[Peace-discuss] Lies
Morton K. Brussel
brussel at uiuc.edu
Tue Jul 15 14:47:57 CDT 2003
A good summary from Le Monde Diplomatique. With its references (some in
French), it could form the basis for letters to the N-G.
MKB
State-sponsored Lies
by IGNACIO RAMONET; Le Monde Diplomatique ; July 15, 2003
"I cannot tell a lie" - George Washington
IT'S LIKE the story of the thief who yelled "Stop, thief!" The dossier
against Saddam Hussein that President George Bush presented to the UN
General Assembly on 12 September 2002 was called A Decade of Lies and
Deceit. And what did he offer for proof? Lies. He claimed that Iraq had
close links with the al-Qaida network and was a threat to the security
of the United States because it had "weapons of mass destruction" (WMD)
- a scary phrase invented by his media advisers.
Three months after the victory of the US forces and their British
auxiliaries in Mesopotamia we now know that these claims, widely
challenged at the time, were indeed false (1). It is obvious that the
US administration manipulated intelligence about the WMD. The
1,400-strong inspection team of the Iraq Survey Group under General
Dayton has still not found any evidence. And now we are told that at
the moment when Bush made these charges, he already had reports from
his security services proving them false (2). According to Jane Harman,
a Democratic congresswoman from California , we have been the victims
of the "biggest cover-up manoeuvre of all time" (3). For the first time
in history the US public is asking questions about the reasons for a
war, although only now that it is over.
A secret department at the heart of the Pentagon, the Office of Special
Plans (OSP), played a part in this mass deception. As revealed by
veteran journalist Seymour M Hersh in the New Yorker (4), the OSP was
set up by Paul Wolfowitz, number two at the Defence Department, and led
by a noted hawk, Abram Shulsky. OSP's job is to analyse data received
from the security services and to produce summaries to be passed to the
government. Relying on statements by Iraqi exiles close to the Iraqi
National Congress (an organisation that was financed by the Pentagon)
and its president, Ahmad Chalabi, the OSP apparently over-inflated the
threat of the WMD and the links between Saddam Hussein and al-Qaida.
The US Secretary of State, Colin Powell, was manipulated and his
political future is now at stake. He was reported to have resisted
White House and Pentagon pressures to distribute the most dubious
briefings. In his UN Security Council speech of 5 February 2003 Powell
was obliged to read a draft prepared by Lewis Libby, chief of staff to
vice president Dick Cheney. It contained such tenuous information that
Powell was said to have become angry, thrown the sheets in the air and
refused to read it. Finally Powell asked to have the head of the CIA,
George Tenet, sit in view behind him to share responsibility for what
was being read.
In an interview in the June issue of Vanity Fair, Wolfowitz admitted
that governmental lies had been told. He said that the decision to put
forward the threat of WMD to justify a preventive war against Iraq had
been adopted "for reasons that have a lot to do with US government
bureaucracy . . . We settled on the one issue which everyone could
agree on, which was weapons of mass destruction" (5).
So Bush had lied. Searching for a casus belli to appeal to the United
Nations and recruit a few accomplices ( United Kingdom and Spain ) to
his project for conquering Iraq , Bush did not hesitate to fabricate a
massive governmental lie.
He was not alone. On 24 September 2002 Tony Blair stood before the
House of Commons and announced: " Iraq possesses chemical and
biological weapons . . . Its missiles can be deployed in 45 minutes."
To the UN Security Council on 5 February Powell said: "Saddam Hussein
has investigated dozens of biological agents causing diseases such as
gas gangrene, plague, typhus, tetanus, cholera, camelpox and
haemorrhagic fever." In March, on the eve of war, the US Vice
President, Dick Cheney, said: "We believe he has reconstituted nuclear
weapons" (6).
Bush repeated the charges in many speeches. After a meeting with Powell
on 6 February he went so far as to add erroneous details: " Iraq has
sent bomb-making and document forgery experts to work with al-Qaida.
Iraq has also provided al-Qaida with chemical and biological weapons
training. We know that Iraq is harbouring a terrorist network, headed
by a senior al-Qaida planner."
These charges were amplified by the pro-war media, which became the
instruments of propaganda. They were repeated by television channels
Fox News, CNN and MSNC, by the Clear Channel radio network (1,225
stations throughout the US ) and even prestigious newspapers, such as
the Washington Post and the Wall Street Journal. These accusations
provided the main argument for those who were pro-war around the world.
In France they were taken up by Pierre Lelouche, Bernard Kouchner, Yves
Rocaute, Pascal Bruckner, Guy Millière, André Glucksman, Alain
Finkelkraut and Pierre Rigoulot (7).
They were also repeated by Bush's allies. The most zealous, the Spanish
prime minister, José Maria Aznar, on 5 February told the Madrid Cortés:
"We all know that Saddam Hussein has weapons of mass destruction . . .
