“Damning US
intelligence puts Russia in the dock” proclaims the Times’ front page lead this morning. Thus the orthodox line: only
at superpower level can you find the quality of intelligence to nail Vladimir
Putin and his followers. This recalls the aftermath of the then USSR shooting
down flight KAL007 after it had accidentally strayed over Soviet airspace.
Old media: the Murdoch Times
The USA had what we now know as Global Positioning System (GPS):
their military could see that the Russians were dissembling. But what the Times, and most of the mainstream press
would rather not admit, is that, with less and less being spent on proper
investigative journalism, but more ordinary people having access to the video
technology and the internet, the incriminating evidence can come from anywhere.
And nowhere has this been seen to better effect than in the
pursuit of evidence to show that a Buk missile launcher was in the rebel-held area
of eastern Ukraine at the time Malaysia Airlines flight MH17 was shot down last
Thursday. Photos and videos were linked to the towns of Snizhne and Torez by
using tools such as Google Earth and local language skills.
Not that you would know this from reading the
report fashioned by the Daily Mail,
which does not credit those who did the hard work, but instead subsumes the
results of their research inside a much longer piece giving a wider picture of
the shooting down. For citizen journalism to get the credit it deserves, you
have to look in at the deeply subversive Guardian.
New media: Eliot Higgins in sofa over-occupation shock ((c) Guardian)
Here, Eliot Higgins (aka Brown Moses) and his new venture
Bellingcat are
name-checked. Why is this project important? Ah well. Here we enter a world
that the Times doesn’t want to talk
about, and the Mail doesn’t want to
credit. Eliot has made Bellingcat open
for anyone to view for the next 48 hours, so you can see how he and his
contributors located the Buk.
HERE
he analyses a video showing the launcher driving through what was claimed to be
the town of Snizhne. Crowd-sourcing and online tools and maps were all that was
needed to confirm that it was indeed taken in Snizhne, the apartment block used
as a vantage point, and therefore that the Buk was around 10 to 15km from the
crash site around the time MH17 was shot down.
HERE
the language skills of Aric Toler are used to pinpoint the location where a Buk
launcher was seen minus at least one of its rockets. This was shown to be the
nearby town of Torez: the yellow facade of the store was key. There is a
Kickstarter open for Bellingcat, and you can contribute HERE. I
have already done so, as have around 450 others. If the press won’t do this
work, there is one alternative.
You want it done properly? Do it yourself. Please support Bellingcat – today.
Ooh, big spooky conspiracy!
ReplyDeleteThe incriminating evidence that you talk about was reported in all the major news outlets (including The Times and The Daily Mail) but was referenced as from an unverifiable source, which it is.
The Times wouldn't do a front page headline saying "Unverifiable source puts Putin in the dock", nor would any other self respecting old or new media outlet.
The question is about journalistic integrity and avoiding ending up in court. Remember the faked abuse pictures in The Mirror? Unverifiable source.
@2
ReplyDeleteThe points made in the post stand.
Any comparison with the Mirror being hoaxed is so tenuous as to not be credible.
Here all afternoon.
@4 @5
ReplyDeleteFascinating. You will be happy to know that I'm Tweeting your comments out to see what feedback tells me.