12/26/07
"Media Lens" - -- - News that
British schoolteacher Gillian Gibbons had been jailed in
Sudan after allowing her pupils to call a teddy bear
Mohammed fed straight into the UK media’s hate factory
and its “war for civilisation”.
The Gibbons story was mentioned in a massive 257
articles in UK national newspapers in the first week,
providing an excuse to boost claims of “genocide” in
Sudan in 10 of these.
The suffering in Sudan has certainly been appalling - it
is estimated that the conflict has cost the lives of
100,000 people with two million made homeless. But Iraq
is far worse - the occupation has so far resulted in the
deaths of 1 million people with more than 4 million
displaced from their homes. Whereas, over the last year,
the term “genocide” has been used in 246 articles
mentioning Sudan - many of these affirming that genocide
has taken place - the results of the US-UK invasion of
Iraq, and of the earlier sanctions regime, are
essentially never described in similar terms.
To its credit, an Independent leader warned that it
would be wrong “to treat Ms Gibbons' case, as some have
done, as a harbinger of the supposedly inevitable clash
between the ‘enlightened’ West and ‘primitive’ Islam”.
(Leader, Ms Gibbons and a teddy bear named Mohamed,’ The
Independent, November 30, 2007)
The advice was largely ignored, however. Following
Gibbons’ release after eight days in jail, a December 4
Telegraph leader described how the “delight and mutual
congratulations that have characterised the agreement
between the Sudanese dictator and the British
authorities... presents a nauseating picture”. The
arrest being, after all, “testimony to the danger of
allowing a rogue state to proceed unchecked”. (Leader,
‘Sudan’s grotesque stunt,’ Daily Telegraph, December 4,
2007)
Is Sudan, then, to replace Iraq as the third “rogue”
member of the “axis of evil”? Daily Mail columnist
Melanie Phillips appeared to recommend as much, writing
a day earlier of how the teddy bear incident was “yet
another symptom of the great onslaught being mounted
against our civilisation and towards which not one inch
of ground must be given if that civilisation is to
survive“. (Phillips, ‘The teddy-bear teacher and
Labour's spineless response to a rogue state that
threatens us all ...,’ Daily Mail, December 3, 2007)
Such preposterous hyperbole belongs in the same category
as Hitler's description of Czechoslovakia as "a dagger
pointed at the heart of Germany". (Quoted, Noam Chomsky,
on Power And Ideology - The Managua Lectures, South End
Press, 1987, p.33)
Phillips was similarly outraged when 15 British sailors
were “kidnapped” by an Iranian warship on March 23 while
on patrol in the Shatt-al-Arab waterway between Iran and
Iraq. Then, she raged at “a military debacle for Britain
- a self-inflicted humiliation at the hands of Iran, at
a time when the mortal danger posed to the free world by
this rogue state is increasing by the day“. (Phillips,
‘The real issue isn't Mr Bean selling his story. It's
our utter humiliation by Iran,’ Daily Mail, April 16,
2007)
Iran was, of course, “steadily advancing towards its
goal of obtaining nuclear weapons with which it is
threatening to bring about the apocalypse it has been
working towards for the past three decades”.
Like the rest of the media, Phillips later fell silent
when evidence emerged suggesting that the British
sailors had in fact strayed into Iranian waters, and had
therefore not been “kidnapped” at all. On July 22, the
UK Foreign Affairs Committee reported:
"We conclude that there is evidence to suggest that the
map of the Shatt al-Arab waterway provided by the
Government was less clear than it ought to have been.
The Government was fortunate that it was not in Iran’s
interests to contest the accuracy of the map.” (http://www.publications.parliament.uk/pa/cm200607/cmselect/cmfaff/880/880.pdf)
Martin Pratt, Director of Research at the International
Boundaries Research Unit at Durham University, pointed
out that the British government’s map was “certainly an
oversimplification... it could reasonably be argued that
it was deliberately misleading”. (Ibid)
George Monbiot - Iran “Is A Dangerous And Unpredictable
State”
This did nothing to dim the enthusiasm of journalists
eager to portray Iran as a threat to world peace. George
Monbiot wrote in the Guardian last month: "I believe
that Iran is trying to acquire the bomb." He added:
"Yes, Iran under Mahmoud Ahmadinejad is a dangerous and
unpredictable state involved in acts of terror abroad.”
(Monbiot, ‘The Middle East has had a secretive nuclear
power in its midst for years,’ The Guardian, November
20, 2007;
http://www.guardian.co.uk/israel/comment/0,,2213812,00.html)
We wrote to Monbiot on the same day:
Hi George
In your latest Guardian article, you write:
"I believe that Iran is trying to acquire the bomb."
