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rokus2595
06-06-2004, 09:02 PM
How To Silence An Awkward Newspaper
by John Pilger; May 28, 2004

The editor of the Daily Mirror, Britain's most famous mass-circulation newspaper, was sacked because he ran the only English-language popular paper to expose the "war on terror" as a fraud and the invasion of Iraq as a crime. He was marked long before the Mirror published the notorious, apparently faked pictures of British troops torturing Iraqi prisoners.



On 4 July 2002, American Independence Day, the Mirror published a report of mine, displayed on the front page under the headline "Mourn on the Fourth of July" and showing Bush flanked by the Stars and Stripes.



Above him were the words: "George W Bush's policy of bomb first and find out later has killed double the number of civilians who died on 11 September. The USA is now the world's leading rogue state". It was the Mirror at its most potent; not since it distinguished itself as the first mass-circulation paper in the western world to oppose the US invasion of Vietnam and, before that, the British invasion of Suez, had it confronted the rapacious policies of a British government and its principal ally. Most of the Western media were then consumed and manipulated by the fake issue of Iraq's non-existent weapons of mass destruction: "45 minutes from attack", said the London Evening Standard front page; "He's got 'em... let's get him", said the London Sun.



In contrast, the Mirror reported that Bush and Blair were lying, that the "liberation" of Afghanistan had installed warlords as barbaric as the Taliban, that US forces had killed almost double the number of civilians killed in the twin towers on 11 September 2001, and that the coming invasion of Iraq had been long planned. It was certainly not the first to say this, but it made sense of it for a popular readership.



The day after the "mourn on the Fourth of July" piece was published, a senior executive of the New York investment company Tweedy Browne, major shareholders in the Trinity Mirror newspaper group, called the Mirror and shouted down the phone at senior management, demanding Morgan's head and mine. This pressure continued as the Murdoch press in the United States and other lunar right-wing papers and broadcasters railed against the "treacherous" Mirror. When, on 1 May last, the Mirror published its "torture" photographs, Tweedy Browne again led the charge of powerful shareholders, notably Fidelity Asset Management, the biggest mutual company in America, run by the billionaire Edward C Johnson III, a donor to the Bush re-election campaign. "We will have to look very carefully," said an executive of Deutsche Asset Management, another shareholder, "at what Trinity Mirror does next in order to protect the value of the Mirror brand." Was corporate influence on the press, and its right to be wrong, ever more eloquently expressed? Morgan had only just survived a year earlier when a new Trinity Mirror senior management under the chief executive, Sly Bailey, ordered him to "tone down" the anti-war coverage and return the paper to celebrities and faithless royal butlers (who had never departed). In the following months, the Mirror, along with the other anti-war daily newspaper in Britain, the Independent, was vindicated. Today, Bush and Blair are universally distrusted and reviled, and the defeat of their atrocious enterprise seems assured.



In bringing this truth to the public, the Mirror departed from the pack as no popular paper has, and the part it played ought not to be buried in the mire of the British tabloid world. For two years, the Mirror represented a majority of the British people, whose critical understanding of Blair's pre-invasion charade was always ahead of journalists'. The Mirror did what a newspaper is meant to do: it kept the record straight. Instead of channelling and amplifying official lies, the Mirror more often than not challenged and exposed them to a readership often dismissed or patronised by those claiming to know what "the public really wants".



Since Morgan's departure, no newspaper has demanded that the Ministry of Defence produce the "incontrovertible evidence" that the Mirror's photographs were faked. The hearsay and apologetics of a regiment with a documented record of brutality in Iraq, facing at least five murder prosecutions, have been accepted. If the Mirror was stitched up, was it merely for money? Instead of pursuing that, as the editors of MediaLens website point out, "a cowed media lined up to heap invective on the sacked editor and to declare the decision 'correct', 'necessary', 'inevitable'".



The BBC, having got rid of the one reporter, Andrew Gilligan, who caught out Blair, and having duly disported itself before the whitewashing Hutton inquiry, allowed Andrew Neil to dominate its news of Morgan's sacking with an attack on the Mirror's "very slanted and skewed journalism" - and this from a former Murdoch editor, a caricature who waved his champagne glass at 5,000 men sacked by his master, whose scurrilous London Sunday Times smear campaigns included the notorious campaign against the current affairs programme Death on the Rock, which had lifted a veil on the secret British state and its terrorism.



