Wars
and propaganda machines
By Rodrigue Tremblay
"The
biggest lesson I learned from Vietnam is not to trust [our own]
government statements -- I had no idea until then that you could
not rely on [them]." --James W. Fulbright (1905-1995),
former US senator
Third sorrow:
"The replacement of truth by propaganda, disinformation, and
the glorification of war, power, and the military legions."
--Chalmers Johnson, (Sorrows of Empire)
”If you
tell a lie big enough and keep repeating it, people will
eventually come to believe it. The lie can be maintained only
for such time as the State can shield the people from the
political, economic and or military consequences of the lie. It
thus becomes vitally important for the State to use all of its
powers to repress dissent, for the truth is the mortal enemy of
the lie, and thus by extension, the truth is the greatest enemy
of the State.” --Joseph Goebbels, Nazi Minister of
Propaganda
10/09/06 "Online
Journal" Propaganda
machines are dangerous, even more so in a democracy
than in a totalitarian regime, because their goal is to confuse,
disinform, lie, raise fear and manipulate the opinions of the
people.
Indeed, those few hands that control the
media have the power to turn lies into truth and truth into
lies, without being contradicted, because they also have the
power to silence any competing voices. This is the worse
monopoly one can find, much worse than any economic monopoly.
Indeed, when a small elite in power start using propaganda
intensively, it makes a mockery of the democratic principle of
self-government by the people. In fact, people begin to distrust
the government because it has become a source of half-truths,
lies and disinformation. Discouragement and apathy follow
because people know that their views do not count and that the
oligarchy in power will do whatever it wants, no matter what the
supposedly 'sovereign' people thinks. It is only when the media
are free and independent that people can hope to be honestly
informed and be free from government manipulation.
We have a clue about how powerful
political propaganda can be when we consider that,
more than a year after the Iraq invasion, just before the 2004
presidential elections, a
Harris Poll reported that 62 percent of all American
voters, and 84 percent of those planning to vote for Bush II,
still were of the opinion that Saddam Hussein and Iraq had
''strong links" to al Qaeda, and 41 percent of all voters, and
52 percent of Bush backers, believed that Saddam had ''helped
plan and support the hijackers" who attacked the USA, on
9/11. What's more, as an amazing tribute to the force of
political propaganda and the tactics of
big
lies, a whopping 85 percent of the American soldiers
themselves still believed, in 2006, three years after the
invasion, the falsehood that they were fighting in Iraq “to
retaliate for Saddam’s role in the 9-11 attacks," while 77
percent thought that a major reason for the war was “to stop
Saddam from protecting al Qaeda in Iraq."
Today, a solid majority of Americans think
that the Iraq war was a mistake and many are lucid enough to
know they have been misled. Indeed, nearly two-thirds of
Americans, an overwhelming majority, are now
opposed to the war. But, it is too late. The damage
has been done, and the U.S. is now solidly bogged down in Iraq.
In fact, what is the Bush-Cheney administration's answer to
popular rejection? Its response: "Stay the course," "Full
speed ahead!" Indeed, notwithstanding the tremendous pro-war
propaganda originating from the partisan American media, 61
percent of Americans now oppose the
war in Iraq. What is even more damning, a vast
majority of Iraqis are turning against the invaders and
occupiers. Seventy-one percent of Iraqis see the U.S.-led
coalition not as "liberators" but as "occupiers," and 78 percent
consider the U.S. military presence in Iraq to have a
destabilizing influence. And, not surprisingly, a solid majority
of them support an immediate military
pullout of foreign troops from their country.
In their
grandiose plan, the neocon Bush team intends to have
American troops occupy the country of Iraq illegally for as long
as one can foresee. They built 14 permanent military bases there
and they are constructing a military fortress disguised as an
embassy to host the equivalent of a medium-size American town.
That way, the United States is sure to be at war in the Middle
East for decades to come.
Before the March 2003 invasion of Iraq, the
neocon propaganda machine in the media, led by Rupert
Murdoch-owned Fox News (News Corp), assisted by ABC (Disney),
NBC (GE), CBS (Viacom), TBS
(Time Warner), CNN (Time
Warner), MTV (Viacom), plus the Weekly Standard (News
Corp), the National Review, the New Republic, the Wall Street
Journal (Dow Jones),
the New York Post (News Corp), the New York Sun, the Washington
Times (Sun Myung Moon),
etc., initiated an all-out propaganda campaign to persuade the
American people that Saddam Hussein was really the villain
behind the 9/11 attacks, not the Taliban of Afghanistan or bin
Laden's alleged al Qaeda terrorist network. They succeeded so
well in this endeavor that many Americans believed the
fabricated fable and swallowed the bait -- hook, line, and
sinker.
