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US press enlists for war on Iraq
By Bill Vann
25 September 2002
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As the Bush administration prepares for a colonial-style war
against Iraq, the US media increasingly assumes the role of a
semi-official propaganda arm for the White House and the Pentagon.
On the television networks, news announcers speculate on when
and how the US will take out Saddam Hussein. Even
more significant is the near unanimity of the editorial pages
of the major US daily papers in parroting the line of the administration
and offering friendly advice on how best to prepare an Iraqi invasion.
Like their counterparts in the broadcast media, the editorial
writers of the New York Times, the Washington Post
and the Wall Street Journal, not to mention other major
dailies, accept the Bush administrations justification for
a war against Iraq at face value. They repeat the mantra of weapons
of mass destruction, while offering high-sounding sophistry
to buttress a transparent pretext for military aggression. This
is the case in editorials published by the three papers on September
18 in the wake of Bushs speech to the United Nations General
Assembly and Iraqs announcement that it would readmit weapons
inspectors.
The Times begins its editorial by dismissing Iraqs
agreement to readmit weapons inspectors as ambiguous.
It follows with a now familiar ritual for the paper: groveling
praise for what it improbably portrays as the political prowess
and oratorical skill of the occupant of the White House. The specific
role of this organ of what passes for the liberal
establishment is to provide an aura of legitimacy to an administration
that assumed power on the basis of electoral fraud and judicial
fiat and maintain the fiction that its policies are based on something
other than the global appetites of the most criminal and reactionary
elements within the ruling elite.
The bill of particulars presented by President Bush last
week was extensive and compelling, the Times writes
in reaction to Bushs UN address, ignoring the fact that
the president offered no evidence to substantiate his claim that
Iraq represents an imminent danger to the people of the US and
the world because it possesses stockpiles of unconventional weapons
and is on the verge of deploying nuclear-armed missiles.
More perceptiveor rather, more honestobservers
contrasted Bushs appearance with that of Adlai Stevenson
in October of 1962, when the then-US ambassador to the UN presented
spy photos and other concrete evidence that the Soviet Union was
building missile bases in Cuba. Bush presented no such proof,
leading to the obvious conclusion that he possesses no convincing
evidence to back up his allegations. His speech amounted to an
ultimatum: either the UN rubberstamps a US war aimed at installing
a puppet regime in Baghdad, or it will be condemned to irrelevancy
and Washington will proceed without its sanction.
Citing Bushs invocation of 16 UN Security Council resolutions
allegedly violated by Iraq, the Times continues: ...if
they were the only problems, it is doubtful that Washington would
be pressing the UN toward a showdown with the Hussein regime.
What makes Iraq the subject of intense concern ... is Mr. Husseins
defiance of the Security Councils longstanding instructions
to dismantle Baghdads nuclear weapons program and to eliminate
all its biological and chemical weapons and the materials used
to make them.
Thus, the newspaper takes Bushs unproven charges about
nuclear weapons as self-evident. It knowingly lies when it asserts
that the Bush administration would not be pressing
for war were it not for Baghdads supposed buildup of weapons
of mass destruction, including nuclear devices. The most
influential figures in the Bush administrationVice President
Dick Cheney, Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld and Deputy Defense
Secretary Paul Wolfowitzhave been pressing for a showdown
with the Saddam Hussein regime since the first Gulf war
ended more than a decade ago.
After September 11, they sought to exploit shock and anger
over the terrorist attacks to justify an attack on Baghdad, falsely
claiming a link between the hijackers and Iraqi intelligence.
Even after this lie was exposed, they continued to float unsubstantiated
claims of a connection between Baghdad and Al Qaeda. Similarly,
they attempted to tie last years anthrax attacks to Iraq,
until evidence proved that the murderous letters had originated
from within the US military/intelligence establishment.