The collusion of the respectable media in the epic crime in Iraq is rarely discussed. Recently, there have been honourable exceptions. David Rose, who wrote major investigative articles for the Observer that linked Saddam Hussein to al-Qaeda and to the anthrax attacks in America - claims long discredited - wrote in the Evening Standard that he looked "back with shame and disbelief" at his support for the invasion. In the United States, a number of journalists have written regretfully about the supine way the freest press in the world allowed the Bush regime to get away with its lies.



Charles Lewis, a former CBS star reporter and now director of the Centre for Public Integrity, told me that had the media "fulfilled their unique constitutional role and challenged the administration's lies, such as those tying Iraq to al-Qaeda, there is a very, very good chance we would not have gone to war".



With the exception of the Mirror, the Independent and intermittently the Guardian, the same can be said of the British media. British television rarely showed the full horror of "shock and awe" that the Arab world saw via its satellite broadcasters.



Videotape and photographs were sanitised. Phillip Knightley points out that there was an "unwritten agreement that nothing too horrific made it on to the screen or the front pages. Take the photograph of a weeping Iraqi grandfather cradling in his arms his little granddaughter, severely injured in a Coalition bomb attack on Basra... You cannot recall it? I am not surprised..." This picture, like so many pictures of suffering civilians, ran in its entirety in the Arab press, but was cropped in Britain and America so that what was left of the little girl's horribly mangled feet was not visible. The excuse was that it was not "tasteful".



The campaign against the BBC by Blair's spin-master, by the Murdoch press and Conrad Black's Telegraph and finally by Hutton, was Goebbels-quality: a deliberate distraction, and perverse in the extreme. No follower of the government's war agenda was more faithful than the BBC. A comprehensive Media Tenor survey of coverage of Iraq by the world's leading broadcasters' found that the BBC had given just 2 per cent to demonstrations of anti-war dissent - less than even American broadcasters. A Cardiff University study found no evidence that the BBC was anything but pro-war. Historically, the BBC has always supported the establishment's wars by declaring the status quo (war) neutral and dissent "biased". Propaganda made respectable dominates the very language and tone of news and current affairs.



Thus, BBC1's Panorama on 23 September 2002 claimed to have "hard evidence" about Iraq's weapons of mass destruction, having accepted as true a fake story about a secret biological weapons laboratory under a major hospital in Baghdad. In common with most of the media, the BBC went along with the greatest hoax of all: Colin Powell's presentation to the United Nations Security Council in February last year as a final justification for the invasion. This was made up of cartoon-like drawings, such as "Slide 21", of which Powell said: "Here you see both truck- and railcar-mounted mobile factories." Powell called this "diagramising". Of the satellite images he presented, he said, "The photos that I am about to show you are sometimes hard for the average person to interpret, hard for me. The painstaking work of photo analysis takes experts with years and years of experience, poring for hours and hours over light tables." This was the "irrefutable evidence" for "65 facilities [that have] housed chemical weapons".



It was all fake, as the profoundly cynical Powell has since hinted. Bush himself has since joked about the lack of evidence of weapons; Paul Wolfowitz has revealed that the WDM "story" was "agreed" as one that the public would swallow; Donald Rumsfeld has admitted there was no link between Iraq and al-Qaeda. Thanks to their propaganda, played unchallenged through most of the media, millions of Americans still believe it. In Iraq, soldiers talk about killing and mistreating Iraqis "as payback for 9/11".



In Britain, protecting the reputation of the British army from the current contagion of revelations is a priority task. Ironically, Piers Morgan, who has a brother in the army, was always reluctant to publish anything that suggested "our boys" were like their rampaging allies. When the Mirror published its "torture" photographs on 1 May, the paper stressed that the transgressors were "rogue" soldiers.



It was wrong.



