2nd
February 2007
Won't Get Fooled Again?
NYT, networks offer scant skepticism on Iran claims
The
most important lesson about the Iraq War for reporters was perhaps
the simplest one: Don't assume the White House is telling the
truth. It's a lesson that many reporters seem to be forgetting
now that U.S. officials are escalating their claims about Iran's
role in Iraq.
On
January 29, CBS Evening News aired a report about Iran's alleged
support for Shiite militias in Iraq. Anchor Katie Couric introduced
the segment by saying "the U.S. military says it has proof
positive" to that effect, and Pentagon correspondent David
Martin did little to undercut the official line by saying the
U.S. is "already fighting a proxy war inside Iraq" with
Iran. Martin went on to list the evidence: serial numbers on explosive
devices that could be "traced directly back to Iran,"
along with rocket-propelled grenades and other weapons that "bear
Iranian factory markings." The only guest on the segment
was Jon Alterman of the Center for Strategic & International
Studies, who essentially backed the official story.
Martin
closed his report by commenting, "American failure in Iraq
would be a disaster for the U.S., but American success would be
a disaster for Iran. So something's got to give." When Couric
asked Martin, "Is this intelligence really reliable?,"
Martin's response was that while U.S. officials "wince"
at the question, "this time, some of the evidence, like those
serial numbers, is smoking-gun quality." In other words,
exactly what U.S. officials said about Iraq's weapons of mass
destruction.
The
following night (1/30/07), ABC World News With Charles Gibson
correspondent Jonathan Karl warned that "U.S. officials say
the mounting evidence against Iran includes photographs of Iranian
training camps on Iraqi soil." Karl bolstered this claim
by citing a "slickly produced video released by a Sunni terrorist
group" that alleged Iranians were supplying weapons to Moqtada
al-Sadr's Mahdi Army. It is unclear why Karl would cite a rival
insurgent group's videotape as credible evidence; for that matter,
any claims of "training camps" in Iraq deserve special
scrutiny, as exactly the same claims were made regarding Al Qaeda
training camps in the country, which turned out to be false (Mother
Jones, 3-4/06).
Karl
continued by listing evidence allegedly gathered by U.S. officials,
including Iranian-made weapons and documents purporting to show
Iranian control of militias. Karl oddly noted: "U.S. officials
had planned to publicly present the evidence against Iran as early
as tomorrow. Those plans were abruptly scrapped today, raising
questions about just how convincing the evidence is. Officials
say they want to continue to pursue leads before declassifying
the information. The information, officials say, won't be made
public for a while."
Of
course, such information was being made public—on every
network newscast.
NBC
Nightly News (1/30/07) pursued alleged Iranian involvement in
the ambush of U.S. soldiers in Karbala, which killed five American
soldiers. Pentagon reporter Jim Miklasziewski stated that "secret
U.S. military reports have concluded now that the attack against
the American soldiers in Karbala was definitely an inside job
and that it may have involved Iranian agents." This main
evidence for this theory is "because it was so well laid
out and meticulously executed." Apparently Iraqi insurgents
are unqualified to mount such sophisticated attacks. Miklasziewski
went on to make the familiar charges against Iran—"providing
the most sophisticated and powerful roadside bombs and a growing
arsenal of other weapons inside Iraq," for example, along
with assorted weaponry and the seizure of computer files that
"listed vast inventories of weapons shipped from Iran to
Iraqi extremists and militias." He added: "U.S. officials
now claim Iran is providing shoulder-fired surface-to-air missiles
to Shiite militias."
Miklasziewski
did note that "all of this is being viewed and greeted with
a great deal of skepticism, especially on Capitol Hill."
It would be nice to see such skepticism from reporters, instead
of them merely repeating the laundry list of charges from unnamed
U.S. officials.
The
next day, the New York Times ran a remarkably similar story (1/31/07),
again relying exclusively on anonymous government officials (U.S
and Iraqi). While the Times did note that "Officials cautioned
that no firm conclusions had been drawn and did not reveal any
direct evidence of a connection," the paper nonetheless went
on at some length describing the theory that an off-shot of the
Mahdi Army connected to the Iranian government was behind the
attack. The Times report relied exclusively on unnamed officials.
The article's entire sourcing:
"Investigators
say...according to American and Iraqi officials knowledgeable...The
officials said...Officials cautioned... A senior Iraqi official
said... An Iraqi knowledgeable about the investigation said...
the Iraqi said... the senior Iraqi official said, citing information
directly from the prime minister's office... Another senior Iraqi
official said... the official said ...the American military has
said... the military said... An American military official said...
the military official said... officials say... Two American officials
in Washington confirmed... One of those officials said... The
second official said...."
