on the foreign ministry's website.
Its own site contains story after
story defending and explaining Moscow's take on world crises -- chief among now,
what's unfolding in Ukraine. The Columbia Journalism Review notes it is best "known as an
extension of former President Vladimir Putin's confrontational foreign
policy."
In other words, it's about the
last place you'd expect to hear these words: "What Russia did is wrong."
Yet that is exactly what one of
RT's anchors, Abby Martin, said Monday night at the end of her "Breaking the Set" program. Moscow was not her
lone target -- she also expressed disappointment over coverage and
"disinformation" emanating "from all sides of the media spectrum" -- but it was
clearly the most noticeable.
Apparently, her bosses took
notice.
While RT didn't immediately
respond to a CNN request for comment, the Telegraph reported -- and Martin
herself acknowledged -- that the network told her to go to Crimea, the peninsula
on the Black Sea where Russian troops reportedly played a part in besieging
Ukrainian military bases in the days after that country's Russian-leaning
president was ousted.
"But I am not going to Crimea
despite the statement RT has made," Martin tweeted.
The next move for Martin, whose
show is based out of Washington, or the network remains to be seen. Still,
what's transpired already did offer an interesting glimpse into the volatile
situation in Ukraine, Russian state media and RT, in particular.
The Ukrainian crisis has been
brewing since last November, when protesters angry about then President Viktor
Yanukovych's move away from a European Union trade pact and toward an apparently
closer relationship with Moscow.
Other issues -- including how
much control a president should have and his government's treatment of
dissenters -- also came into play. Finally, after a few days of violent
confrontations between demonstrators and security forces, Yanukovych fled to
Russia and a new pro-Western government took over.
That's when Russia reportedly
stepped in.
Yuriy Sergeyev, Ukraine's U.N.
ambassador, claimed Russia used planes, boats and helicopters to flood the
peninsula with 16,000 troops. And Ukrainian officials say disguised Russian
troops have laid siege to military installations around the Crimean
peninsula.
Russian President Vladimir Putin
on Tuesday denied sending any more of his country's troops into the country, or
that any of the up to 25,000 troops who are stationed there have played any part
in the standoff, according to the state-run RIA Novosti news agency.
Many don't believe him,
including various Western officials and NATO Secretary General Anders Fogh
Rasmussen.
And, apparently, Martin -- who
touts her art on
her website and has surmised the U.S. government was complicit in the September
11, 2001, terrorist attacks -- is among them.
In her end-of-show commentary,
Martin said she wanted "to say something from my heart about the ongoing
political crisis in Ukraine and Russia's military occupation of Crimea."
"I can't stress enough how
strongly I am against any state intervention in a sovereign nation's affairs.
What Russia did is wrong.
"I admittedly don't know as much
as I should about Ukraine's history or the cultural dynamics of the region," she
added. "But what I do know is that military intervention is never the answer.
And I will not sit here and apologize (for) and defend military aggression."
Martin prefaced her remarks by
saying that, "just because I work here for RT doesn't mean I don't have
editorial independence."
That claim may have been belied
by the network reportedly ordering Martin to go to Crimea to "better her
knowledge," according to the Telegraph report.
RT did retweet multiple messages
about Martin's rant from Glenn Greenwald -- the former Guardian reporter known
most lately for his work revealing the U.S. National Security Agency's spy
policies through former government contractor Edward Snowden, who has since been
granted asylum in Russia. Among them: "Who was the @AbbyMartin of @RT in the US
television media for Iraq? Do we have one for today's wars?"
And video of her rant was still
up on RT's website -- alongside stories about the swelling "self-defense forces"
in Crimea and Putin saying Russia reserves the "right" to use military force --
well after she gave it.
That includes her last words:
"Above all, my heart goes out to the Ukrainian people who are now wedged as
pawns in the middle of a global power chess game. They are the real losers
here.
"All we can do know is hope for
a peaceful outcome to a terrible situation and prevent another full-blown Cold
War between multiple superpowers. Until then, I'll keep telling the truth as I
see it."
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