Hoax or otherwise, what the Mirror's photographs revealed was a trail of abuse and worse that runs right through the British army in Iraq. Much of the evidence for this has been collected by a tireless Birmingham solicitor, Phil Shiner, acting for 13 Iraqi families, and by the Independent on Sunday, whose outstanding investigations almost salvage the honour of British journalism. The IoS reveals there are now nearly 40 cases of allegedly unlawful killings of Iraqi civilians and prisoners by British forces since the invasion. When compared with the 37 suspicious deaths of prisoners held by the Americans in Iraq and Afghanistan, the potential scale of the British crime becomes evident, although it is clear these figures represent only the surface. Evidence that soldiers of the Queen's Lancashire Regiment carried out systematic torture under the direction of an officer is to go to the high court.



"In some cases officers actually took part," says Amnesty International.



Yet on 14 May, a colonel from this regiment had the nerve to suggest that Morgan's "ego" was the price of "the life of the soldier" - a line almost certainly spun for him. Journalists are well aware of what Amnesty calls systematic abuse. A year ago, the Sun published "artist's impressions" of photographs taken by soldiers of the Royal Regiment of Fusiliers showing them stringing up Iraqi prisoners of war from a fork-lift truck and forcing them to simulate *** acts. Several of the soldiers have been prosecuted.



A BBC newsreader referred to such photographs as "mere mementoes". Imagine the response, had they been of Iraqis torturing British PoWs. On the day Morgan was sacked, a BBC reporter, Nicholas Witchell, said: "After the appalling reality of what the Americans have been doing, the Mirror's pictures threatened to compromise the work of every British soldier." By contrasting the "reality" of American abuse with the unreality of "the Mirror's pictures", Witchell managed to whitewash the British army while fretting that its good "work" in Iraq might be "compromised". Are BBC trainees taught sophistry like this?



The British army is doing no worse in Iraq than it has done in its long history of colonial occupations. Torture was deployed as a strategy in Palestine (where the British pioneered the terror tactic of home demolitions), in Cyprus, the British Cameroons, Brunei, British Guiana, Aden, Borneo and Northern Ireland. In Malaya, the conversion of entire villages to concentration camps and the use of carcinogenic defoliants were copied by the Americans in Vietnam. In Northern Ireland, British interrogators refined their methods, reported Amnesty, "for the purpose or effect of causing a malfunction or breakdown of a man's mental processes". Little of this was reported at the time. Today, thanks to a couple of "rogue" newspapers, the digital camera and the internet, the public is getting the truth, day by day, image by image, fact by fact.



Michael Berg, whose son Nick was beheaded in Iraq and who blames Bush and Rumsfeld, asks: "How can you take responsibility when there are no consequences?" As they manipulate the United Nations to set up a stooge regime in Baghdad, the Americans and British are granting their own troops immunity from prosecution. After all, said a BBC commentator, the soldiers' misdeeds "do not compare with Saddam Hussein's systematic tortures and executions". So the tyranny of Saddam Hussein is now the west's moral compass, is it?



Will journalists allow Blair to get away with yet another charade? Or will they ask why Article 7 of the statute of the International Criminal Court, to which Britain is a signatory, is not being invoked? This makes clear that British and American behaviour in Iraq is categorised under "crimes against humanity", for which the ultimate responsibility lies, as ever, at the top.


http://www.zmag.org/content/showarticle.cfm?SectionID=40&ItemID=5615

cut
06-06-2004, 09:11 PM
the mirror is not the more famous than the Sun and is certainly nowhere near as honest as this article would make you think. Piers Morgan was sacked because pretty much the whole country hates him.

Mark Sman
06-06-2004, 11:39 PM
It was the Mirror at its most potent; not since it distinguished itself as the first mass-circulation paper in the western world to oppose the US invasion of Vietnam

Well this statement on history is about as accurate as their present day reporting. Invasion of Vietnam, yeah thats how it went. Way to do the research aholes.

Secret Squirrel
06-06-2004, 11:52 PM
It was the Mirror at its most potent; not since it distinguished itself as the first mass-circulation paper in the western world to oppose the US invasion of Vietnam

Well this statement on history is about as accurate as their present day reporting. Invasion of Vietnam, yeah thats how it went. Way to do the research aholes.