What is the basis for your belief, please?
You also write:
"Yes, Iran under Mahmoud Ahmadinejad is a dangerous and
unpredictable state involved in acts of terror abroad.
The president is a Holocaust denier opposed to the
existence of Israel."
Is it your understanding that Ahmadinejad, rather than
Khamenei, is the supreme ruler of Iran? If so, why? And
which "acts of terror abroad" do you have in mind? Do
you include the claims that Iran has supplied EFPs to
blow up US-UK tanks and troops in Iraq, for example?
Finally, what is the basis for your belief that
Ahmadinejad is "opposed to the existence of Israel"?
Best wishes
DE and DC
We wrote a further two times but received no replies.
Monbiot had earlier written to us in February 2005:
“If, as I think you have, you have begun to force people
working for newspapers and broadcasters to look over
their left shoulders as well as their right, and worry
about being held to account for the untruths they
disseminate, then you have already performed a major
service to democracy.” (Email, February 2, 2005)
These were kind words but they surely overstated the
case. In truth, we have little power to hold journalists
to account - it is a simple matter for them to ignore
our emails.
Monbiot’s comments on Iran recall his pre-war comments
on Iraq. At a crucial time politically, he wrote in
November 2002: "if war turns out to be the only means of
removing Saddam, then let us support a war whose sole
and incontestable purpose is that and only that..." (Monbiot,
'See you in court, Tony,' The Guardian, November 26,
2002)
We asked him:
"Can you explain why you would prioritise the support of
such a war ahead of a war to remove the Algerian
generals, the Turkish regime, the Colombian regime, or
maybe Putin? Would you also support a war to remove
these regimes, if this turns out to be the only way?"
(Email, November 26, 2002. See our series of Media
Alerts, beginning with:
http://www.medialens.org/alerts/02/021202_Monbiot_Iraq.HTM)
He replied the same day:
“The other nations you mention have some, admittedly
flimsy, domestic means of redress: in other words, being
democracies, or nominal democracies, citizens can, in
theory, remove them without recourse to violent means.
There is no existing process within Iraq for removing
the regime peacefully. Like many of those who oppose
this war with Iraq, I also want to help the Iraqi people
to shake off their dictator...
“As I suggest in my article, we must try the non-violent
means first, and there are plenty which have not been
exhausted. But if all the conditions which I believe
would provide the case for a just war are met - namely
that less violent options have been exhausted first,
that it reduces the sum total of violence in the world,
improves the lives of the oppressed, does not replace
one form of oppression with another and has a high
chance of success - then it seems to me that it would be
right to seek to topple Mr Hussein by military means.”
(Email, November 26, 2002)
We asked him if he thought Iraq was a special case to be
singled out for this kind of treatment. He replied:
"I do not believe that Iraq is a special case, or,
rather, I do not believe that it is any more special
than a number of other cases." (Email, November 27,
2002)
So why single out Iraq, just then, when the British and
American governments were clearly intent on attacking
Iraq? He replied:
"... why did I write that column about Iraq, rather than
about Burma or West Papua? The answer is that Iraq is
the issue over which the ideological battles of the
moment are being fought. Yes, of course the reason for
this is that the hawks in the US have put it on the
agenda." (Email, December 3, 2002)
The elusive but key truth is that mainstream politics
and media have an astonishing capacity to make certain
issues seem particularly real and important while
consigning others to oblivion. To criticise the actions
of the Iranian state, for example, is to have a voice -
our words are likely to matter, they may well be heard;
they can lead to discussion and even action. To
criticise the actions of a government of marginal media
interest is to be a voice in the wilderness - we might
as well be muttering to ourselves in the bath. The
temptation for a professional journalist is to be
'relevant', to accept mainstream parameters of debate,
and to ignore the costs of his or her actions.
By late 2002, establishment propaganda had made the need
to take action to deal with Saddam Hussein’s regime seem
real, urgent and important - Monbiot was swept along in
the wake of that propaganda. Something similar appears
to be happening again, now, over Iran.
On December 18, we analysed the UK national press over
the last 20 years searching for ‘gay rights’ and ‘Iran’.
We found 79 mentions - 56 of these have been since the
March 2003 invasion of Iraq:
2007 - 14
2006 - 9
2005 - 9
2004 - 19
2003 - 6 (5 post-invasion, 1 pre-invasion)
2002 - 2
2001 - 3
2000 - 1
1999 - 1
1998 - 2
1997 - 2
1996 - 1
1995 - 1
1994 - 5
1992 - 1
1989 - 1
1988 - 2
Following the invasion, Iran took the place of Iraq as
the West’s official enemy - it was the ideal scapegoat
for the catastrophic occupation and a suitable device
for maintaining the traditional fear of foreign
‘threats’.
