Ex-Guardian Journo Blames Russia for Corbyn Leaks and Gets Pilloried Online

Window of the building housing The Guardian newspaper 770 x 403-min

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10 December 2019|The Interregnum|Mohamed Elmaazi

Journalist James Ball once worked with WikiLeaks to reveal war crimes perpetrated by US and UK forces, though he later argued that WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange had nothing to fear if he left the Ecuadorian embassy were he received diplomatic asylum. Ball regularly accuses the Russian state with interfering in the affairs of other countries.

Featured image via Wikimedia Commons

Former Guardian Journalist James Ball has raised a number of eyebrows on social media after claiming that “Labour should have known better” than to publish leaked documents exposing details of UK-US trade negotiations. The negotiations revealed, among other things, that the National Health Service is ‘on the table’:

​The remarks from Ball are particularly curious given that he serves as Global editor of The Bureau of Investigative Journalism and because he once worked with WikiLeaks to reveal war crimes perpetrated by US and UK troops in Iraq and Afghanistan. Balls Twitter thread, which was published over the weekend, finished by saying that he would “mute” people whose responses were “wildly irrational”.

Users of the Twitter social media platform expressed their consternation over an investigative journalist’s apparent opposition to publication of newsworthy documents:

​Some of the responses explicitly called-out Ball for his apparent attempts to undermine the revelation by linking them to Russia:

Those dastardly Russians and their, um, information campaign…

Jimmy “Red Scare” Bollock

​A number of replies sarcastically expressed what they believed was the ultimate takeaway from Ball’s twitter thread:

Labour should have looked at the documents that show that the government is lying and shoved them in the shredder.

​On the same day as Ball’s thread the trade justice experts Global Justice Now released a statement saying:

“The leak of the Trump Trade Files has revealed the threat to NHS drug prices, to food standards and to our democracy itself from a US-UK trade deal. Wherever the leak came from, no one has disputed that the documents are real. They are information, not disinformation.”

A history of pushing Russiagate narratives

Ball has published accounts accusing Russia of ‘interference’ in the US elections including hacking the computers of the US Democratic National Committee computers and passing the information onto WikiLeaks, a charge WikiLeaks denies. Yet Ball’s work, which assumes as fact that the Russian state actively interfered in the US 2016 election, has never referenced the work of journalist Aaron Maté who recently won an award for his work exposing the weaknesses of the Russiagate narratives.

The Bureau of Investigative Journalism recently raised money online on the basis that they were planning on suing the UK government for refusing to publish the ‘Russia’ report on alleged Russian state interference before the UK general election. However, two weeks later on 27 November Jame Ball wrote an article for The Bureau explaining that their case was not strong enough to follow through on their planned lawsuit.

 

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