You dont agree that the U.S invaded Vietnam after it became clear that the anti-communist south was losing and couldnt fight the war?

Mark Sman
06-07-2004, 12:11 AM
No. And neither does anyone else who has studied the history.

For one, we were there before the before the war really ramped up at the request of the South Vietnamese government. The Viet Cong were beaten in 1968. Effectively the internal communist revolution had failed.

During and after 1968 the North Vietnamese army prosecuted the war by invading the south. The political will for the US to prosecute the war waned, and almost all US combat troops pulled out in 1972. Saigon fell in 1975.

The shame of it is that people talk about the US invading Vietnam when we had been asked to help defend South Vietnam by the South Vietnames government. The greater shame is that we had to do it with the help of the South Koreans, Australians almost noone else as the rest of the world was quite happy to sit back and watch the North Vietnamese invade.

At the same time we were helping DEFEND the South Vietnamese, aholes like the numbnuts at the Mirror are calling us invaders.

So no, I don't agree with rewritting history. Noone gives the Chinese any crap about supporting this invasion, or the brutal murders the North Vietnamese and the VC carried out during the internal struggle and later invasion of South Vietnam by the communists.

Look up invasion in the dictionary.

American Patriot
06-07-2004, 12:16 AM
The mofuggas attacked us first in the Gulf of Tonkin.

Not that I agree with how the war was fought.

ogukuo72
06-07-2004, 12:17 AM
It was the Mirror at its most potent; not since it distinguished itself as the first mass-circulation paper in the western world to oppose the US invasion of Vietnam

Well this statement on history is about as accurate as their present day reporting. Invasion of Vietnam, yeah thats how it went. Way to do the research aholes.

You dont agree that the U.S invaded Vietnam after it became clear that the anti-communist south was losing and couldnt fight the war?

No. That's an absurd idea. Seriously, where did all these ideas come from?

As for the article above, it is typical of the kind of product that come out from immature minds who did not think their arguments through, who use myths rather than facts, because they want more to win the argument than to make sound arguments.

Secret Squirrel
06-07-2004, 12:36 AM
No. And neither does anyone else who has studied the history.

For one, we were there before the before the war really ramped up at the request of the South Vietnamese government. The Viet Cong were beaten in 1968. Effectively the internal communist revolution had failed.

During and after 1968 the North Vietnamese army prosecuted the war by invading the south. The political will for the US to prosecute the war waned, and almost all US combat troops pulled out in 1972. Saigon fell in 1975.

The shame of it is that people talk about the US invading Vietnam when we had been asked to help defend South Vietnam by the South Vietnames government. The greater shame is that we had to do it with the help of the South Koreans, Australians almost noone else as the rest of the world was quite happy to sit back and watch the North Vietnamese invade.

At the same time we were helping DEFEND the South Vietnamese, aholes like the numbnuts at the Mirror are calling us invaders.

So no, I don't agree with rewritting history. Noone gives the Chinese any crap about supporting this invasion, or the brutal murders the North Vietnamese and the VC carried out during the internal struggle and later invasion of South Vietnam by the communists.

Look up invasion in the dictionary.

I guess when people hear invasion they assume it to mean something forceful and unwanted. The north may have termed it an invasion, and yes of course the south requested American help. Also, just to add to your list of allies, there was also Canadians. As for none of the other major powers, well I guess that would mean England and France(?) werent they kind of busy with decolonization (i could be wrong, its been awhile since i've looked at that time period globally)? I'd have to agree with you regarding no one really mentioning the North and their murder campaign.

Mark Sman
06-07-2004, 12:46 AM
Canadians served in Vietnam in the U.S. military and presumeably in the Aussie or NZ military as well.

Canada, however did not help defend South Vietnam.

Yes, France was busy with declonization. Part of which was leaving Vietnam.

The only countries that helped defend Vietnam were the South Vietnamese, of course, US, Australia, New Zealand, Phillipines, South Korea and Thailand.


I guess when people hear invasion they assume it to mean something forceful and unwanted.

As opposed to what. "Come over and invade my house for dinner tonight."

Secret Squirrel
06-07-2004, 12:54 AM
I guess when people hear invasion they assume it to mean something forceful and unwanted.

