All the Propaganda That's Fit to
Print:
The New York Times, Again, Tells It Like It Ain’t
By Sean M. Madden
15/08/08 "iNoodle"
--- The New York Times’ top
story Thursday morning -- entitled "Bush, Sending Aid,
Demands That Moscow Withdraw" -- leads with the following
three propaganda-packed paragraphs:
President Bush
sent American troops to Georgia on Wednesday to oversee
a “vigorous and ongoing” humanitarian mission, in a
direct challenge to Russia’s display of military
dominance over the region. His action came after Russian
soldiers moved into two strategic Georgian cities in
what he and Georgian officials called a violation of the
cease-fire Russia agreed to earlier in the day.
Mr. Bush demanded that
Russia abide by the cease-fire and withdraw its forces
or risk its place in “the diplomatic, political,
economic and security structures of the 21st century.”
It was his strongest warning yet of potential
retaliation against Russia over the conflict.
The decision to send
the American military, even on a humanitarian mission,
deepened the United States’ commitment to Georgia and
America’s allies in the former Soviet sphere, just as
Russia has been determined to reassert its control in
the area.
But the propaganda
is already at work, before we even get to these lead
paragraphs, within the headline itself, splashed as it is
across the front page of America’s oft-called “newspaper of
record,” along with the Gray Lady’s hundred-plus-year-old
motto “All the News That’s Fit to Print”. The headline is
accompanied, or vice versa, by a
photograph of a “humanitarian aid” shipment being
unloaded, we’re told, from a U.S. military cargo plane at an
airport in Tbilisi, Georgia.
But to be sure that all concerned -- that is, we
historical-fact-deprived Americans, you god-help-you
Georgians, and the rest of “the free world” -- get the point
at a glance, the U.S. State Department seal, apparently
color-coordinated for the occasion, graces the side of the
shipment.
As part of an all-out
Western media campaign to bury the simple fact that Georgia
invaded South Ossetia a week ago -- an act of aggression
which led, subsequently,
to Russia’s response -- Thursday’s NYT’s top headline helps
to further instill the lie, at home and abroad, that Bush
and the U.S government are truly concerned about the welfare
of Georgians and human beings generally.
American and international readers are spoon-fed their daily
dose of sanctioned thought within the very first sentence of
the article. Bush, and by extension, the U.S. government and
its military are not
in Georgia to further U.S. (or the global elite’s)
geopolitical interests.
Don‘t you dare think
such a forbidden thought, the NYT goads its readers (of
whom, on the whole, it can be said could do with a fair bit
of goading to wake them from their psyop slumber).
Bush, the U.S. government and its military -- who, lest we
forget, are guilty of murdering more than a million Iraqi
civilians by way of their very own and very indisputable act
of overt aggression, to say nothing of atrocities in
Afghanistan or the ceaseless drumbeat toward a prefabricated
war with Iran -- are in Georgia on a “humanitarian mission”.
A “vigorous and ongoing”
one at that, should we have considered that it could be
otherwise.
Gee whiz, what swell folk they are, off on a sticky
humanitarian venture, risking life and limb for liberty and
justice for all, when they could be vacationing during the
final throes of summer. Worse yet, some of the American men
and women deployed to Georgia may actually believe that
they’re doing just that, risking life and limb (as they most
certainly are) for liberty and justice for all.
Mike Whitney wrote the
following in an
article which headlined Wednesday’s Information Clearing
House newsletter:
The attack was unprovoked and took place a full 24 hours
before even ONE Russian soldier set foot in South
Ossetia. Nevertheless, the vast majority of Americans
still believe that the Russian army invaded Georgian
territory first. The BBC, AP, NPR, the New York Times
and the rest of the establishment media has consistently
and deliberately misled its readers into believing that
the violence in South Ossetia was initiated by the
Kremlin. Let's be clear, it wasn't. In truth, there is
NO dispute about the facts except among the people who
rely the western press for their information. Despite
its steady loss of credibility, the corporate media
continues to operate as the propaganda-arm of the
Pentagon.
Whitney’s article
popped into my inbox at 1:35 BST (British Summer Time)
Thursday morning. The New York Times daily headlines email
arrived at 9:31, giving me time, first, to read, share and
comment on (in correspondence) Whitney’s ICH article before
coming upon the NYT’s daily dose.
