Untitled Document
The US press is supposed to be challenging the lies of this war
It is a bright winter morning and I am sipping my first coffee of the day in
Los Angeles. My eye moves like a radar beam over the front page of the Los Angeles
Times for the word that dominates the minds of all Middle East correspondents:
Iraq. In post-invasion, post-Judith Miller mode, the American press is supposed
to be challenging the lies of this war. So the story beneath the headline "In
a Battle of Wits, Iraq's Insurgency Mastermind Stays a Step Ahead of US"
deserves to be read. Or does it?
Datelined Washington - an odd city in which to learn about Iraq, you might
think - its opening paragraph reads: "Despite the recent arrest of one
of his would-be suicide bombers in Jordan and some top aides in Iraq, insurgency
mastermind Abu Musab Zarqawi has eluded capture, US authorities say, because
his network has a much better intelligence-gathering operation than they do."
Now quite apart from the fact that many Iraqis - along, I have to admit, with
myself - have grave doubts about whether Zarqawi exists, and that al-Qai'da's
Zarqawi, if he does exist, does not merit the title of "insurgency mastermind",
the words that caught my eye were "US authorities say". And as I read
through the report, I note how the Los Angeles Times sources this extraordinary
tale. I thought American reporters no longer trusted the US administration,
not after the mythical weapons of mass destruction and the equally mythical
connections between Saddam and the international crimes against humanity of
11 September 2001. Of course, I was wrong.
Here are the sources - on pages one and 10 for the yarn spun by reporters
Josh Meyer and Mark Mazzetti: "US officials said", "said one
US Justice Department counter-terrorism official", "Officials ...
said", "those officials said", "the officials confirmed",
"American officials complained", "the US officials stressed",
"US authorities believe", "said one senior US intelligence official",
"US officials said", "Jordanian officials ... said" - here,
at least is some light relief - "several US officials said", "the
US officials said", "American officials said", "officials
say", "say US officials", "US officials said", "one
US counter-terrorism official said".
I do truly treasure this story. It proves my point that the Los Angeles Times
- along with the big east coast dailies - should all be called US OFFICIALS
SAY. But it's not just this fawning on political power that
makes me despair. Let's move to a more recent example of what I can only call
institutionalised racism in American reporting of Iraq. I have to thank reader
Andrew Gorman for this gem, a January Associated Press report about the killing
of an Iraqi prisoner under interrogation by US Chief Warrant Officer Lewis Welshofer
Jnr.
Mr Welshofer, it transpired in court, had stuffed the Iraqi General Abed Hamed
Mowhoush head-first into a sleeping bag and sat on his chest, an action which
- not surprisingly - caused the general to expire. The military jury ordered
- reader, hold your breath - a reprimand for Mr Welshofer, the forfeiting of
$6,000 of his salary and confinement to barracks for 60 days. But what caught
my eye was the sympathetic detail. Welshofer's wife's Barbara, the AP told us,
"testified that she was worried about providing for their three children
if her husband was sentenced to prison. 'I love him more for fighting this,'
she said, tears welling up in her eyes. 'He's always said that you need to do
the right thing, and sometimes the right thing is the hardest thing to do'".
Yes, I guess torture is tough on the torturer. But try this from the same report:
"Earlier in the day ... Mr Welshofer fought back tears. 'I deeply apologise
if my actions tarnish the soldiers serving in Iraq,' he said."
Note how the American killer's remorse is directed not towards his helpless
and dead victim but to the honour of his fellow soldiers, even though an earlier
hearing had revealed that some of his colleagues watched Welshofer stuffing
the general into the sleeping bag and did nothing to stop him. An earlier AP
report stated that "officials" - here we go again - "believed
Mowhoush had information that would 'break the back of the insurgency'."
Wow. The general knew all about 40,000 Iraqi insurgents. So what a good idea
to stuff him upside down inside a sleeping bag and sit on his chest.
But the real scandal about these reports is we're not told anything about the
general's family. Didn't he have a wife? I imagine the tears were "welling
up in her eyes" when she was told her husband had been done to death. Didn't
the general have children? Or parents? Or any loved ones who "fought back
tears" when told of this vile deed? Not in the AP report he didn't. General
Mowhoush comes across as an object, a dehumanised creature who wouldn't let
the Americans "break the back" of the insurgency after being stuffed
headfirst into a sleeping bag.
Now let's praise the AP. On an equally bright summer's morning in Australia
a few days ago I open the Sydney Morning Herald. It tells me, on page six, that
the news agency, using the Freedom of Information Act, has forced US authorities
to turn over 5,000 pages of transcripts of hearings at the Guantanamo Bay prison
camp. One of them records the trial of since-released British prisoner Feroz
Abbasi, in which Mr Abbasi vainly pleads with his judge, a US air force colonel,
to reveal the evidence against him, something he says he has a right to hear
under international law.
And here is what the American colonel replied: "Mr Abbasi, your conduct
is unacceptable and this is your absolute final warning. I do not care about
international law. I do not want to hear the words international law. We are
not concerned about international law."
Alas, these words - which symbolise the very end of the American dream - are
buried down the story. The colonel, clearly a disgrace to the uniform he wears,
does not appear in the bland headline ("US papers tell Guantanamo inmates'
stories") of the Sydney paper, more interested in telling us that the released
documents identify by name the "farmers, shopkeepers or goatherds"
held in Guantanamo.
I am now in Wellington, New Zealand, watching on CNN Saddam Hussein's attack
on the Baghdad court trying him. And suddenly, the ghastly Saddam disappears
from my screen. The hearing will now proceed in secret, turning this drumhead
court into even more of a farce. It is a disgrace. And what does CNN respectfully
tell us? That the judge has "suspended media coverage"!
If only, I say to myself, CNN - along with the American press - would do the
same.