Author Topic: For all the clowns on the Al-Jazeera bandwagon  (Read 323 times)

Fury

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For all the clowns on the Al-Jazeera bandwagon
« on: September 10, 2013, 07:54:07 AM »
Let's not forget that this organization is owned by the Emir of Qatar.

Syria Feature: Al Jazeera’s Fake Story Of “Iran’s Fighters In Aleppo”

Earlier this week, Al Jazeera English posted a dramatic video, beginning with the declaration, “Iranian Fighters on Syrian Soil”.

Claiming to show the first footage of “Iranian fighters” inside Syria, Al Jazeera’s reporter said of the English-dubbed video, “It appears the Iranians are the ones calling the shots in a war that has arguably become as much about them as it is about Syria.”

Al Jazeera claims that the footage was handed to its reporter by an insurgent, who found it after battling Iranian fighters in Aleppo.

But as soon as the images appear, there are oddities.

Far from being amateur footage taken with a cellphone or consumer-grade camera, the video is of professional quality.

Al Jazeera claims that the men in the film knew they were being recorded and hence were comfortable about speaking openly. That seems an unusual breach of security inside a military facility, where filming is usually forbidden. It would be doubly so, given that Iran has consistently denied military involvement in Syria.

Why are the men in army uniforms at the start of the clip speaking Arabic if they are Iranians?

More questions: under what circumstances would foreign “military personnel” allow themselves to be filmed overtly by a professional cameraman, sitting in the back seat of a car, as they pass through a checkpoint? And why are the Syrian soldiers at the checkpoint apparently unfazed about this?

The biggest give-away that the film is now what it seems, however, is the interview with “Ismail Ali Haydari”, identified as an “Iranian Fighter”.

It is impossible to make out Haydari’s actual words behind the dubbing, which has him saying, “I’ve been in Syria now for more than a hour. I’ve fought all across the country.”

However, the interview does not appear to be part of an amateur film, but of a professional documentary.

Perhaps that is because Esmail Haydari is actually a documentary-maker.

Haydari was killed during a regime offensive near Damascus in August as he was filming. The clips obtained by Al Jazeera appear to be from his unfinished project.

Far from hiding Haydari’s presence in Syria, Iranian media openly reported on his work and his death, with Radio Farda summarizing the coverage. Here is a report by Tasnim News on Haydari’s “martyrdom” in Syria and his memorial.

So does the fact that Haydari obtained footage of Syrian soldiers indicate that Iran has a military cooperation with the Assad regime? Well, no. While it would be highly unusual for an Iranian (or anyone) to film operations inside a Syrian military base, is not unusual for Iranian reporters to be embedded within Syrian Arab Army units or to report on their fighting against the insurgency. This clip from Iran’s ABNA news agency shows just that.

And so a dramatic story of “Iranian Fighters on Syrian Soil” is actually a distorted epitaph to the work of a journalist and filmmaker who became yet another casualty in a civil war — which is far more about Syrians than it is about Iran.

Featured Image: A funeral image of Esmail Haydari.

http://eaworldview.com/2013/09/iran-feature-al-jazeeras-fake-story-of-iranian-fighters-in-aleppo/


It makes me laugh that people hold Al-Jazeera as some sort of objective news organization without an agenda.