We also all know that he has chemical weapons" (8). On 30 January, on
an order from Bush, Aznar produced a declaration of support for the US
, the Letter of Eight, which was signed by Blair, Silvio Berlusconi and
Vaclav Havel among others, claiming that "the Iraqi regime and its
weapons of mass destruction represent a clear threat to world security".
To justify a preventive war that the United Nations and global public
opinion did not want, a machine for propaganda and mystification
(organised by the doctrinaire sect around George Bush) produced
state-sponsored lies for more than six months, with a determination
characteristic of the worst regimes of the 20th century.
The Bush administration added to the US 's long historical tradition of
lies. One of the most cynical was about the explosion on the battleship
Maine in the Bay of Havana in 1898, which was used as the pretext for
the US to go to war with Spain , and for the annexation of Cuba ,
Puerto Rico, the Philippines and the island of Guam.
On 15 February 1898, at 9.40pm, the Maine sank in the Havana straits,
with the loss of 260 men, after a violent explosion. Immediately the
popular press accused the Spaniards of having mined its hull: the press
denounced Spanish barbarism and "death camps". It even claimed the
Spanish were cannibals.
Two press barons vied in sensationalism: Joseph Pulitzer of the New
York World, and William Randolph Hearst of the New York Journal. The
anti-Spanish campaign was supported by US businessmen who had major
investments in Cuba and were keen on ousting the Spaniards. But the
public was not interested, and neither were journalists. In 1898 the
Journal war artist Frederick Remington wrote to Hearst from Havana :
"There is no war here. I demand to be recalled." Hearst cabled: "Stay.
You provide the drawings, I'll supply the war." Then came the explosion
on the Maine , which allowed Hearst to campaign for war, devoting pages
of his news-papers every day for months to the subject, calling for
vengeance: "Remember the Maine ! To Hell with Spain ." Other papers
copied. Sales of the Journal soared from 30,000 to 400,000, and then
regularly topped a million. Public opinion was inflamed. The atmosphere
became hallucinatory. Pressed on all sides, President William McKinley
declared war on Spain on 25 April 1898. But 13 years later a commission
of inquiry decided that the explosion had been an accident in the Maine
's engine room (9).
During the cold war in 1960, the CIA distributed to journalists
confidential documents showing that the Soviets were about to get ahead
in the arms race. Immediately the media pressured candidates for the
presidency and clamoured for increased defence spending. John F Kennedy
promised to devote millions of dollars to reviving the ballistic
missiles programme, wanted by both the CIA and the military-industrial
complex. Once Kennedy was elected and the programme voted through, he
discovered the US already had a crushing military superiority over the
USSR .
In 1964 it was claimed that two US destroyers had been attacked by
North Vietnamese tor pedoes in the Gulf of Tonkin . Immediately the
media turned this into an issue, describing it as a humiliation and
demanding reprisals. President Lyndon B Johnson used this as a pretext
to launch reprisal bombings against the North Vietnamese. He called on
Congress to pass a resolution that allowed him to send in US troops,
and began the Vietnam war, which was only to end - in defeat - in 1975.
Later the crews of the destroyers said that the attack stories were
fabricated.
In 1985 President Ronald Reagan declared a state of emergency because
of the "Nicaraguan threat" posed by the Sandinistas in power in Managua
, a government democratically elected in November 1984 that respected
political liberties and freedom of expression. Nicaragua , so Reagan
claimed, was "two days' car drive from Harlingen , Texas.We are in
danger!" Secretary of state George Shultz told Congress: " Nicaragua is
a cancer eating into our country, it applies the doctrines of Mein
Kampf and threatens to take control over the whole hemisphere" (10).
These lies were used to justify massive aid to the anti-Sandinista
Contras and led to Irangate.
The lies of the Gulf war in 1991 have been extensively analysed (11) .
Claims were frequently repeated that Iraq had the fourth most powerful
army in the world, that maternity hospitals in Kuwait had been
destroyed, that there was an uncrossable defensive line, that Patriot
missiles were effective: all were proved false.
After George Bush Jr's election to the presidency in November 2000,
manipulation of public opinion was the key preoccupation of the new
administration. After the attacks of 11 September 2001 it became an
obsession. Michael Deaver, a friend of Donald Rumsfeld and a specialist
in psychological warfare, advocated that military strategy should be
considered in relation to television coverage, because if the public
supported a conflict it was unstoppable - without it government was
powerless.
On 20 February 2002 the New York Times revealed that the Pentagon, on
orders from Donald Rumsfeld and the undersecretary for defence, Douglas
Feith, had secretly created the mysterious Office of Strategic
Influence (OSI), to generate false news to serve US interests. It was
coordinated by an air force general, Simon Worden. The OSI was
authorised to engage in disinformation, particularly to foreign media.
