Global Times

World needs to step out of US’ industry chain of rumormonge­ring

- By Li Qingqing The author is a reporter with the Global Times. opinion@ globaltime­s. com. cn

Why does the US, the world’s only superpower today, seem paranoid whenever it comes to China- related issues? How has this anti- China atmosphere prevailed in the US and other Western countries? German writer Michael Lueders, in his new book The Hypocritic­al Superpower, exposes in detail the US media’s reporting tricks.

Lueders depicted the US’ whole industry chain to create rumors and smear other countries: Set the prerequisi­te that a country is problemati­c; the US government makes a statement against other countries, elites hype it and then US media interview government officials for confirmati­on – a seemingly balanced report and yet still predetermi­ned; hire public relations company to produce baseless statements; intensify conflicts after the hype; spread the inflammato­ry informatio­n across borders.

The US is much too familiar with this whole process. For example, according to Politico, a US- based political communicat­ions firm O’Donnell & Associates created a document in April 2020 that urged the Republican Party to blame China with the statements such as “China caused this pandemic by covering it up, lying, and hoarding the world’s supply of medical equipment,” and “China is an adversary that has stolen millions of American jobs, sent fentanyl to the United States, and they send religious minorities to concentrat­ion camps.” These statements have been franticall­y spread by US politician­s and major media, starting a US public opinion offensive to discredit China in an all- round way.

Another example is the tracking of the COVID- ID- 19 origins. Again, Washington n resorts to the above- mentioned tioned process to smear China. hina. Baseless disinforma­tion tion has been used by the e so- called experts, hyped ped by media, and emphasized mphasized by politician­s. ns. They are trying to o turn the “lab- leak” conspiracy onspiracy into a so- called lled scientifif­ific scientific conclusion and internatio­nal consensus. ensus.

This set of methods can also be traced back 19 years ago when former US president George W. Bush’s administra­tion tion fabricated the “washing ng powder” lie, to legitimize the he US invasion of

Iraq. Washington ington presumed guilt against Iraq q after 9/ 11 and made up allegation­s ons that Iraq had a link with al Qaeda. da. In 2003, the then US secretary of f state Colin Powell insisted that Iraq possessed ossessed weapons of mass destructio­n ( WMD) and presented some white e powder as proof at the UN, which was later mocked as “washing powder.” Then, US officials distorted the narrative, deliberate­ly exaggerate­d Iraq’s WMD threat, agitated American people and ganged up US allies, including the UK and Australia, to join Washington in the invasion.

By repeatedly resorting to this industry chain of producing rumors, the US aims at fooling the world and manipulati­ng the internatio­nal community for the sake of its selfish interests. Mainstream US media has also played an infamous role in this chain. Although US media boasts of being “the fourth eses tate,” they have become an accomplice of the US administra­tion’s suppressio­n of China and other countries they regard as “opponents.”

In an interview with the Xinhua News Agency in June, Lueders said some reports tend to simplify the complicate­d geopolitic­al issues into a combat between “we Western allies the good guys” against China and Russia “the evil ones.” “This, in my view, is a wrong thinking. It’s a dangerous thinking because it leads to a confrontat­ional policy,” he said.

In many US and Western speeches about a China, there is very v few objective discussion disc or criticism, but bu much blind demonizati­on. demoni The US and other Western countries countrie are caught in a certa certain kind of predicamen­t: dicament They cannot jump out of o the existing black- and- white whi mentality. They believe a country co either represents “democracy” democ or “autocracy.” Such a narrative will inevitably lead to the image of an unfree or an oppressed China.

“US anti- China propaganda propa has led many other Western countries by the nose. Worse, many man Western people have believed suc such lies, and this may push the US and an Western government­s’ China policies pol into an abyss, further worsening China- US relations and China- West Wes relations and even making them irreparabl­e,” irrepa Zhang Tengjun, an assistant research res fellow at the China Institute of Internatio­nal Studies, told the Global Times T on Tuesday. Tuesday

The world needs more diversifie­d voices besides the US. Countries worldwide should get rid of Western media’s stereotype­s, re- understand China, and, as Lueders said, “step out of the shadow of the USA.”

 ?? Illustrati­on: Liu Rui/ GT ??
Illustrati­on: Liu Rui/ GT

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