Deliberate
Deception—Bush & Iraq: How Much More Evidence is
Needed?
By:
Jack Dalton
05/23/05
"ICH" - - That the single most serious decision
which anyone calling them self the president can make is the
decision to go to war, is beyond question. That George W. Bush
& Company were formulating plans to invade Iraq even prior
to 9/11 is also beyond question; at least for those willing to
spend the time looking at the wide body of available evidence.
Paul
O’Neill, who was Secretary of the Treasury until Bush replaced
him, was very clear when he stated that invading
Iraq was on the table from the first day Bush took office. Richard
Clarke who was the “Terrorism Czar” was also replaced by
Bush. Writing in his book, “Against All Enemies” he is very
clear in explaining how the only thing Bush wanted to discuss,
or hear, was invading
Iraq
.
The
recent articles by Juan Cole, “The
Lie That Led to War” and Robert Parry’s article, “For
Bush, Iraq Lies are Fundamental” detailing the trail of
BushCo deceptions that ultimate led to this war of choice and
the slaughter of over 100,000 Iraqi’s with untold wounded in
mind and body; as
well as over 1800 Americans dead and up to 85,000 seeking
medical care—these are numbers far in excess of what the
Pentagon is reporting.
None
of this is new information. What is new are the memos recently
released which give additional confirmation to the simple fact,
Bush & Co wanted to invade
Iraq
and nothing was going to stop them.
“The
Downing Street Memo, recently leaked, reveals that
President George W. Bush decided to overthrow Iraqi President
Saddam Hussein in summer 2002 and—determined to ensure that
U.S. intelligence data supported his policies—"fixed"
the intelligence and facts relevant to WMD.” To date, three
weeks after the release and confirmation of the memos, the
media, especially broadcast media, has been silent!
It
never ceases to amaze me what broadcast media in the
U.S.
considers “news-worthy” and what is not; what the public
should be informed about and what the public does not need to
know. We were lied into war and the media is complicit in this
criminal enterprise know as the invasion and occupation of
Iraq
.
The
group,
Fairness and Accuracy in Reporting, has one of the best and
most complete analyses on the “Smoking Gun Memo” and the
lack of media attention in this nation.
Instead of properly informing us, the people of this
nation, print and broadcast media have become nothing more than
mouth-pieces for Bush and “The New World Order” as
articulated by groups such as the Project for the New American
Century and the American Enterprise Institute.
I’ve
left the entirety of the FAIR report and call to take action
here rather than just provide the link, which is above.
Information to enable you to contact various media outlets are
provided at the conclusion of this. Remember that the
“greatest sedition is silence.” Join with me and do “not
go quietly into that good night…” as our continued silence
and inactivity will surely be the death of us all.
FAIR
ACTION ALERT:
Network Viewers Still in the Dark on "Smoking Gun
Memo"
Print media continue to downplay story
May 20, 2005
Following FAIR's call for more mainstream coverage of the
"smoking gun memo"--the secret British document
containing new evidence that the Bush administration manipulated
intelligence to justify its plan to invade Iraq--a steady
trickle of news reports have appeared. But that coverage has
been downplayed in general and is still completely absent from
the nightly news.
The Los Angeles Times published a page 3 story on the memo on
May 12, and the Washington Post ran a page 18 story the
following day. More than two weeks after the story broke in the
Sunday Times of London (
5/1/05
), it finally made the front page of a major
U.S.
newspaper, the Chicago Tribune (
5/17/05
).
After referring to the memo (
5/2/05
) in a story on the British electoral campaign, the New York
Times failed to report on the document's implications about the
Bush administration until today (
5/20/05
); the one-column story didn't mention the manipulation of
intelligence until the eighth paragraph. (Times columnist Paul
Krugman also discussed the memo on the paper's opinion page on
May 16.)
The Washington Post's ombudsman, Michael Getler, who the
previous week (5/8/05) had mentioned reader complaints about the
Post's lack of memo coverage without evaluating their substance,
revisited the issue with a much more critical eye in his most
recent column (5/15/05). (The ombud gave back-handed credit to
FAIR and the group Media Matters for
America
--both "self-described media watchdog
organizations"--for prompting him to delve into the story.)
Getler wrote that Post editors initially told him they didn't
pursue the story because they were "tied up with election
coverage"--this despite the fact that the leaked memo
became a major election story in
Britain
and likely contributed to Tony Blair's weak returns. When he
questioned them again after the email campaign, Getler wrote,
"editors agreed that this story should be covered and said
they were going to go back and do that"; the Post's May 13
story followed.
Getler called investigation of the memo's conclusions
"journalistically mandatory" and suggested that the
Post story should have been placed on the front page.
While the memo has begun to get wider coverage in print,
broadcasters have maintained a near silence on the issue. The
story has turned up in a few short CNN segments (Crossfire,
5/13/05; Live Sunday, 5/15/05; Wolf Blitzer Reports, 5/16/05),
but the only mention of the memo FAIR found on the major
broadcast networks came on ABC's Sunday morning show This Week
(5/15/05), in which host George Stephanopoulos questioned Sen.
John McCain about its contents. When McCain declared that he
didn't "agree with it" and defended the Bush
administration's decision to go to war, Stephanopoulos didn't
question him further. A look at the nightly news reveals not a
single story aired about the memo and its implications.
When finally questioned by CNN (5/16/05), White House press
secretary Scott McClellan claimed he hadn't seen the memo, but
that "the reports" about it were "flat-out
wrong." British government officials, however, did not
dispute the contents of the memo--which can be read in full
online at http://downingstreetmemo.com/
--and a former senior American official called it "an
absolutely accurate description of what transpired" (Knight
Ridder, 5/6/05).
The Chicago Tribune (
5/17/05
) named several factors that had caused a "less than robust
discussion" of the smoking gun memo: Aside from the White
House's denials, and the media's slow reaction, the paper
asserted that "the public generally seems indifferent to
the issue or unwilling to rehash the bitter prewar debate over
the reasons for the war." Of course, it's hard to judge the
public's interest in a story the media have largely shielded
them from.
ACTION:
Please contact the nightly news programs and ask them to
investigate and report on the new evidence that the Bush
administration manipulated intelligence to support its plan to
invade
Iraq
.
CONTACT:
ABC World News Tonight
Phone: 212-456-4040
mailto:PeterJennings@abcnews.com
CBS Evening News
Phone: 212-975-3691
mailto:evening@cbsnews.com
NBC Nightly News
Phone: 212-664-4971
mailto:nightly@nbc.com
PBS NewsHour with Jim Lehrer
Phone: 703-739-5000
mailto:newshour@pbs.org
Jack
Dalton is a disabled Vietnam veteran, writer and activist. He is
a columnist for the POAC.
He also writes his own blog, Jack’s Political “Straight-Speak”