It's
been a year since the Bush administration defied
international law and public opinion and launched
its invasion of Iraq. Since then, more than 10,000
Iraqis have died along with almost 600 American
military personnel, 60 British troops and over
40 other coalition fighters. Approximately 10,000
American troops have also been injured along with
countless Iraqis.
The
Christian Science Monitor cites the Pentagon in
reporting that US forces fired over 75 tons of
radioactive "Depleted Uranium" (DU) munitions
in Iraq during this war, with some spent rounds
producing radiation at 1,300 times the normal
background level. The paper admits that other
sources estimate that up to 1,000 tons of radioactive
dust and debris were spread over Iraq during the
current war.
The
United States, recipient of the world's sympathy
and support in the wake of the 9/11 attacks, is
now a global pariah, diplomatically isolated and
almost universally despised by the overwhelming
majority of the world's citizens. This is especially
true in countries where the US needs friends in
its struggle against terrorism.
A
poll conducted by The Pew Research Center, for
example, shows that 61% of Indonesian Muslims
held favorable opinions of the United States in
2002. That number dropped to 15% after the Iraq
Invasion. Equally upsetting is the fact that nearly
three quarters of the population of NATO ally
Turkey fear that the US may someday threaten their
country. We're at our most popular in Britain,
where only 57% of the population opposes Bush's
policies. In essence, the rest of the world now
sees us as a bunch of bullet-headed cowboys. And
why shouldn't they?
The
first anniversary of the war was marked this past
weekend by over 575 anti-war demonstrations in
60 countries, including 300 demonstrations in
the US. In a preview of what this summer's Republican
convention will look like, almost 100,000 people
marched in New York last Saturday, corralled like
cattle into pens stretching almost 40 blocks.
Another 50,000 marched under slightly more democratic
conditions in San Francisco. In New Englander
George W. Bush's adopted home town of Crawford,
Texas, 1,000 folks came out to march against the
policies of their millionaire carpetbagger neighbor.
Military
Mourners Protest the War
The
most interesting aspect of this past week's protests
is the active involvement of Iraq War veterans,
military families and relatives of service personnel
killed in Iraq. By contrast, during the Vietnam
War, it took nearly 10 years of bloodshed before
these players developed an active voice in the
peace movement. This time around, they began marching
before the war hit its first birthday.
Last
week, family members who lost loved ones to Bush's
Iraq War marched on the Air Force base in Dover,
Delaware, and at Walter Reed Hospital in Washington,
D.C., in anti-war protests organized by Military
Families Speak Out (www.mfso.org) and Veterans
for Peace (www.veteransforpeace.org). One of these
protestors, Sue Niederer, a mother who lost her
son recently in Iraq, was quoted in The Toronto
Star describing her son's death in Iraq as being
"in vain." She went on to explain that if her
actions helped bring other service personnel home,
"then he died for a purpose." Another military
mom, Jean Prewett, who lost her son, said that
she never protested before and generally is pretty
shy, but she began demonstrating because she wanted
George W. Bush and Secretary of Defense Donald
Rumsfeld to know how families were suffering -
especially, she explained, because her son died
fighting in a war that was based on faulty intelligence
data.
Speaking
more to the point, one father, Fernando Suarez
del Solar, told Agencie France Presse that "Bush
lied" and his son "died." The mourners who participated
in these demonstrations were berated by the pro-war
Free Republic web site as being "dim-wits" and
"idiots" who stay "focused" by "hating America."
With anti-war feelings spreading across the American
political landscape, the Bush team is finding
its dwindling pockets of pro-war support in some
pretty fetid places.
A
Year of Lies Now Documented
The
past year has seen all of the Bush administration's
justifications for this war exposed as deliberate
lies. This comes as no surprise to alternative
press readers and listeners who, going into the
war, heard or read countless testimonies from
current and former US military officials explaining
that Iraq no longer had weapons of mass destruction
or a program to produce such weapons, and was
not harboring or supporting representatives from
al Qaida, which the US intelligence community
clearly identified as a foe of the secularist
Iraqi regime.
Last
week the US House of Representatives Committee
on Government Reform released a 34 page report
documenting a deliberate disinformation campaign
launched by the Bush administration in order to
trick Congress into supporting the war. The report,
which is available on the web (www.reform.house.gov/min),
documented 237 misleading public statements about
the "threat" posed by Iraq, made by "President
Bush, Vice President Cheney, Secretary Rumsfeld,
Secretary Powell and National Security Advisor
Rice."
The
report, in dry social scientific deadpan style,
divided the false statements into four categories.
The first category consisted of statements falsely
claiming that Iraq posed an "urgent threat" to
the US. The other categories were statements falsely
claiming Iraqi ties to al Qaida, threats about
nonexistent nuclear activities and threats about
defunct chemical and biological weapons programs.
Punctuated with odd little charts showing "Number
of Misleading Statements Made Each Month," (Sept.
2002 showed a huge spike) and "Categories of Misleading
Statements" (the Bio/Chem weapons bar is the tallest),
the report documented specific false statements
along with when and where they were made.
The
report cites Bush, for example, on November 7th,
2002, telling the nation that Saddam was "a threat
because he is dealing with al Qaida" and that
a network of terrorists "trained and armed by
Saddam could attack America." In his 2003 lie-laced
State of the Union Address, Bush proclaimed that
"Evidence from intelligence sources, secret communications,
and statements by people now in custody reveal
that Saddam Hussein aids and protects terrorists,
including members of al Qaeda [spelling as in
original documents]." Of course, as US intelligence
officials have since explained, there was no such
evidence. This misrepresentation of an Iraqi link
to al Qaida was the most common misstatement made
by Bush leading up to the war.
Our
Compliant Wartime Press
Under
normal conditions, such a report would be an historic
document, to be followed up with impeachment hearings.
Lying to the congress is a crime - especially
when telling those lies results in a war. But
these aren't normal times for America. So the
release of this report was eclipsed by more important
events, such as the NCAA basketball playoffs and
ongoing chatter about Martha Stewart's conviction
for lying about conversations with her stock broker.
Stewart, of course, is held to a higher standard
than George W.Bush.
Of
course it's no surprise that the corporate media
would downplay the historic significance of this
report. It was the same corporate media that allowed
Bush's false statements to fly unchallenged in
their pages and on their airwaves in the lead-up
to the war - at a time when the alternative media
were using statements from current and retired
US government officials to debunk the Bush misstatements.
The
Los Angeles Times' Robert Sheer told an audience
at the University of California at Berkeley School
of Journalism's War and the Media conference,
that timid journalists feared being labeled "unpatriotic"
if they challenged statements from "a punitive
government." Challenging official statements,
especially those issued by a punitive government,
however, is the responsibility of a free press
in a democratic society. Anything less is unacceptable.
The failure of the press to challenge blatant
lies and disinformation was ultimately responsible
for the ensuing war - built on a foundation of
misinformation trumpeted by a compliant press
corps. Media kills.
Michael
I. Niman's previous columns are archived at www.mediastudy.com
Topplebush.com
Posted: March 31, 2004
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