MEDIA - LOOKING GLASS NEWS | |
Bushcons Sunny Side the Horror of Iraq |
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by Kurt Nimmo Another Day in the Empire Entered into the database on Thursday, December 01st, 2005 @ 19:12:42 MST |
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For some unexplained reason, the discovery of fake news stories planted
by the United States government is now considered scandalous, or at least momentarily
shocking in the current news cycle. It must be a slow news day—or week,
month, year, most assuredly a decade or more. Fake and heavily spun news has
emanated from the corporate media since (and before) the CIA launched Operation
Mockingbird in the late 40s. ABC, NBC, CBS, Time, Newsweek, Associated Press,
United Press International, Reuters, Hearst Newspapers, Scripps-Howard, Copley
News Service, etc., ad nauseam, have worked hand-in-glove with spooks and government
overlords for decades, since before I was a tike in short pants. Ho hum. And now I am supposed to be alarmed by the fact “U.S. Army officers
have been secretly paying Iraqi journalists to produce upbeat newspaper, radio
and television reports about American military operations and the conduct of
the war in Iraq,” according to Knight
Ridder, itself more than likely chewed through with CIA moth holes (or if
not CIA, at least military intelligence, as “officers from the 4th Army
PSYOPS group staffed the National Security Council’s Office of Public
Diplomacy (OPD), a shadowy government propaganda agency that planted stories
in the U.S. media supporting the Reagan Administration’s Central America
policies,” and labored away to spin the news at CNN, as
we learned back in March of 2000, before the current crop of reality-spinsters
had a chance to man the propaganda battle stations in the Bush White House and
Pentagon). Of course, everybody, especially the Iraqis, understand the situation in Iraq
is an unmitigated disaster—even the Strausscons know this, although they
seem to believe they can fool us and the Iraqis, thus indicating they take us
repeatedly for chumps. “U.S. officials in Washington said the payments were made through the
Baghdad Press Club, an organization they said was created more than a year ago
by U.S. Army officers. They are part of an extensive American military-run information
campaign—including psychological warfare experts—intended to build
popular support for U.S.-led stabilization efforts and erode support for Sunni
Muslim insurgents.” I realize many Americans suffer from chronic memory loss—for as Gore
Vidal reminds us (lest we forget), we Americans live in the United States of
Amnesia. It was a little less than a year ago the Pentagon told us the they
would dutifully launch their very own “news service in Iraq and Afghanistan
to send military video, text and photos directly to the Internet or news outlets,”
not that such (at an estimated sticker price of $6.3 million) is really necessary
with the corporate media professionally slanting the news. “The project,
called Digital Video and Imagery Distribution System or DVIDS, will also give
the Pentagon more control,” according to an AP
news item, posted February 28, 2004. In fact, the military outfitted “five
Mobile Public Affairs Detachments with a suitcase-sized reporting kit containing
digital video and still cameras, a laptop computer and a Norsat NewsLink 3200
satellite broadcast terminal,” the result “aimed at packaging and
shipping locally focused stories to small and medium-sized newspapers and TV
stations in the United States,” a great deal—or rather only deal—since
most journalists and newsfolk are deathly afraid to venture out of their hotels
in the Green Zone, lest they get either killed or kidnapped by roving black
op teams tasked with making sure nobody finds out the truth about what the Bushcons
are doing in Iraq. And then of course there was Rumsfeld’s Office of Strategic Influence,
supposedly canned by “lawmakers” (i.e.., the plutocrats in Washington
who spend most of their time courting and chasing AIPAC and corporate money)
because—well, because it was so obvious and Orwellian as to be an insult,
or so we were told a couple years ago. Well, good ideas devised by Straussian
neocons and self-proclaimed reality alchemists never die—they simply get
a facelift, pedicure, and name change. “The Bush administration, battling
negative perceptions of the Iraq war, is sending Iraqi Americans to deliver
what the Pentagon calls ‘good news’ about Iraq to U.S. military
bases, and has curtailed distribution of reports showing increasing violence
in that country,” the Washington
Post reported last October. The unusual public-relations effort by the Pentagon and the U.S. Agency
for International Development comes as details have emerged showing the
U.S. government and a representative of President Bush’s reelection
campaign had been heavily involved in drafting the speech given to Congress
last week by interim Iraqi Prime Minister Ayad Allawi. Combined, they indicate
that the federal government is working assiduously to improve Americans’
opinions about the Iraq conflict—a key element of Bush’s reelection
message… Meanwhile, Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld’s office has sent
commanders of U.S. military facilities a five-page memorandum titled “Guidance
to Commanders.” The Pentagon, the memo says, is sponsoring a group
of Iraqi Americans and former officials from the Coalition Provisional Authority
to speak at military bases throughout the United States starting Friday
to provide “a first-hand account” of events in Iraq. The Iraqi
Americans and the CPA officials worked on establishing the interim Iraqi
government. The Iraqi Americans “feel strongly that the benefits of
the coalition efforts have not been fully reported,” the memo says. The memo says the presentations are “designed to be uplifting accounts
with good news messages.” Rumsfeld’s office, which will pay
for the tour, recommends that the installations seek local news coverage,
