Unraveling the war of lies and propaganda
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AuthorTopic: Unraveling the war of lies and propaganda
topic by
John Calvin
3/30/2002 (19:44)
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The first casualty

Don't always trust what they tell you in the war on terror
Downing Street said al-Qa'ida was using chemical weapons: it was wrong. The Pentagon said Saddam Hussein was to blame for the anthrax attacks on the US: it was wrong.
Raymond Whitaker and James Palmer unravel the West's war of lies and propaganda
31 March 2002
Truth is already a casualty in the war against terror, but as the campaign against Iraq hots up, distinguishing facts from propaganda may become even harder.

According to a flurry of reports on both sides of the Atlantic, Tony Blair and George Bush will be drawing up a dossier of evidence on Iraqi efforts to develop weapons of mass destruction when the two get together on the President's Texan ranch next weekend. But the attempt to build a case against Saddam Hussein went seriously wrong a week ago.

Downing Street claimed that American troops had found a biological warfare laboratory in Afghanistan, and that Baghdad was supplying al-Qa'ida with weapons of mass destruction, only for the Pentagon and British military sources to rubbish both suggestions. The Prime Minister's spokesman, Alastair Campbell, is said to be working closely with the White House on information policy, but there was little sign of co-ordination here.

As the following case studies show, however, the Pentagon has also been responsible for stories appearing in the media which have later been retracted, disputed or disproved.

Case 1

Claim: On 22 March Downing Street briefs news organisations that US forces have found an al-Qa'ida biological warfare laboratory in eastern Afghanistan, just as Britain deploys 1,700 Royal Marines to fight in the country. In another briefing, Iraq is said to be supplying al-Qa'ida with chemical and biological weapons.

Fallout: The Pentagon vehemently denies the laboratory story the following day – but too late for British papers, which carry headlines such as 'Marines called in after discovery of germ war plant'. The alleged link between Iraq and al-Qa'ida not only contradicts No 10's previous position, but is denied by a senior military source, who tells The Independent: 'We are not aware of evidence, intelligence or otherwise, that the Iraqi government or its agencies are passing on weapons of mass destruction to al-Qa'ida. Nor have we seen any credible evidence linking the Iraqi government to the 11 September attacks.'

Verdict: A cock-up, at the very least.

Case 2

Claim: In mid-March, Pentagon officials say a satellite positioning device found in a cave in Afghanistan belonged to a US commando killed in the 'Black Hawk Down' incident in Somalia in 1993. This is considered a 'smoking gun' linking al-Qa'ida to the Somalia fighting, in which 18 US troops lost their lives.

Fallout: The manufacturer of the device points out that that model was not made before 1997, and the serial number shows it was sold to the US military in 1998. Officials were misled by the name G Gordon, which matched that of a master sergeant killed in Somalia – but it was also the nickname of the real owner, a helicopter pilot operating in Afghanistan.

Verdict: Pentagon was far too quick on the trigger.

Case 3

Claim: On 11 March, when Vice President Dick Cheney is visiting Downing Street, the Washington Times reports that British intelligence has provided evidence that a US pilot, Navy Lieutenant Commander Michael Speicher, who was shot down in the Gulf War, is still alive and in captivity in Iraq. Speicher, declared killed in action in 1991, was reclassified as 'missing in action' by the Pentagon last year, after information from an Iraqi defector.

Fallout: Iraq – which says Speicher is dead – invites a US delegation, including American journalists, to investigate the case. Defence Secretary Donald Rumsfeld retorts: 'I don't believe very much what the regime of Saddam Hussein puts out. They're masters at propaganda.'

Verdict: Not proven.

Case 4

Claim: The week before Christmas, the Special Boat Service intercepts the sugar freighter Nisha off Beachy Head in East Sussex, after a tip-off from a foreign intelligence agency that it could be concealing materials for a bomb or anthrax attack. Press speculation runs riot, with headlines such as 'Bin Laden plot to put anthrax into our sugar' (People), and 'Armada of terror' (Daily Star).

Fallout: The vessel is searched for a week and found to be carrying nothing more than sugar from Mauritius to an east London refinery. Weeks later, however, it was still being alleged that the seizure of the ship by security services had 'foiled a plot'.

Verdict: Too good a story to admit to a huge mistake.

