May 24, 2007
PENTAGON PROPAGANDA OCCUPIES THE GUARDIAN’S FRONT PAGE
“The Guardian’s vision is to offer independent, agenda-setting
content that positions us as the modern, progressive, exciting challenger
to the status-quo.” (Guardian editor, Alan Rusbridger; http://www.adinfo-guardian.co.uk/
the-guardian/index.shtml)
The Con Coughlin School Of Hard News
Commenting on Con Coughlin‘s “reliance on unnamed intelligence
sources in several far-fetched articles about Iran,” the Campaign
Against Sanctions and Military Intervention in Iran (CASMII) identified
key features in reports filed by the Daily Telegraph’s executive foreign
editor:
“Sources were unnamed or untraceable, often senior Western intelligence
officials or senior Foreign Office officials.
“Articles were published at sensitive and delicate times where
there had been relatively positive diplomatic moves towards Iran.
“Articles contained exclusive revelations about Iran combined with
eye-catchingly controversial headlines.” (Campaign Iran, ‘Press
Watchdog slammed by “Dont Attack Iran” Campaigners,’
May 1, 2007; www.campaigniran.org/casmii/
index.php?q=node/2060/print)
CASMII revealed that it was Coughlin who, with the help of unnamed intelligence
sources, discovered that Saddam Hussein could launch weapons of mass destruction
in 45 minutes. And it was Coughlin who revealed the link between the 9/11
hijacker, Mohammed Atta, and Iraqi intelligence. Both claims have, of course,
been exposed as utter nonsense.
However disturbing these revelations, many readers will have been reassured
by the thought that these articles were, after all, published in the Telegraph.
The same readers may have shared our dismay, then, on reading the Guardian’s
astonishing May 22 front-page story this week: ‘Iran's secret plan
for summer offensive to force US out of Iraq’ by Simon Tisdall. (You
can see the front page here: www.medialens.org/alerts/07/
screenshots/guardian_070522_cover.jpg)
Tisdall’s high-profile piece claimed that Iran has secret plans to
do nothing less than wage war on, and defeat, American forces in Iraq by
August.
Iran, it seems, is “forging ties with al-Qaida elements and Sunni
Arab militias in Iraq in preparation for a summer showdown with coalition
forces intended to tip a wavering US Congress into voting for full military
withdrawal”. (www.guardian.co.uk/frontpage/
story/0,,2085195,00.html)
The claim was based almost entirely on unsupported assertions made by anonymous
US officials. Indeed 22 of the 23 paragraphs in the story relayed official
US claims: over 95 per cent of the story. The compilation below indicates
the levels of balance and objectivity:
“US officials say”; “a senior US official in Baghdad
warned”; “The official said”; “the official said”;
“the official said”; “US officials now say”; “the
senior official in Baghdad said” “he [the senior official
in Baghdad] added”; “the official said”; “the
official said”; “he [the official] indicated; “he [the
official] cited”; “a senior administration official in Washington
said”; “The administration official also claimed”; “he
[the administration official] said”; “US officials say”;
“the senior official in Baghdad said”; “he [the senior
official in Baghdad] said”; “the senior administration official
said”; “he [the senior administration official] said”;
“the official claimed”; ”he [the official] said”;
”Gen Petraeus’s report to the White House and Congress”;
“a former Bush administration official said”; ”A senior
adviser to Gen Petraeus reported”; “the adviser admitted”.
No less than 26 references to official pronouncements formed the basis
for a Guardian story presented with no scrutiny, no balance, no counter-evidence
- nothing. Remove the verbiage described above and a Guardian front page
news report becomes a straight Pentagon press release.
Tisdall quoted “a senior official in Baghdad” as saying:
"Iran is fighting a proxy war in Iraq and it's a very dangerous
course for them to be following. They are already committing daily acts
of war against US and British forces."
And: "We expect that al-Qaida and Iran will both attempt to increase
the propaganda and increase the violence prior to Petraeus's report in September”
- when the US commander, General David Petraeus, will report to Congress
on the "surge" of 30,000 troop reinforcements.