As opposed to what. "Come over and invade my house for dinner tonight."

as opposed to the South requesting the help, and the North certainly not over-joyed about it...depends which side the coin lands on.

n4292936
06-07-2004, 12:56 AM
I'd have to agree with what seems to be majority opinion here. Invasion is the wrong word to use in describing America's invovlement in Vietnam.

As for the Gulf of Tonkin Incident; much like WMDs and Iraq, that incident was little more than the ostensive reason for the war.

Mark Sman
06-07-2004, 12:56 AM
I'm gonna go with the side of the coin that was trying to defend themselves from a real invasion.

That would be South Vietnam defending themselves from invasion by North Vietnam.

And yes that is using invasion in the sense of something forceful and unwanted.

Mark Sman
06-07-2004, 01:02 AM
Don't know where you're from Squirrel, but you seem to type English well.

So I'm going to hope you read it as well as you type, and recommend a book that does a fairly decent job of introducing this conflict.

Vietnam: A History by Stanley Karnow. That was the first book my college professor in Vietnamese history had us read, and it is probably the best book to cover the entire conflict in one book.

Mr Gently Benevolent
06-07-2004, 01:15 AM
The mofuggas attacked us first in the Gulf of Tonkin.

Not that I agree with how the war was fought.
Many historians even American ones feel that there is more to the Gulf Of Tonkin incident than meets the eye, some feel that it was faked others feel it was a trivial incident blown way out of proportion its worth reading up on.
IMO American intervention in South Vietnam was necessary if only to stabilise the country.

Secret Squirrel
06-07-2004, 01:16 AM
Don't know where you're from Squirrel, but you seem to type English well.

So I'm going to hope you read it as well as you type, and recommend a book that does a fairly decent job of introducing this conflict.

Vietnam: A History by Stanley Karnow. That was the first book my college professor in Vietnamese history had us read, and it is probably the best book to cover the entire conflict in one book.

I'll have to check it out; most of my history courses during my undergrad were pre-1945 and only one of my graduate courses during my M.A was post 1945. So my knowledge of Vietnam is fairly basic as i really havent looked at it indepth. And my comments above regarding the coin simply meant that someone will either call vietnam an invasion or not depending on what side of the conflict they "were on". As you know (you've indicated that you've studied military history? or history of some sort) that historical jargan will easily identify what "group" or school of thought someone is from.

n4292936
06-07-2004, 01:23 AM
Actually, I think an objective truth can found in the matter; Was America's presence unwelcome by the SV government? No
Did US forces enter the country as an invading force does? NO
Was the US presence in the country supported by the SV government? Yes
Was the SV government considered legitimate and recognised internationaly? Yes

The above reduces contentions that America invaded to absurdity. The legitimacy of the war is another matter entirely, but in discussing the semantics of the issue, we should be able to reach consensus that "invasion" is misapplied in this case.

Secret Squirrel
06-07-2004, 01:48 AM
Actually, I think an objective truth can found in the matter; Was America's presence unwelcome by the SV government? No
Did US forces enter the country as an invading force does? NO
Was the US presence in the country supported by the SV government? Yes
Was the SV government considered legitimate and recognised internationaly? Yes

The above reduces contentions that America invaded to absurdity. The legitimacy of the war is another matter entirely, but in discussing the semantics of the issue, we should be able to reach consensus that "invasion" is misapplied in this case.

I dont believe that there is an object truth when discussing historical matters(everything is biased to varying degrees and it all depends on your interpretation). If you look at the Vietnam war from the North it was an invasion (the bringer of democracy against the commies), but if you look at it from the South's perspective its wasnt an invasion but rather a great helping hand.

n4292936
06-07-2004, 02:30 AM
right I'd agree about a lack of objective truth in most historical matters - although it is objectively true that 7 Ireali athletes were killed during the 78(?) Olympics, true that Saddam fell to US forces, true that the Tet offensive occured during which a determinec number of US soldiers died etc. but yes, I see your point.
I think I would argue towards an objective definition of the word "invasion", establish criteria which lends or strips its credibility as an adjective in certain uses, and then concede or dismiss its use accordingly. I think a definition can be reached of the word... its in establishing criteria where things get tricky.