They are left with weapons of mass destruction
as the justification for war. Nowhere has the administration presented
evidence to refute the assessment of Scott Ritter, the former
US Marine who spent seven years as a top UN arms inspector in
Iraq, who says: Since 1998, Iraq has been fundamentally
disarmed. The administration cannot present a serious argument
that a former colonial country devastated by US military might
in 1991 and subjected to devastating sanctions ever since represents
a dire and immediate threat to the world.
Like most Americans, we would welcome a peaceful resolution
of this crisis, the Times sanctimoniously declares.
But it is obvious thatwhatever most Americans
wantthe Bush administration is not prepared to accept anything
but war, no matter what concessions are made by Baghdad.
The cynics at the Times go on to state they have no
illusions that a peaceful resolution is an option.
Nevertheless, they argue, the best way to prepare for war is to
maintain the pretence that the US is seriously interested in pursuing
a peaceful alternative. Echoing the Bush White House, the newspaper
demands that the UN Security Council approve a tough new
resolution reaffirming its disarmament demands, with a realistic
deadline for compliance, adding that the resolution should
include a clear warning that military force is likely to follow
if Iraq balks.
The editorial offers a piece of advice to the Bush war cabal,
indicating a minor tactical difference. It urges the White House
not to quibble over whether the Security Council passes one resolution
or twothe first threatening war over inspections, and the
second authorizing it. Washington cant expect to dictate
every move to the UN, it counsels.
The Washington Post is, if anything, more saber-rattling
in its approach, headlining its editorial The Inspections
Trap. The newspaper is full of praise for Bush. He was
right to take his cause to the United Nations, whose support
could galvanize a broad coalition to destroy Baghdads
weapons of mass destruction and replace Saddam Hussein with a
stable and progressive governmenti.e., a US puppet
regime.
The editorial warns that, even with full Iraqi cooperation,
an official determination of whether and how Iraq is stockpiling
weapons of mass destruction could take up to a year. The
US should not wait for such a determination, the Post advises,
but should instead devise an accelerated inspection
plan to include specific triggers that allow for enforcement
with the first act of Iraqi noncompliance. It further urges
continued preparations for a possible military campaign
... so that dilatory action will invite consequences beyond toothless
statements from the Security Council.
The Post endorses an idea floated by sections of the
American foreign policy establishment, namely, that any new weapons
inspection program be supplemented by a military implementation
force. This is precisely the type of demandwhich would
require Iraq to renounce any claim to national sovereignty and
accede to the presence of foreign troops, including those of the
US, on its soilthat is designed to be rejected. It is reminiscent
of the ultimatums issued to Belgrade at the Rambouillet peace
talks in 1999 that provided the pretext for the US and NATO
to launch the war that had already been decided on.
Thus, while dismissing Iraqs offer to readmit the inspectors
as Saddam Husseins latest gambit, the editorial
makes clear that the demand for inspections is not aimed at determining
whether Iraq has actually developed the weapons that Washington
claims, but rather at providing a pretext for a US invasion.
On September 22, the Post followed up with another editorial
entitled The Iraq Decision, which explicitly endorses
the Bush war plan, explaining that the shock of 9/11 has
given this country the lesson that, in an era in which enormous
harm can be done by seemingly weak adversaries, threats such as
that posed by Iraq must not just be managed but treated aggressively.
This is a justification for military action against any weak
country that is perceived to be an obstacle to American imperialisms
global interests.
The Wall Street Journal, the paper whose editorial line
most closely tracks the thinking of the extreme right-wing elements
that dominate US foreign policy, is more openly contemptuous of
the UN than the Times or Post. Seeking Security
Council approval for a US war, it warns in its September 18 editorial,
will delay any action past the best invasion time of winter.
The Journal makes no attempt to conceal the war lust
that consumes the Bush administration. It flaunts it, declaring,
There is only one kind of inspection regime that can truly
disarm Saddamthe 82nd Airborne, aided by armor and air power.
Typical of the Journal editorial pages penchant
for employing the most improbable lies and slanders to further
its political agenda is the suggestion that Saddam Hussein is
somehow behind the recent outbreak of the West Nile virus in the
US.