Case 5

Claim: During last October's anthrax attacks in the US, Mr Rumsfeld threatened direct action against Baghdad if there was any evidence of Iraqi involvement. A spate of reports sourced to US intelligence officials said the airborne form of anthrax used was difficult and expensive to produce, requiring state sponsorship. Even though there was no 'credible evidence' to tie the anthrax attacks to al-Qa'ida, said the director of homeland security, Tom Ridge, 'we ought to operate under the presumption that it is.'

Fallout: Scott Ritter, a former UN weapons inspector, said accusations that Iraq was the source of the anthrax were unsubstantiated and irresponsible. It emerged that the spores had been treated with an additive designed to allow them to stay in the air longer, suggesting it was unlikely they originated from Iraq or the former Soviet Union. They appear to have been launched by a scientist from within US biological warfare laboratories, making use of a strain from the US Army's medical research institute.

Verdict: It is easy to blame Iraq or al-Qa'ida for any incident of terror, but hard to establish proof.

Case 6

Claim: A US special forces raid at Hazar Qadam in central Afghanistan on 23 January, in which 16 men were killed and 27 taken prisoner, was first described by the Pentagon as a successful strike on two al-Qa'ida compounds. Later it was suggested the men were Taliban fighters.

Fallout: Last month the prisoners were released. Far from fighting for the Taliban, they were local men who had fought against the regime. The freed men said they had been punched, kicked and clubbed by US special forces while in detention. Two of the dead men were found with their hands bound behind their backs, fuelling suspicions that they were executed. One man told the Los Angeles Times he had seen his cousin being bound with white plastic handcuffs by American soldiers. He later found his cousin dead, still handcuffed, with bullet holes in the neck, chest and stomach.

Relatives of the dead said they had been handed up to $2,000 per family, which some called 'hush money'. American officials conceded that CIA officers distributed money, but said it was compensation. Mr Rumsfeld ordered an inquiry into the raid, but on Friday General Tommy Franks, commander of US forces in Afghanistan, released a report that said there was no evidence the detainees had been mistreated by US forces. Their injuries 'were not serious or life-threatening' and were consistent with the reasonable use of force to secure them, the report found. The other claims were not addressed.

Verdict: One of several incidents in the war where Pentagon responses have left unanswered questions

The Independent
reply by
John Calvin
3/30/2002 (19:47)
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War Times” Uncovers Truth in Afghanistan


SAN FRANCISCO, March 30 (IslamOnline & News Agencies)-The world renowned American actor Danny Glover denounced the U.S. military campaign against Afghanistan since September 11 in the pilot issue of the bi-weekly “War Times”, aiming to uncover the whole truth about what is going on Afghanistan, the Guardian reported.

The paper’s editors maintain that the media in the U.S. is not showing the full picture of exactly what is happening in Afghanistan as a result of the American attacks since September 11.

The editors assert that the newspaper is a response to increased demand for more information on exactly what is happening in Afghanistan and the possibility of further conflicts.

The managing editor of War Times Bob Wing said the demand for the paper, whose slogan is “the first casualty of war is the truth”, was so great that they had to print and distribute 100,000 copies instead of the originally planned 7,500.

Glover said 'bombing Afghanistan and creating the idea that the U.S. is the judge, the jury and the executioner is the wrong way to respond.'

'It's hard because of the anger, the pain and the humiliation we feel about September 11. But we have to understand that other people have faced the same kind of pain, the same kind of anger.”

'Their lives have been transformed by acts of terrorism and violence, often supported or perpetrated by the U.S.'

Wing said the aim of the paper is 'to report hidden truths, to put a human face on events, and explore the real interests behind the 'permanent war'.'

Based in San Francisco, the first issue of the paper will be distributed on April 12 and will be published in English and Spanish.

Prominent figures and organizations such as Noam Chomsky, anti-war groups, and labor organizations are supportive of the newspaper.

The paper is also supported by former editor in chief of Cross Roads, Max Album, Orlando Garcia from the National Network for the Rights of Refugee and Asylum seekers, Howard Zen, a historian, Iris Moras a movie director, Catheline Cliver, director of an institute for human rights research, Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz, head of a feminist research organization, and Barbara Den, a musician.








reply by
TheAZCowBoy
3/30/2002 (20:31)
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Re: Life in the fast lane with the US Pentagon and Israel's GSS.(*)

* The 'G' has been added to throw off those that that still haunt members of the brutal German 'SS.'

We American's are a gullible bunch, we know the Jews control the US media yet we have a tendency to believe everything we read and see in the US media.

When the Pentagon states that the Afghan people are lying and that our B-52 bombers did not flatten many a village and kill hundred's and perhaps thousands of Afghan civilian's in America's 'War on Terrorism' we want to believe it. After all, to discount the Pentagon's lies would be err, err, let's say unpatriotic, da?