We found a similar pattern when searching for the terms
’Taliban’ and ‘women’s rights’. Since February 1995,
there have been 56 mentions in the Guardian. Of these,
36 have appeared since the September 11, 2001 attacks.
Following the September 11 attacks, there was the same
number of mentions (nine) in the last three and a half
months of that year as there had been in the previous
three years combined. 90% of the mentions in 2001
occurred after 9-11.
US Spies Confound The Warmongers
Just two weeks after Monbiot’s comments on Iran, his own
newspaper covered the latest report by the US National
Intelligence Estimate (NIE), which summarises the work
of the 16 American intelligence agencies. The report,
‘Iran: Nuclear Intentions and Capabilities,’ disclosed
that Iran has +not+ been pursuing a nuclear weapons
development programme for the past four years:
"Tehran's decision to halt its nuclear weapons programme
suggests it is less determined to develop nuclear
weapons than we have been judging since 2005.” (Ewen
MacAskill, ‘US spies give shock verdict on Iran threat:
Intelligence agencies say Tehran halted weapons
programme in 2003,’ The Guardian, December 4, 2007)
The report concluded: "We judge with high confidence
that in fall 2003 Tehran halted its nuclear weapons
programme." (Ibid) The programme had not been restarted
as of the middle of this year.
Other evidence challenges the claim that Iran is
supplying sophisticated weaponry to Iraqi insurgents. In
May, the Guardian devoted an entire front page column to
anonymous US military sources who insisted:
"Iran is fighting a proxy war in Iraq and it's a very
dangerous course for them to be following. They are
already committing daily acts of war against US and
British forces." (Simon Tisdall, 'Iran's secret plan for
summer offensive to force US out of Iraq,’ The Guardian,
May 22, 2007. You can see the front page here:
www.medialens.org/alerts/07/screenshots/guardian_070522_cover.jpg)
Journalists have long taken for granted that Iran is
smuggling advanced roadside bombs, known as Explosively
Formed Penetrators (EFPs), into Iraq. However, in
October, historian and security analyst Gareth Porter
described on Inter Press Service how the US military
command had accused Iran last January of providing EFPs
despite knowing that Iraqi machine shops had been
producing their own EFPs for years. By late 2005, the
British military had found clear evidence that Iraqi
Shiites were manufacturing their own EFPs.
The US command also had substantial evidence that the
Iraqi Mahdi army had received EFP technology and
training on how to use it from Hezbollah rather than
Iran. In November 2006, a senior intelligence official
told the New York Times and CNN that Hezbollah had
trained as many as 2,000 Mahdi army fighters in Lebanon.
According to British expert Michael Knights, writing in
Jane's Intelligence Review last year, the earliest EFPs
appearing in Iraq in 2004 were probably constructed by
Hezbollah specialists. Porter noted that British and US
officials have long known that the EFPs being used in
Iraq closely resemble weapons used by Hezbollah against
Israeli forces in Southern Lebanon.
Despite all of this, Porter observed, the US command,
operating under close White House supervision, “chose to
deny these facts in making the dramatic accusation that
became the main rationale for the present aggressive US
stance toward Iran”. (Porter, ‘U.S. Military Ignored
Evidence of Iraqi-Made EFPs,’ IPS, October 25, 2007;
http://ipsnews.net/news.asp?idnews=39810)
And so, while the media continue to capitalise on any
excuse to promote a “clash of civilisations” between the
West and “militant Islam”, it remains a remarkable fact
that the ‘threats’ faced are mostly invented. Much of
the actual violence against the West has been, and will
continue to be, in retaliation for grave Western crimes
in Iraq, Afghanistan, Palestine and elsewhere consuming
literally millions of lives.
The simplest way for the West to bring its “war on
terror” to a successful conclusion would be for it to
stop waging war and to renounce terrorism.
SUGGESTED ACTION
The goal of Media Lens is to promote rationality,
compassion and respect for others. If you decide to
write to journalists, we strongly urge you to maintain a
polite, non-aggressive and non-abusive tone.
Write to Melanie Phillips
Email:
m.phillips@dailymail.co.uk
Write to George Monbiot
Email: g.monbiot@zetnet.co.uk
Please send a copy of your emails to us
Email:
editor@medialens.org