It had a contract worth $100,000 a month with the Rendon Group, a media
consultancy already used in the Gulf war, which had fabricated a
statement by a Kuwaiti "nurse" (12) who claimed to have seen Iraqi
soldiers looting the maternity department of a hospital in Kuwait and
killing the babies. This statement was decisive in persuading members
of Congress to vote for the war. Although officially dissolved after
these revelations, the OSI must have remained active. How otherwise can
we explain the grossest manipulations of the recent war in Iraq ,
especially the "rescue" of Private Jessica Lynch?
The US media splashed this story in April. Lynch was one of a group of
10 US soldiers captured by Iraqi troops. According to the approved
narrative, she had been ambushed on 23 March and captured after firing
at the Iraqis until her ammunition ran out. She had been hit by a
bullet, stabbed, tied up, and taken to a hospital in Nasiriyah where
she was beaten by an Iraqi officer. A week later US special forces
freed her in a surprise operation: despite resistance from her guards,
they broke into the hospital, rescued her and flew her by helicopter to
Kuwait .
That evening, Bush, from the White House, announced her rescue to the
nation. Eight days later the Pentagon supplied the media with a video
made during the mission, with scenes up to the standards of the best
action movies.
After the war ended on 9 April, journalists - particularly from The New
York Times, the Toronto Star, El País and the BBC - went to Nasiriyah
to find the truth. They were surprised by what they found. According to
their interviews with Iraqi doctors who had looked after Lynch (and
confirmed by US doctors who had later examined her), her wounds, a
fractured arm and leg and a dislocated ankle, were not due to bullets
but to an accident in the lorry in which she had travelled. She had not
been maltreated. On the contrary, the Iraqi doctors had done everything
possible to look after her.
"She had lost a lot of blood," explained Dr Saad Abdul Razak, "and we
had to give her a transfusion. Fortunately members of my family have
the same blood group: O positive. We were able to obtain sufficient
blood. She had a pulse rate of 140 when she arrived here. I think that
we saved her life" (13).
Taking considerable risks, these doctors managed to contact the US army
to return Lynch. Two days before the special forces arrived the doctors
had even taken her in an ambulance to a location close to US lines. But
US soldiers opened fire and almost killed her.
The pre-dawn arrival of special forces equipped with sophisticated
equipment surprised the hospital staff. The doctors had already told
the US forces that the Iraqi army had retreated, and that Lynch was
waiting to be claimed.
Dr Anmar Uday told the BBC's John Kampfner: "It was like in a Hollywood
film. There were no Iraqi soldiers, but the American special forces
were using their weapons. They fired at random and we heard explosions.
They were shouting Go! Go! Go! The attack on the hospital was a kind of
show, or an action film with Sylvester Stallone" (14).
The "rescue" was filmed on a night-vision camera by a former assistant
of director Ridley Scott, who had worked on the film Black Hawk Down
(2001). According to Robert Scheer of the Los Angeles Times, these
images were then sent for editing to US central command in Qatar , and
once they had been checked by the Pentagon they were distributed
worldwide (15).
The saving of Private Lynch is one for the annals of propaganda. In the
US she may represent the most heroic moment of the conflict, even if
the story of her rescue is as much a lie as Saddam Hussein's WMD or the
links between the Iraqi regime and al-Qaida.
Bush and his entourage have deceived Americans and world public
opinion. As Professor Paul Krugman says, their lies are "the worst
scandal in American political history, worse than Watergate, worse than
Iran-contra" (16).
________________________________
(1) See "Poles apart", Le Monde diplomatique, English language edition,
March 2003.
(2) International Herald Tribune, 14 June 2003 and El País ,Madrid , 1
and 10 June 2003.
(3) Libération, Paris , 28 May 2003.
(4) New Yorker, 6 May 2003. See as published oncommondreams.org
(5) Press Release : US Department of Defense, Wolfowitz Interview with
Vanity Fair's Tannenhaus. Published on
www.scoop.co.nz/mason/stories/WO030 ...
(6) Time, 9 June 2003.
(7) See Le Monde, 10 and 20 March 2003 and Le Figaro, 15 February 2003.
See also Anna Bitton, "Ils avaient soutenu la guerre de Bush",
Marianne, 9 June 2003.
(8) El País ,Madrid , 4 June 2003.
(9) www.herodote.net/histoire02151.htm .
(10) See "Entretien avec Noam Chomsky", Télérama, 7 May 2003.
(11) See La Tyrannie de la communication, Gallimard, Folio actuel
series, no 92, Paris , 2001.
(12) This "nurse" was the daughter of the Kuwaiti ambassador in
Washington , and her account was created for the Rendon Group
consultancy by Michael K Deaver, formerly media adviser to Ronald
Reagan.
(13) El País, 7 May 2003.
(14) John Kampfner, 'Saving Private Lynch story 'flawed', BBC, London ,
18 May 2003
(15) Los Angeles Times, 20 May 2003. See also: www.robertscheer.com
(16) The New York Times, 3 June 2003.
Translated by Ed Emery
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ALL RIGHTS RESERVED © 1997-2003 Le Monde diplomatique
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