro-Palestinian "activists" such as Rania Khalek have all
joined in on the whitewashing.

The problem with these regime apologists is that they claim to be
journalists or academics or both - independent ones at that. Covering
both sides of a story is one thing. Acquiescing to the narratives of
three states wreaking havoc on civilians across Syria while doing so
is another.

A genocide-denying regime and its allies cannot be given the benefit
of the doubt, and those publicly defending such a regime are not
journalists and must not be left unchallenged.

How many ways can I whitewash thee?

The regime and its allies' crimes in Syria have been whitewashed in
several ways by journalists and academics alike. Bartlett, Beeley,
Fisk and Khalek, for example, repeat the regime's propaganda almost
verbatim, claiming that what's happening in Syria is a war against
terrorists.

Others argue that Assad is bad but that they see no other alternative
to his regime.

OPINION: And who are we to say the Syrian revolution is dead?

Others have argued any Western intervention for regime change in Syria
would only cause further loss of life, so it must be avoided. There
are those who admit and extensively cover the crimes of the Assad
regime, yet give the regime a platform to spread lies.

Still others say it doesn't matter who is doing the killing in Syria -
it just needs to stop.

All of these arguments are problematic for three reasons: they deny
the presence of the Syrian narrative, place the "burden of proof" on
the victims of war crimes being committed by three different states,
and remove all nuance from analysis on Syria.

Idealism is nice on paper

It is indeed imperative for killing in Syria to stop. Yes, anyone who
has taken innocent souls, regardless of "whose side they're on", must
be brought to account. However, any international conversation to stop
killing in Syria must first plainly identify those who are committing
the majority of these crimes.

For six years now, even the United Nations, which itself is guilty of
being biased towards the regime in more ways than one, cannot but
admit that the biggest criminals in Syria are the regime and its
allies.

OPINION: Aleppans to Idlib - Out of the frying pan into the fire

Most importantly, Syrians, at great personal risk, have documented the
crimes of not only the regime and its allies, but also of groups in
the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant and Jabhat Fateh el-Sham
category, for nearly six years now.

Yet, two white women, in one swoop, would like to claim that Syrians
in Aleppo are lying about the destroyed eastern part of the city and
that the Assad regime, Russia and Iran are bombing civilian areas
because they just want a terrorist-free Syria.


Inside Story: A war crimes investigation in Syria - but will anyone be
charged? (24:40)

Terminology matters

Nuance in analysing Syria has been and continues to be a problem
across pro-regime, opposition and even "neutral" media. This has been
particularly evident as the world suddenly woke up to the fact that
something bad was indeed happening in the country only in the past few
weeks as eastern Aleppo made headlines.

But claiming those who support or reject the revolution do so based on
a "flawed sectarianism" and "geopolitical commitments" is unhelpful
and uses terminology that is not only inflammatory but also
inaccurate.

Other cases of sloppy terminology have been more subtle. ISIL, Jabhat
Fateh el-Sham and Jund al-Aqsa are often called rebels, even though
Syrians in areas outside regime control are themselves victims of
these groups and have protested their presence.

While Daraya, Moadamieh, Aleppo and other cities were being cleansed
of their inhabitants, many media outlets called it evacuation rather
than forced displacement.

These are small examples, but they help whitewashers to discredit even
the most solid evidence that the Assad regime and its allies have been
at the forefront of committing atrocities in Syria for years now.

Leaving whitewashers unchallenged says more about us than about them.
It indicates that we are either not willing or unable to seek out
truth. When we leave whitewashers to continue their campaigns
unchecked, we put our own voices at risk of being marginalised in the
very same way when it is our turn to speak.

Malak Chabkoun is an independent Middle East researcher and writer
based in the US.

The views expressed in this article are the author's own and do not
necessarily reflect Al Jazeera's editorial policy.



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