Secret Squirrel
06-07-2004, 03:14 AM
right I'd agree about a lack of objective truth in most historical matters - although it is objectively true that 7 Ireali athletes were killed during the 78(?) Olympics, true that Saddam fell to US forces, true that the Tet offensive occured during which a determinec number of US soldiers died etc. but yes, I see your point.
I think I would argue towards an objective definition of the word "invasion", establish criteria which lends or strips its credibility as an adjective in certain uses, and then concede or dismiss its use accordingly. I think a definition can be reached of the word... its in establishing criteria where things get tricky.

Did you list objective truths or facts? Sorry to nit-pick but whenever I see the word "object" is causes warning sirens to go off in my head. Personally, I believe objectivity only exists in a dictionary as there is always some form of bias for bringing up certain points. Yes althetes were killed, and yes a lot died during the Tet offensive (approx. US, Korea, Australia 1,536 died, South Viet Nam 2,788 died, North Viet Nam and Viet Cong 45,000 died among others). Events occur which become facts (ie. your examples), the problems arise when someone tries to interpret and explain the importance or significance behind those facts. And yes when one is trying to define terms things can get a little gray (ie. how many have to die before its called genocide). The true past only happens once...ironically when its the present; everything else are educated guesses and intrepretations depending on what vantage point you're looking from. Perception is the key to reality.

n4292936
06-07-2004, 03:30 AM
I think we're probably arguing the same point... almost. Id agree about the lack of objective truth, the indispensability of subjective truth, and the lack of agreement in between. However, I think one can make a claim about an objective fact, which by its very nature is objectively true. There are certain things which are beyond dispute - though they are not often found in the social sciences - or in this forum :D

SOG
06-07-2004, 03:42 AM
I dont believe that there is an object truth when discussing historical matters(everything is biased to varying degrees and it all depends on your interpretation). If you look at the Vietnam war from the North it was an invasion (the bringer of democracy against the commies), but if you look at it from the South's perspective its wasnt an invasion but rather a great helping hand.

actually, your objectifying your opinion of what the north thought it was, yet historical facts pointed to a different opinion of the north.

in the link below you will see FACTS stating the north came to power by criminal means (the opposition was eliminated, something someone just accused russia of doing in another topic) the north then agressively attacked but was defeated by the french, the north then penned china and a arms allie so they could push out the french and conquer the south. france buckled under major attacks and the US held the south until poltical pressure buckled them.

korean war? north attacked south, we stopped the north, did we conquer the north? no. did we invade the north? no. did we beat them sensless until the south could? no. we protected the south from being unwillingly brutalized. saying the nva thought we were coming to invade them is ludicrous when we did not fight to invade but to wholly defend until the nva stepped up measures. in fact it was those sames measures of "non attack" put forth by our own government that frustated american forces because we did not go deep into enemy lines and bomb the hell out of them which we easily could have! why all the zones? why all the perimeters? why all the yelling when a american force went across the border and hit targets? because we were playing a defensively strangled war from the begining at the request of the south and showed no intention of anything else!

and no, france was not de-colonializing at the time, they were stuck in the middle of it all. trying to keep thier colonialzation from crumbling.
http://www.vwam.com/vets/anticolonial.html

one of the strongest debates of the vietnam war was, if they would have let the gloves come off, we could have gone offensive and won. amercian politics killed our men and ran the war into the ground weather anyone view that as good or bad.

funny, the north running in and brutally raping the south and murdering them is okay, but us defending that upon request was not! and of course we were the sole bad guys when the innocent civilian population was caught inbetween the drawn fought over border lines.

Secret Squirrel
06-07-2004, 12:17 PM
I think we're probably arguing the same point... almost. Id agree about the lack of objective truth, the indispensability of subjective truth, and the lack of agreement in between. However, I think one can make a claim about an objective fact, which by its very nature is objectively true. There are certain things which are beyond dispute - though they are not often found in the social sciences - or in this forum :D

I'd agree there are things that are beyong dispute...I think I just dont like seeing the word "objective" when "fact" is a better word and has the same meaning. woot