When the IDF reports that the 3 year old Palestinian child blown away by a US supplied hellfire missile fired from a US supplie Apache helicopter gunship was busy asembling a bomb, well, we want to believe it, don't we?

When little Mohammed Al-Dura was murdered by the IDF, September of 2001, the IDF went to great lengths to prove that the 12 year old child was murdered by the crossfire of the Palestinian 'terorists' and in the end were proven the miserable liars that they are by the photographer who took the photos.

DIM BULB like's to mention how Saddam Hussien 'gassed the Kurds' therefore, justifying all the 'evil' things the US is planning to do to him. But have you ever read in the US media about the 13,000% increase among the Iraqi population of cancer caused of the US' use of depleted uranium ammunition in the Gulf war and how the US has blocked shipments of equipment and medicines to treat this oncology disaster.

How much has the US spent to help the Vietnamese people overcome the Agent Orange ecological disaster they created on these hapless people? Even today 30+ years later toxins flow from mothers milk and the cases of chronic asthema, spinal diffida, cancer, fetal DNA problms persist.

The answer would 'shame' the American people and the monsters at the Pentagon.

Have you read how Israeli supplied US built F-4 phantom jets and American cluster bombs furnished to the Turkish hoodlums by Israel with the US' tacit approval are murdering Kurds in southern Turkey and northern Iraq with the US' blessings?

How about the no-fly zones designed to protect the Kurds in the north and the Shiites in the south. What do they do to protect the Kurds from the devastating Turkish attacks on snow bound Kurds in the mountains of northern Iraq. When was the past time you saw those 'wonderful' US C-130's dropping food stuffs to the poor nearly frozen devils?

Yes, we American's live a lie and we're afraid to look back because JUSTICE may be right behind us, huh?

WTC, was it God's way of asking us to slow down and return to our Christian values? The USS cole incident, was it the Arab's saying 'get out!' The Khabar bombing in Saudi Arabia, was this the Saudi people's way of saying 'get the hell out?'

Well, the US & Israel are not ready to get out and what does that mean to America?

Maybe we should all go down to the local library and check out the book 'The Rise and Fall of the Roman Empire,' there are lessons to be learned because history has a way of repeating itself.

TheAZCowBoy
reply by
John Calvin
3/30/2002 (21:33)
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I recommend Gibbons 'Rise and Fall of the Roman Empire', the first work of history I read AFTER graduating with a BA in History ( no one ever suggested I read in while a student!) I especially like the way Gibbon confronted the totally inexplicable behavior of human beings- even in the best of times- whereby they brought disasater down on their own heads time and time again. He called it 'insensible', perfect description of the Presient's behavior, as well as the behavior of practically every member of Congress.

By the way, when Saddam gassed the Kurds, there is strong evidence that he was locating his victims using data supplied by U.S. asatellites furnished by the C.I.A. which also facilitated the start-up of his biological weapons programs.
reply by
TheAZCowBoy
3/30/2002 (23:13)
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RE: Iraq's 'gassing of the Kurds,' the story behind the story.

In the midst of the Iran/Iraq war the US and Israel were very excited, here was the chance to have the Arabs and the Persians murdering each other, thereby reducing the threat from both sides to Israel. Kinda like 'killing two birds with one stone, as the saying goes.

To keep the blood flowing Ronnie Reagan was selling Hughes aircraft ( Now Raytheon ) TOW missiles to the Iranian's to counter Saddam's 6,000+ tanks and satellite information regarding Iranian troop movements was simultanously passed on to the Iraqi's.

The famous photo of the Kurdish 'Madonna' ( a woman cradling her child as she died ) dead from nerve gas has been published ad nasaum by Washinton to show the world just how cruel Saddam can be.

However, it is common knowledge that this 'gassing' was a byproduct of a battle where both Iranian/Iraqi sides used nerve gas. As the Pentagon like to say, the Kurd's in the 'Modona' photos were 'collatral damage' of one of the Iran/Iraq army battles.

Today Ronnie baby has learned that there is a God as he labors to continue stealing oxygen from the living in his desperate attempst to achive what the Queen mother achieved before dying this week--hitting 100+

I sometimes smile when DIM BULB talks about 'world terrorists' and his desire to demolish any country that finances, arms, covers up for the world's terrorists. I mean, who does it better than the US when it is running inteference for the murderous Zionist thugs of Israel?