Following comments from the US overseas broadcasting chief listing RT as a challenge alongside the Islamic State and Boko Haram, critics said the outlet was singled out for “daring to advocate a point of view,” as well as for “competing for viewership.”
On Wednesday, the new chief of the US Broadcasting Board of
Governors (BBG), Andrew Lack, told the New York Times that RT
posed a significant challenge – putting the broadcaster in a list
alongside the Islamic State and Boko Haram terror groups.
READ MORE: Head of US state media put RT on same
challenge list as ISIS, Boko Haram
The comments have since been denounced on social networks and across the media spectrum. Speaking to RT, legal analyst and media commentator Lionel said the channel was being outrageously singled out and equated to the Islamic State for “daring to advocate a point of view.”
“In the history of incoherent statements, this might be the
granddaddy of them all. In reading this, he alleges that Russia
Today pushes… ‘a point of view,’” he told RT’s Ameera David.
Georgetown University journalism professor Chris Chambers added
that Lack’s words were “supremely silly and careless,”
especially considering his media background. Lack previously
worked for NBC, Bloomberg, and Sony Music.
“This is a guy who has some media savvy, supposedly, even
though he’s moved around a lot – maybe this is one reason he’s
moved around,” Chambers told RT. “But this was a very
careless and silly thing to say considering the prevalence of
corporate media here in the United States, and the purpose of
BBG’s constitutes like Voice of America, who are supposed to put
out all kinds of views.”
Nothing makes me want to watch @RT_com more than to have a US propaganda minister tell me not to watch it. #NewsIsNotTerror
— Lionel (@LionelMedia) January 23, 2015
While Lack’s comments were roundly criticized, Steven Ellis of
the International Press Institute said he was right in one way.
“Mr. Lack could have phrased his comments more carefully: RT
does indeed pose a challenge to US international broadcasting in
terms of competing for viewership,” he said.
Asked about the issue on Friday, State Department spokeswoman Jen
Psaki distanced the US government from Lack’s comments, saying it
doesn’t agree with the statement.
READ MORE: State Dept disagrees with head of US state media over equation of RT with ISIS
“Would the US government put those three in the same
category? No, we wouldn’t,” Psaki said. However, she said
there are “concerns” the US does agree with, stating
that Russia’s independent media is under pressure and that BBG’s
ability to broadcast in the country has become more difficult.
RT’s editor-in-chief Margarita Simonyan condemned the comparison
and demanded clarification.
“We are extremely outraged that the new head of the BBG
mentions RT in the same breath as the world’s number one
terrorist army,” she said. “We see this as an
international scandal and demand an explanation.”
We all need propaganda free news but the banksters have other ideas. My take just now on @RT_com#NewsIsNotTerrorhttp://t.co/LnkwXbnrtt
— Tony Gosling ✈ (@TonyGosling) January 23, 2015
To Lionel, the comparison was also troubling because Lack began
his tenure on questionable footing by targeting another media
outlet instead of expressing a commitment to spreading the truth.
“Instead, you pull one organization out and align, and
impugn, and suggest – through some strange kind of juxtaposition
– that RT is somehow – what? An agent of ISIS and Boko Haram? On
day one? I can’t wait for day two!”
Still, Lionel pointed to the reaction on social media, which
spread under several hashtags including #NEWSISNOTTERROR, and
from other outlets as a sign of optimism.
“We have resoundingly said that this is absurd,” he said.
“So the best thing to do is always to disseminate
truth.”