After five years of equivocation on Syria, Glenn Greenwald has finally taken a stance. He is attacking Syria’s leading dissident who spent 16 years in Assad’s notorious prisons for his left-wing politics, whose two brothers were abducted by ISIS, and whose wife was disappeared three years ago.

Greenwald’s charge? That Yassin al Haj Saleh doesn’t mention Obama in his criticisms; and that in an interview with The Intercept Saleh accuses most leftists of being Assad sympathisers without naming them.

Does Yassin omit Obama in his criticisms?

“Nothing could diminish the despicable crime the Obama administration has committed against Syria and its population. And history will not forget this for a long time. ”

Yes, those are Yassin’s words. He has never been shy to indict Obama or the rest of the world.

Does Yassin criticise leftists without naming them?

Yassin names and shames them where necessary. But when he is talking about general trends he has no obligation.

But let me oblige Greenwald and name one prominent leftist who is objectively pro-Assad: Glenn Greenwald.

Sorry Glenn, but that common throat clearing preamble—”Of course Assad is bad but…”—will give you only limited protection when you devote your entire time to maligning and attacking the regime’s opponents.

Let’s look at your record.

You have lately started to counter mentions of your pro-Assad bias by saying that you are being attacked by “both sides”. But the Assadists have attacked The Intercept, not you. And they have attacked it for the few articles published lately by Maz Hussein and Marwan Hisham. Don’t use their credibility as a fig leaf.

Your sympathies are not hard to discern. Let’s take your starkly different reactions to two articles that The Intercept published. You have objected to the Maz Hussein/Marwan Hisham interview with Yassin al Haj Saleh because you say its claims are inaccurate. Even if this were true, it is an interview and Yassin is entitled to his opinion.

Contrast that with your conspicuous silence over what was supposed to be a factual story that you published by Rania Khalek which alleged that “Internal United Nations assessments obtained by The Intercept reveal that U.S. and European sanctions are punishing ordinary Syrians and crippling aid work during the largest humanitarian emergency since World War II.”

Except, your report was a fabrication. As Charles Davis notes: “the report that was “obtained” was a report available freely online at least four months earlier, authored not by a U.N. official or agency but by an official, Justine Walker, at the British Bankers’ Association, an organization institutionally inclined to favor Western trade with literally whomever, capital and those who possess it not troubled by grave violations of human rights.”

You have since been forced to acknowledge this. A correction appended to the article now reads: “The report referenced was prepared for the U.N. and does not reflect the U.N.’s official position.”

But it should’t have taken our criticism for you to discover this. Had you even bothered to read the alleged “UN assessment”, it would have been clear. The page right after the title carries the unmissable disclaimer: “The views expressed are entirely those of the author and should not be considered to constitute any official statement.”

But why let facts or ethics get in the way of clickbait, eh? If it means casting Assad as the victim of sanctions while Assad is besieging and staving a whole city, so be it. Why bother speaking to the UN, which explicitly blames the regime for the sieges and starvation, when your ideological zeal demands that you exculpate a mass-killer. Nor did you seem troubled by the fact that your comrade Rania Khalek sympathises with the regime’s military and, in a bizarre attack on MSF, even denied that Aleppo was under siege. Seriously!

Your response to this embarrassing fabrication was silence. Many people, including myself, repeatedly brought this to your notice so you can’t claim to be unaware. But you haven’t withdrawn the story and its misleading headline with the false claim still remains in place.

Sorry, Glenn, but you are no truth teller. You are only a dissident because you live in a country where you know that you don’t pay a price for dissent. Yassin spent 16 years in prison for his beliefs; you got a Pulitzer and an Oscar. You have the temerity to question his credibility?

UPDATE

Glenn Greenwald has been dismissive of US intelligence agencies’ conclusion that Russia interfered in the US presidential election. He has alleged that this is no different than the CIA’s WMD claims back in the lead up to the Iraq war. He seems unaware that the CIA’s 2002 National Intelligence Estimate registered serious doubts about Iraq’s WMDs as well as its alleged ties to Al Qaeda. This is the reason why Dick Cheney and the neocons had to establish the Office of Special Plans at the Pentagon to bypass official intelligence channels. But part of Greenwald’s shrill protestations might also have to do with the fact that his own publication, The Intercept, has been identified as one of the conduits for Russian disinformation.

Greenwald has also been dismissive of reports that the FBI acted to undermine Clinton. But in an appearance on Democracy Now! he offered a most bizarre counter theory. According to Greenwald, it wasn’t the FBI or Russia that acted against Clinton, but it was the CIA that has plotted against Trump.

The agency that has led the way in pushing these allegations about Russia, which is the CIA, there is no question that the CIA—the community of the CIA was vehemently in support of Hillary Clinton’s candidacy and, with equal vehemence, opposed to Donald Trump…The CIA was very aggressively in favor of Hillary Clinton’s victory. And there’s a lot of different reasons for that, but I think the primary one is that the CIA proxy war in Syria is something that Hillary Clinton had promised not just to support, but to escalate. She was very critical of Obama for restraining the CIA’s effort to support these rebels and to remove Assad, while Trump took the exact opposite position, saying, “We have no business trying to change the government of Syria. We ought to let Russia run free in Syria, kill ISIS, kill whoever else they want to kill, because we have no interest. We should keep Assad and Russia in charge of Syria.” There were other reasons, as well. So there’s no question the CIA was a political actor behind the Hillary Clinton presidency and against Donald Trump’s… So I think a lot of this is exactly what Julian said, which is the CIA is attempting to undermine and subvert Trump because they never wanted him to be president in the first place, and they’re now trying to weaken and subvert his agenda, that they oppose.

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