By Michael Schwartz
November 18, 2008 "Huffington Post" -- Will The US Government And Media Finally Report The Slaughter Of Iraqis By The US Military?
I recently received a set of questions from Le Monde Diplomatique reporter Kim Bredesen about the 2007 Project Censored story about 1,000,000 Iraqi deaths due to the U.S. invasion and occupation of Iraq. The questions and answers are, I think, useful in framing both the untold story of the slaughter in Iraq and the failure of the U.S. media to report on its extent or on U.S. culpability for the deaths of 4% of the Iraqi population.
Bredeson : I observed recently that your story on Iraqi deaths caused by US occupation became story no. 1 in this year's listing by Project Censored. I wondered if I could ask you a few questions on e-mail regarding this issue?
Regards,
Kim Bredesen,
Le Monde
diplomatiqe
(Norway)
These are my
questions.
1.Do you
expect that
the new
administration
under
Barrack
Obama will
acknowledge
the validity
of the
statistics
concerning
Iraqi deaths
caused by
the US
occupation
force?
It is always
difficult to
predict the
political
future, but
even if the
Obama
administration
pursues a
very
different
policy in
Iraq and the
Middle East,
I doubt it
will
acknowledge
the amount
of violence
caused by
the war
during its
first six
years.
Historically,
the U.S.
government
has a poor
record of
acknowledging
its
responsibility
for death
and/or
destruction
of other
peoples,
beginning
with the
genocide
against
Native
Americans
(never
officially
acknowledged),
continuing
through two
hundred
years of the
slave trade
and slavery
(there has
actually
been a limp
official
apology),
and
culminating
in the
ongoing
refusal to
acknowledge
one to three
million
deaths in
Vietnam
caused by
the U.S.
attempt to
conquer that
country.
2.You
mention in
your update
to Censored
2009 that
there is a
media
blackout
about the
dramatic
statistics
in US mass
media. Do
you think
this will
change?
I think that
the U.S.
mainstream
media has a
poor record
of
acknowledging
the many
instances in
which it has
(collectively)
failed to
maintain its
constitutionally
mandated
independence
from
government
policy, and
instead has
ignored or
written
false
reports
supporting
government
malfeasance
and tyranny.
It was
refreshing
that the New
York Times
and
Washington
Post
acknowledged
their
failure to
report the
contrary
evidence to
the US
government
claims about
WMDs in
Iraq, but
this is a
rare moment
that has not
led to more
independent
reporting on
other U.S.
government
action in
the Middle
East.
I think that
we can
expect the
U.S.
mainstream
media to
continue to
compromise
its
journalistic
integrity in
reporting on
Iraq, and
this will
mean failing
to report
its own
suppression
of the
Lancet
studies and
continuing
to misreport
the U.S.
role in the
Iraq war.
This
expectation
is, of
course,
speculation,
but the best
evidence for
this
speculation
is the fact
that the
major media
have been
withdrawing
their
personnel
from Iraq,
instead of
taking
advantage of
more
favorable
security
conditions
to send
reporters to
locations
that were
previously
inaccessible
and
therefore
more
thoroughly
report the
impact of
the war on
Iraqi life.
3.How have
you
experienced
the coverage
about the
issue in
other
Western or
international
media, have
they taken
the
situation in
Iraq more
seriously?
I find the
reporting in
Al Jazeera,
the British
national
press, other
international
media, and
independent
U.S. media
far more
comprehensive
in their
coverage of
the Iraq
war. I would
not say that
they take
the
situation
more
“seriously,”
– there has
never been a
problem with
the U.S.
media taking
the war
seriously.
The
differences
are in very
specific
parts of the
coverage:
reporting on
U.S.
involvement
in deaths
and
destruction,
reporting on
Iraqi
resistance
to the U.S.
presence;
reporting on
the economic
and social
chaos caused
by U.S.
military,
political,
and economic
policies in
Iraq;
reporting on
who is
fighting
against the
U.S.;
reporting on
the actual
reality of
life under
U.S.
occupation;
and
reporting on
the
day-to-day
antagonism
of Iraqis to
the U.S.
presence.