Then the neocons persuaded born-again
George W. Bush that he had a mission from 'God' to fight the
evil of Islamist terrorism. They whispered in his ear that the
'Devil' was in Iraq, not in Afghanistan. Thus,
Bush II could enthusiastically proclaim that
"Across the world, and across the years, we will fight these
evil ones, and we will win." Canadian neocon
David Frum introduced in a Bush speech the idea of
targeting three countries -- Iran, Iraq, and North Korea -- as
the
evils he had to fight, without even mentioning Osama
bin Laden or al Qaeda. And, just as with the monkey on the
elephant's back, the neocons led the American elephant into the
Iraqi quagmire. Even today, most Americans ignore what really
happened and why they have soldiers in Iraq to kill and to be
killed.
As a rule, professional news media in a
democracy should be independent, objective and, as much as
possible, factual and neutral in reporting news and events. This
means that they should not have a systematic bias and should not
be under government control or under the total control of
special interest groups. Indeed, to be informed is a
prerequisite for the citizenry to be able to exercise its
democratic rights. If the media systematically slant the news or
remain content to serve as conveyor belt for state propaganda,
this results into a direct attack on
democracy
itself.
Unfortunately, over the last decade,
American corporate media have developed the lazy tendency of
being "embedded" with the government and of presenting
uncritically the government spin on things and events, as if
this was always the truth. Some have gone so far in that
direction that they seem to be reproducing the relationship that
existed in the former Soviet Union between the government and
the media, the latter being a simple extension of the former. A
case in point: they have no qualms about accepting selective
invitations to secret
meetings in the Oval Office to be 'briefed' and
cheered up in their public support of the Bush-Cheney
administration.
The results of this government-inspired
disinformation is all there to be seen:
- Three years after this was officially
disproved, half of Americans still believe Iraq had
weapons of mass destruction (WMD) before Bush II
decided on his own to launch his war of aggression;
- Close to one-quarter of Americans
still cling to the idea that the government of Iraq was
behind the attacks of 9/11. Since no such misinformation
exists in other countries, this could only mean that public
government officials, assisted by the neocon media and
government propagandists, have consciously spread and
perpetuated the disinformation and are, therefore, mainly
responsible for the abysmal and dangerous ignorance found in
a large and probably decisive segment of the American
electorate.
There is no area where general information
is as profoundly at odds with what is known in the United States
compared to what is known in the rest of the world as with
questions dealing with the state of Israel and the Middle East.
Thanks to the powerful
pro-Israel Lobby and its propaganda (Hasbara)
machine, Americans seem to live on a different planet than the
rest of the world. -- Americans, for example, are far more
likely than Europeans to
side with Israel in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
A Pew Global Attitudes survey taken between March and May (2006)
found that 48 percent of Americans said that their sympathies
lay with the Israelis; only 13 percent were sympathetic towards
the Palestinians. By contrast, in Spain for example, 9 percent
sympathized with the Israelis and 32 percent with the
Palestinians. The main reason for this cleavage is the fact that
Americans do not receive the same news as the rest of the world.
In the U.S., news directly or indirectly involving Israel is
filtered, slanted and adjusted by spin organizations in order to
present Israel as the innocent victim, even when it does the
killing and the destruction, as its indiscriminate bombings of
civilian areas in
Lebanon, during the summer of 2006, amply
demonstrated.
For this purpose, for example, the Lobby
has its own propaganda coordinating organization, the Committee
for Accuracy in Middle East Reporting in America (CAMERA).
Its mission is to see that American media (TV, radio,
newspapers, magazines) toe the line on Israel and on American
policies toward Israel, not hesitating in the process to smear
journalists or authors who dare criticizing the actions of the
Israeli government or who offer more balanced viewpoints. It
also takes the necessary political steps to make sure that the
Federal Communications Commission [FCC]
does not impede the move toward concentration of media ownership
in the U.S.
What are the conclusions to be drawn from
all this?
First, there is the need for free societies
to be aware when they are subjected to incessant and systematic
campaigns of indoctrination and disinformation, the more so if
it is to wage wars of aggression abroad. Second, the threat of
excessive concentration of media ownership should always be a
paramount preoccupation in a democracy, if freedom of
information is to be preserved.
Rodrigue Tremblay is professor emeritus of economics at the
University of Montreal and can be reached at
rodrigue.tremblay@ yahoo.com. He is the author of the book
'The New American Empire'. Visit his blog site at
www.thenewamericanempire.com/blog.
Copyright © 1998-2006 Online Journal
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