In keeping with its more shameless approach to beating the
war drums, the Journal pointed in an editorial two days
earlier to the real motive for war against Iraq. The best
way to keep oil prices in check is a short, successful war on
Iraq that begins sooner rather than later, it wrote.
That this is the real objective of the impending war is well
known to those who run the editorial boards of the New York
Times and the Washington Post. Behind the pretext of
weapons of mass destruction and the triggers
of weapons inspections, the aim of a war against Iraq is the seizure
of its oilfields, second only to Saudi Arabia in terms of proven
reserves, and the consolidation of unchallenged US control over
the entire Gulf region.
A second, and related, aspect of the press treatment of US
war preparations is the increasingly venomous tone and substance
of commentaries denouncing Germany and Russia for withholding
support for a unilateral US invasion. The Washington Post,
for example, branded the two countries appeasers of Saddam
Hussein.
In a separate editorial, the Post denounced the government
of Vladimir Putin for invoking terrorism to justify a military
intervention in Georgia, characterizing it as a stunningly
brazen attempt to cloak an old-fashioned threat of military aggression
in Mr. Bushs new doctrine of preemption. Apparently
the editorials authors believe that the US holds the patent
for that particular cloak.
The Wall Street Journal has published numerous editorial
comments condemning German Chancellor Gerhard Schröders
statements opposing a US war against Iraq, even opening up its
editorial pages on the eve of the German elections to Wolfgang
Schauble, the Christian Democratic Unions shadow foreign
and defense minister.
No attempt is made to objectively consider the conflicting
interests of German and US imperialism or those of the regime
in Russia. On this, as on all questions dealing with impending
war, the elementary obligation of journalism to remain skeptical
in the face of official pronouncements, to investigate, educate
and inform the public have gone by the wayside. Whether the US
has the right to unleash unprovoked wars against far
weaker nations and impose governments of its own choosing is not
even an issue. Instead, parroting the line of the Bush administration,
these newspapers vilify any rival power that dares challenge US
interests.
The consensus between the media and US foreign policy is not
new. One can see in press barons like William Randolph Hearst
and the yellow journalism that became notorious at
the end of the nineteenth century, when American imperialism was
cutting its teeth, a clear predecessor to the role the press plays
today.
During the second half of the twentieth century, a new consensus
between the supposedly free press and the government
was founded on anticommunism, with the editorialists casting US
actions on the world stage as a defense of freedom
against tyranny.
Nevertheless, there was room within the establishment press
for some degree of criticism and even opposition to American militarism
and the more naked imperialist depredations of the ruling elite.
It is instructive to recall that the New York Times defied
the Nixon administration and published the Pentagon Papers
in 1971, and the Washington Post began publishing the Watergate
exposures of Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein a year later.
Today, there is little of the oldand fraudulentpretense
that Washington is pursuing some higher calling, a democratizing
global mission. Yet the media virtually excludes any hint of dissent
from the government line. Instead, it seeks to terrorize the American
people into acquiescing to a war on the grounds that it is necessary
to prevent another September 11.
The solid front of the New York Times, the Washington
Post and the Wall Street Journal in support of a neo-colonial
war of conquest reflects two crucial political facts. First, the
existence of a consensus in favor of war spanning the entire spectrum
of US bourgeois politics. Second, the disintegration of American
liberalism and its prostration before the most reactionary and
militaristic forces within the ruling elite.
Underlying both of these political realities is the profound
decay of American democracy. The lying and war-mongering role
of the press is an expression of a more general collapse of democratic
institutions and the absence of any faction within the ruling
class committed to their defense. Such is the inevitable political
corollary domestically of the eruption of American imperialism
internationally.
See Also:
Oil and conspiracy theories:
a reply to a liberal apologist for the US war in Afghanistan
[20 September 2002]
The Bush administration wants war
[18 September 2002]
Bush at the UN: Washingtons war
ultimatum to the world
[13 September 2002]
New York Times whitewashes
US torture
[19 June 2002]
Why is the New York Times
defending Bushs September 11 cover-up?
[22 May 2002]
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