Z-Propaganda Lashes Out At Kremlin Following Assad's Flight
12- 9.12.2024, 14:19
- 18,092
Some of them blame Putin personally.
Russian TV and Z-propagandists have rapidly rolled over. The militants who have taken power in Syria are no longer called terrorists, while Bashar al-Assad and the Syrian army are harshly criticised.
As early as December 7, Channel One referred to the Syrian rebels as ‘terrorists,’ but already on Sunday the word disappeared from the lexicon of propagandists, ‘We Can Explain’. has noticed. ‘Russia has repeatedly warned the Assad regime, but his army has suddenly started to lose power,’ the Sunday Times programme said in its report. Channel One experts attributed the rapid revolution to the fact that ‘the Syrian army has decayed.’
Vladimir Solovyov has shifted all responsibility to the common Syrians. ‘Taking responsibility for the life of the people who don't want to take this responsibility on themselves is strange,’ the propagandist said on the Rossiya 1 channel.
The failure of Russian policy in Syria is being vigorously discussed by Z-channels. Most authors fear to mention the culprits directly and write in well-oiled formulations, but with clear hints:
‘The orders to withdraw [the Russian military from Syria] have been received. Another triumph of the wise politician's negligibility.’
‘It will be extremely sad if Assad and his family's evacuation to Moscow becomes the only outcome of our ten-year campaign in Syria. On the other hand, negative experience is also experience.’
‘Okay, we may lose bases in Syria. Let it be. It's not the point to tear the hair out. It means there will be more men and planes on the main front. <...> Clearly, with the loss of bases in Syria, we will lose Africa.’
‘Everything that was being fought off, with the help of the Russians and specifically the ‘orchestra’, was surrendered without a fight in a matter of hours, literally.’
‘The loss of Palmyra and Deraa occurred not because there were no more soldiers, they simply did not believe in their future, and the portrait of Bashar al-Assad no longer symbolised anything.’