I should
add,
however,
that these
failures are
not so much
failures of
U.S.
mainstream
reporters,
but of the
editors and
publishers
who assign
reporters to
particular
stories and
not to
others.
There are
many
reporters
who fit
information
about all
these issues
into
assignments
that are
aimed at
other
subjects.
One small
example will
illustrate
what I mean.
In reporting
about the
U.S.
offensive in
Haifa Street
in January
2007,
mainstream
reporters
(for
McClatchy
and the
Washington
Post, if
memory
serves me)
whose
assignment
was to
report on
the
successful
capture by
U.S. troops
of an
insurgent
stronghold
also
described
the
destructiveness
of the U.S.
attack and
mentioned
that U.S.
soldiers
stood idly
by while
Shia death
squads
cleansed the
neighborhood
of Sunnis.
This
information
appeared
toward the
end of
published
reports, but
it was
published
nevertheless.
In contrast,
a CBS report
on the
overarching
destructiveness
of the
offensive
and of the
anger of
residents at
U.S.
military
actions was
not
broadcast
and was only
made public
because of
the protests
of the
censored
reporter.
4.The
journalist
Joshua
Holland
compare the
mass
killings in
Iraq with
Pol Pot’s
genocide in
Cambodia. Is
this an
accurate
comparison
in your
opinion?
Holland’s
purpose in
this
comparison
is the same
as my
purpose in
comparing
the deaths
in Iraq to
those in
Darfur: we
are trying
to give
people a
sense of the
scale of the
violence
wrought in
Iraq by the
U.S.
military.
The mass
murders in
Cambodia
under Pol
Pot and the
displacements
and genocide
in Darfur--as
well as so
many other
recent and
more distant
instances of
such
violence--all
have
different
sources,
intentions,
and outcomes
from the
Iraq
violence and
from each
other. The
point of
making these
comparisons
is to point
out the
magnitude of
the
slaughter in
Iraq, not to
make
analytic
comments
about the
dynamics of
the war.
5. Do you
believe it
is
appropriate
that the
Bush-administration
should face
trial for
their
actions?
In “The Fog
of War,”
former U.S.
Secretary of
Defense
McNamara
said to the
camera that
if the U.S.
had lost
World War
II, then he
and other
American
leaders
would have
stood trial
as war
criminals
for the
terrorist
fire
bombings of
Japanese and
German
cities by
the U.S. air
force.
Certainly
the actions
of U.S.
political
leaders and
military
commanders
in ordering
their troops
to attack
civilian
targets in
Iraq (for
example the
destruction
of the city
of Falluja—well
publicized
everywhere
in the world
except in
the United
States) fall
under the
same
definition
of war
crimes that
McNamara was
considering
in making
this
statement,
and so it
would be
perfectly
appropriate
for Bush,
Cheney,
Rumsfeld,
Powell, and
the various
commanding
generals to
stand trial
for these
actions.
But take
note that
McNamara
said that
trials would
have taken
place if the
U.S. had
“lost.” This
statement
has actually
turned out
to be a kind
of half
truth. In
World War
II, the
Japanese and
Germans
certainly
lost, but
only a
relative
handful of
those
responsible
for their
war crimes
stood trial
(the
Japanese
Emperor, for
example, was
actually
restored to
his throne).
In the
Vietnam War,
most
observers
say that the
U.S. “lost”
the war, but
no U.S.
leaders
stood trial
for the many
war crimes
they
committed
during that
long
conflict.
There is no
predicting
the future,
but I expect
that, no
matter how
the Iraq war
ends--with
either
McCain’s
“victory” or
with the
“defeat”
that
President
Bush has
repeatedly
warned the
U.S.
citizens
about—there
will be no
war crimes
trials of
U.S.
political
and military
leadership.