While
some of this reporting could be accurate, it just as easily could
be part of a Bush administration campaign to drum up talk of Iranian
involvement in the Iraq War. Since many reporters seem conscious
of that very real possibility, journalists should treat such anonymous
chatter very skeptically. They should also, at a bare minimum,
consult experts who could shed light on whether the claims from
administration officials make any sense in the context of what
is known about Iran's influence in Iraq.
For
example, the Congressional Research Service reported (9/29/06)
that Iran was encouraging Shiite participation in electoral politics
("To that extent, Iran's goal in Iraq differs little from
the main emphasis of U.S. policy in Iraq"), and that Iran's
closest links in Iraq are to two large Shiite factions firmly
connected to the U.S.-backed government: the Supreme Council for
the Islamic Revolution in Iraq (SCIRI) and the Da'wa Party, of
which Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki is part. And the Iranian government
has engaged in wide-ranging negotiations with the Maliki government
regarding trade, diplomacy and military training. This information
is important to consider alongside U.S. allegations that Iran
is engaged in fomenting violence in Iraq.
And
University of Michigan professor Juan Cole wrote recently in Salon.com
(1/30/07) that there many reasons to be skeptical of U.S. claims:
"To
begin with, some 99 percent of all attacks on U.S. troops occur
in Sunni Arab areas and are carried out by Baathist or Sunni fundamentalist
(Salafi) guerrilla groups. Most of the outside help these groups
get comes from the Sunni Arab public in countries allied with
the United States, notably Saudi Arabia and other Gulf monarchies.
Washington has yet to denounce Saudi aid to the Sunni insurgents
who are killing U.S. troops.
"Meanwhile,
the most virulent terror network in Iraq, which styles itself
'Al-Qaeda in Mesopotamia,' has openly announced that its policy
is to kill as many Shiites as possible. That the ayatollahs of
Shiite Iran are passing sophisticated weapons to these, their
sworn enemies, is not plausible.
"If
Iran is providing materiel to anyone, it is to U.S. allies. Tehran
may be helping the Supreme Council for Islamic Revolution in Iraq
and its Badr Corps paramilitary, but the U.S. is not fighting
that group. By sale or barter, some weaponry originally given
to the Badr Corps might be finding its way to other groups, such
as the Mahdi Army of nationalist Shiite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr,
that do sometimes come into conflict with the U.S. That problem,
however, must be a relatively small one, and cannot explain Bush's
hyperbolic rhetoric about Iran."
Not
all mainstream outlets are so reticent to challenge the official
storyline. On January 23, the Los Angeles Times took a hard look
at the U.S. charges of Iranian meddling in Iraq ("Scant Evidence
Found of Iran-Iraq Arms Link"). The paper found little to
support the array of accusations from U.S. officials, noting that
reporters in Iraq with U.S. troops have not seen "extensive
signs of Iranian involvement." The Times also noted that
military officers from the U.S. and Britain have not seen evidence
at the Iraq-Iran border to support allegations of arms smuggling,
and that "U.S. officials have declined to provide documentation
of seized Iranian ordnance despite repeated requests. The U.S.
military often releases photographs of other weapons finds."
Further, the Times reported that military analysts question whether
Iran would even need to provide some of the weapons, since the
"technology used to make them is simple and widely known
in the Middle East." The Times also pointed out that "the
groups in Iraq that have received the most Iranian support are
not those that have led attacks against U.S. forces. Instead,
they are nominal U.S. allies."
Interestingly,
a day after airing a report that passed along U.S. accusations
with little comment, NBC Nightly News presented a critical take
(1/31/07), with reporter Andrea Mitchell quoting a former CIA
official challenging the notion that a sophisticated attack couldn't
be carried out without Iranian support, another official noting
that weapons allegedly "made in Iran" don't necessarily
mean they come from the Iranian government, and Mitchell pointing
out that "90 percent of the attack on U.S. forces are from
Sunni insurgents or Al-Qaeda," groups unlikely to be affiliated
with Iran.
It
is perhaps reassuring that NBC, a day after passing along official
claims mostly free of skepticism, would take a more sound journalistic
approach. The same cannot yet be said for the New York Times,
CBS Evening News and ABC World News.
FAIR
30th
January 2007
US VP Cheney to visit Australia, Japan, Guam
The
office of US Vice President Dick Cheney says he will travel to
Australia and Japan next month for talks on Asian security and
the global war against terrorism.