noting that “these events and presentations are positive public relations
opportunities.” Predictably, this “effort” to portray the Iraqi occupation as an
exercise in American magnanimity—between sprays of phosphorous, plumes
of napalm, indiscriminate scattering of cluster bombs, and wanton irradiation
by ghoulish way of depleted uranium—failed miserably. So anxious were the Bushcons to spin cycle the horror of U.S. foreign policy
in the Middle East, they threw Undersecretary of State for Public Diplomacy
and Public Affairs Charlotte Beers into the fray—but even Beers’
considerable talent as a Madison Avenue public relations hack (she once marketed
Uncle Ben’s rice) and “shared values” mandate was unable to
convince Muslims worldwide Americans are anything less than skull-and-crossbones
Visigoths bent on sacking the Middle East in the name of Big Oil, Halliburton,
and a band of demented Zionists on a tiny sliver of stolen land pushed up against
the Mediterranean. On March 3, 2003, Ms. Beers resigned her post for “health
reasons,” that is to say the futility of her campaign would have eventually
given her a stroke. At any rate, the really funny part of the latest Pentagon effort to sunny-side
the Iraq Horror Show comes from the corporate media. “Many military officials,”
Knight Ridder continues, “said they were concerned that the payments to
Iraqi journalists and other covert information operations in Iraq had become
so extensive that they were corroding the effort to build democracy and undermining
U.S. credibility in Iraq. They also worry that information in the Iraqi press
that’s been planted or paid for by the U.S. military could ‘blow
back’ to the American public.” Eight current and former military, defense and other U.S. officials in
Baghdad and Washington agreed to discuss the payments to Iraqi reporters
and other American military information operations because they fear that
the efforts are promoting practices that are unacceptable for a democracy.
They requested anonymity to avoid retaliation…. Moreover, the defense and military officials said, the U.S. public is at
risk of being influenced by the information operations because what’s
planted in the Iraqi media can be picked up by international news organizations
and Internet bloggers…. Finally, military and defense officials said, the more extensive the information
operations, the more likely they’ll be discovered, thereby undermining
the credibility of the U.S. armed forces and the American government. Earth to Knight Ridder—the “credibility of the U.S. armed forces
and the American government” is a heap of smoldering offal and has been
such for a long time now. It is also laughable—in a macabre sort of way—that
U.S. officials would claim the idea here is to promote democracy in Iraq when
in fact the idea (as revealed by the very white papers penned by the Straussian
neocons directing the occupation) is to carve up and dismember the Arab and
Muslim Middle East into malleable Bantustan-like chunks. “Much along the
lines of an earlier paper by Israeli Oded Yinon , the [A Clean Break: A New
Strategy for Securing the Realm] document urges the Israelis to aggressively
seek the downfall of their Arab neighbors—especially Syria and Iraq—by
exploiting the inherent tensions within and among the Arab States,” summarizes
the Center
for Cooperative Research. This neocon policy paper, first presented to Likudite
fanatic Binyamin Netanyahu, is also all about invading Iraq, as the neocons
urged for a decade or more. Instead of democracy, the Bushcons are sincerely interested in a Zionist gerrymandering
process designed to punish Muslims for the sin of their very existence, since
they exist uncomfortably close to Israel and not say as swagmen and squatters
in the Australian Outback. But then, of course, for the religious among the
Zionists, since bald-faced “transfer” (ethnic cleansing) or even
genocide is not a practical option, the closest Arabs (Palestinians) should
be considered little more than “hewers of wood and drawers of water'’
for the people of Israel, as were the Gibeonites in the Old Testament. In the Arab world all of this is well known, although in America it is more
or less unspeakable, especially in the corporate media, so slavishly bent on
lionizing Zionists and demonizing Arabs. Thus no public relations (let’s
call a spade a spade—it is crude propaganda) effort will brainwash the
Arabs—no matter how Herculean the effort or how much money is squandered—into
believing Georgie and the neocon Mafia have the best interests of Muslims and
Arabs at heart. It doesn’t matter how many Iraqi journalists—those
not dead or hiding in fear for their lives—are on the occupation puppet
government or Pentagon payroll. Arabs know about the exigencies of the Zionists
because they live with the reality of deranged settlers and serial murdering
IOF soldiers every day of the week. As well, Iraqis live with the horror of the Zionist Master Plan daily as the
occupation effort is completely Israelized—from targeted assassinations
to random murder of innocents. Bush’s neocon gangsters may fool a few
Americans and even themselves, but the Iraqis are not buying into the scam,
especially if they have malnourished kids and relatives dying from cancer due
to the profligate use of depleted uranium. No “upbeat” fake news
stories will make the tumors disappear or magically render clean drinking water
from dirty or provide consistent electricity. It will not paper over the random
shooting of Iraqi motorists by hired “security” thugs or trigger-happy
checkpoint soldiers who are indistinguishable to average Iraqis from Israeli
border guards. Nobody’s fooled—however, in the United States of Amnesia, most
of us don’t know we’re fooled (or do we particularly care our appointed
and vote-rigging president lied the nation into invasion and occupation) and
if we did realize the Pentagon is attempting to sunny-side the gothic horror
in Iraq most of us wouldn’t care, especially when the latest episode of
the Bachelorette is on the idiot tube. |