But let’s return to those first three paragraphs and see if
we can’t sift through the propaganda that the New York Times
has the never-ending gall to heap upon its readers, despite
or in continuation of its deep complicity in smoothing the
way within the hearts and minds of the American people for
the U.S. to wage its criminal war in Iraq, as it did in the
lead up to the invasion of Afghanistan, as it has been doing
with feverish abandon concerning Iran, and is doing now
within the article at hand in order to provide
pseudo-intellectual cover for U.S. aggression-by-proxy in
the Caucasus.
President Bush sent American troops to Georgia on
Wednesday to oversee a “vigorous and ongoing”
humanitarian mission, in a direct challenge to Russia’s
display of military dominance over the region.
The U.S. already had
troops in Georgia, reportedly to train the Georgian
military. Considered in this light, the first sentence of
this NYT article is, at best, a half-truth, at worst, a lie
of omission.
On July 15, Reuters
reported (and MSNBC.com published, though the page has since
“expired“) that “one thousand U.S. troops began a military
training exercise in Georgia on Tuesday against a backdrop
of growing friction between Georgia and neighbouring
Russia.” The report continues: "The main purpose of these
exercises is to increase the cooperation and partnership
between U.S. and Georgian forces," Brigadier General William
B. Garrett, commander of the U.S. military's Southern
European Task Force, told reporters. This was reported on
July 15, one month ago.
But this fact must be
relegated to the memory hole. We are meant only to remember
that U.S. forces are on a humanitarian mission and that
Georgia was attacked, unprovoked, by Russia in a “display of
military dominance over the region.” Never mind that U.S.
forces did, in fact, invade and presently occupy both Iraq
and Afghanistan in a display of military dominance. Russia,
on the other hand, was meant to stand by as their citizens
were being attacked and killed by Georgia military forces
which General Garrett has told us were working in
cooperation and partnership with U.S. forces in July.
Given this fine example of
international cooperation and partnership, are even
Americans and other gullible New York Times readers meant to
swallow the obvious conclusion that Georgia would never have
attacked South Ossetia without prior U.S. knowledge and
approval?
His [Bush’s] action came after Russian soldiers moved
into two strategic Georgian cities in what he and
Georgian officials called a violation of the cease-fire
Russia agreed to earlier in the day.
We’re meant to
believe that Russian soldiers just decided, devoid of any
cause whatsoever, to move into two Georgian cities. Russia,
not Georgia, must be seen to be the aggressor. Not a hint of
reality must be allowed to seep in and cause good ol’
American patriotic resolve to waver.
All must be black and
white, even if what passes for black is, indeed, white or
vice versa.
Mr. Bush demanded that Russia abide by the cease-fire
and withdraw its forces or risk its place in “the
diplomatic, political, economic and security structures
of the 21st century.” It was his strongest warning yet
of potential retaliation against Russia over the
conflict.
Can even the New
York Times, propaganda-arm-extraordinaire, print this with a
straight face? Bush -- the million-plus-mass-murderer from
Connecticut, I mean Crawford -- is pointing out to Russia
that it is risking its place in the “the diplomatic,
political, economic and security structures of the 21st
century,” by which he can only mean the New World Order, the
very nature of which the world’s citizens have observed
throughout the Bush years (I and II) is nothing if not
diabolical.
In closing, and in brief,
let us take a look at the third paragraph in this New York
Times piece:
The decision to
send the American military, even on a humanitarian
mission, deepened the United States’ commitment to
Georgia and America’s allies in the former Soviet
sphere, just as Russia has been determined to reassert
its control in the area.
The New York Times
now asserts -- in case we missed it being gently shoved down
our throats the first time -- that only in retrospect did
the U.S. decide to deepen its “commitment to Georgia and
America’s allies in the former Soviet sphere”. A bald-faced
lie if ever there was one.
But, note, this isn’t a U.S. official lying to the American
public via the New York Times. No, this is the New York
Times, itself, lying directly to its readers, worldwide, as
it does day in and day out.
And, finally, the spoonful of sugar, to either help it go
down or to make you regurgitate the whole:
“Even on a humanitarian
mission.”
Sean M.
Madden is an American writer presently living in the UK. He
edits and writes for his
iNoodle.com and
MindfulLivingGuide.com blogs, and welcomes
correspondence from readers. His email address is
sean@inoodle.com.
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