The
visit is scheduled to begin on February 19.
It
will be Dick Cheney's first trip to Australia as Vice President,
although he did visit when he was serving as Defence Secretary
under President George Bush Sr.
The
Australian Prime Minister, John Howard, says major international
issues will be on the agenda including regional security, terrorism
and the conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan.
Mr
Cheney will thank both the Australian and Japan defence forces
for their efforts in the Middle East, and Mr Howard says it will
be an important opportunity to reinforce the strong bilateral
relationship between the US and Australia.
Mr
Cheney's official tour will also include visiting US troops in
Guam.
ABC
Radio Australia
December
30th / 31st 2006
What's Good for Saddam May Be Good for Mubarak
or the Saudi Royals
Saddam at the End of a Rope
By
TARIQ ALI
It
was symbolic that 2006 ended with a colonial hanging--- most of
it (bar the last moments) shown on state television in occupied
Iraq. It has been that sort of year in the Arab world. After a
trial so blatantly rigged that even Human Rights Watch---the largest
single unit of the US Human Rights industry--- had to condemn
it as a total travesty. Judges were changed on Washington's orders;
defense lawyers were killed and the whole procedure resembled
a well-orchestrated lynch mob. Where Nuremberg was a more dignified
application of victor's justice, Saddam's trial has, till now,
been the crudest and most grotesque. The Great Thinker President's
reference to it 'as a milestone on the road to Iraqi democracy'
as clear an indication as any that Washington pressed the trigger.
The
contemptible leaders of the European Union, supposedly hostile
to capital punishment, were silent, as usual. And while some Shia
factions celebrated in Baghdad, the figures published by a fairly
independent establishment outfit, the Iraq Centre for Research
and Strategic Studies (its self-description: "which attempts
to spread the conscious necessity of realizing basic freedoms,
consolidating democratic values and foundations of civil society")
reveal that just under 90 per cent of Iraqis feel the situation
in the country was better before it was occupied.
The
ICRSC research is based on detailed house-to-house interviewing
carried out during the third week of November 2006.
Only five per cent of those questioned said Iraq is better today
than in 2003; 89 per cent of the people said the political situation
had deteriorated; 79 per cent saw a decline in the economic situation;
12 per cent felt things had improved and 9 per cent said there
was no change. Unsurprisingly, 95 per cent felt the security situation
was worse than before. Interestingly, about 50 per cent of those
questioned identified themselves only as "Muslims";
34 per cent as Shiites and 14 per cent as Sunnis. Add to this
the figures supplied by the UNHCR: 1.6 million Iraqis (7 per cent
of the population) have fled the country since March 2003 and
100,000 Iraqis leave every month, Christians, doctors, engineers,
women, etc. There are one million in Syria, 750,000 in Jordan,
150,000 in Cairo. These are refugees that do not excite the sympathy
of Western public opinion, since the US (and EU backed) occupation
is the cause. These are not compared (as was the case in Kosovo)
to the atrocities of the Third Reich. Perhaps it was these statistics
(and the estimates of a million Iraqi dead) that necessitated
the execution of Saddam Hussein?
That
Saddam was a tyrant is beyond dispute, but what is conveniently
forgotten is that most of his crimes were committed when he was
a staunch ally of those who now occupy the country. It was, as
he admitted in one of his trial outbursts, the approval of Washington
(and the poison gas supplied by West Germany) that gave him the
confidence to douse Halabja with chemicals in the midst of the
Iran-Iraq war. He deserved a proper trial and punishment in an
independent Iraq. Not this. The double standards applied by the
West never cease to astonish. Indonesia's Suharto who presided
over a mountain of corpses (At least a million to accept the lowest
figure) was protected by Washington. He never annoyed them as
much as Saddam.
And
what of those who have created the mess in Iraq today? The torturers
of Abu Ghraib; the pitiless butchers of Fallujah; the ethnic cleansers
of Baghdad, the Kurdish prison boss who boasts that his model
is Guantanamo. Will Bush and Blair ever be tried for war crimes?
Doubtful. And Aznar, currently employed as a lecturer at Georgetown
University in Washington, DC , where the language of instruction
is English of which he doesn't speak a word. His reward is a punishment
for the students.
Saddam's
hanging might send a shiver through the collective, if artificial,
spine of the Arab ruling elites. If Saddam can be hanged, so can
Mubarak, or the Hashemite joker in Amman or the Saudi royals,
as long as those who topple them are happy to play ball with Washington.
Counterpunch