The anonymous official added:
"Iran is perpetuating the cycle of sectarian violence through support
for extra-judicial killing and murder cells. They bring Iraqi militia
members and insurgent groups into Iran for training and then help infiltrate
them back into the country. We have plenty of evidence from a variety
of sources. There's no argument about that. That's just a fact.’”
Tisdall included the most pitiful of disclaimers in the final paragraph
of a long (1,200-word) piece:
"Iranian officials flatly deny US and British allegations of involvement
in internal violence in Iraq or in attacks on coalition forces."
The Guardian Braces Itself
Edward Herman commented to us:
“I saw that story and was amazed that what we call here the ‘Judy
Miller syndrome’ has caught on in the UK ‘liberal media.’
Pretty amazing, after the overwhelming evidence of the past five years
that the U.S.-Bush government is in the very business of disinformation,
and their steady and obvious desire to demonize the Iranians, that this
unconfirmed propaganda is treated as news (and not news pathology).”
(Email to Media Lens, May 22, 2007)
Juan Cole, Professor of Modern Middle East and South Asian History at the
University of Michigan, dismissed Tisdall’s “silly article”,
describing the anonymous sources as “looney in positing a coming offensive
jointly sponsored by Iran, the Mahdi Army and al-Qaeda”. (Juan Cole,
Informed Comment blog, May 22, 2007; www.juancole.com/2007/05/
parliament-building-shelled-iraqi.html)
The holes in the story were obvious, Cole added: “At a time when
Sunni Arab guerrillas are said to be opposing ‘al-Qaeda in Mesopotamia’
for its indiscriminate violence against Iraqis, including Shiites, we are
now expected to believe that Shiite Iran is allying with it.”
He concluded:
“US military spokesmen have been trying to push implausible articles
about Shiite Iran supporting Sunni insurgents for a couple of years now,
and with virtually the sole exception of the New York Times, no one in
the journalistic community has taken these wild charges seriously. But
The Guardian?”
The Guardian was soon bracing itself for the fallout from Tisdall’s
story. Murray Armstrong, an associate editor, noted in his blog that the
article had “led the discussion” at that morning’s editorial
conference. Whether Guardian staff were uncomfortable, dismayed or horrified
at turning US propaganda into a front-page story he did not say. But he
did report: “Simon noted that several readers had already accused
him of peddling US propaganda.” (Murray Armstrong, ‘Iran, Iraq
and sources of information,’ May 22, 2007; http://commentisfree.guardian.co.uk/
murray_armstrong/2007/05/ iran_iraq_and_sources_of_infor.html)
It is fair to describe readers’ responses to Armstrong’s defence
on his blog as devastating and close to 100 per cent critical.
Tisdall responded to one challenger via email:
“Today's article was based on statements made by several senior
US officials who are intimately familiar with the problems facing coalition
forces in Iraq. I requested the interviews, not the other way round. These
officials asked not to be identified. I am confident that they were telling
the truth as they see it, on the basis of information received from a
variety of sources.” (Email to Ian Thomas, May 22, 2007)
It seems readers are to be reassured by Tisdall’s defence that he
actively sought out US propaganda, rather than acted as a passive conduit.
To the Guardian’s credit, two critical pieces soon appeared on their
online section, Comment is Free. D.D. Guttenplan, London correspondent for
The Nation magazine, wrote:
“History really does repeat itself. Either that or the Bush administration
has decided to show its commitment to the environment by recycling lies.
Those are the only firm conclusions to be drawn from the Guardian's front
page story this morning.” (Guttenplan, ‘Don't get fooled again,’
Comment is Free, May 22, 2007; http://commentisfree.guardian.co.uk/
dd_guttenplan/2007/05/dont_get_fooled_again.html)
Middle East analyst Dilip Hiro warned that the official briefings given
to the Guardian were driven by a US political agenda. The timing was crucial:
Ryan Crocker, the US ambassador in Iraq, is about to meet Iran’s envoy
Hassan Kazerni Qomi in Baghdad to discuss Iraqi security (See the second
point made by CASMII at the top of this alert).
Hiro also pointed out obvious inconsistencies in the story: the claim
of a link-up between the virulently anti-Shia al-Qaida in Mesopotamia
and the largely Shia Iranians “is beyond belief”. (Hiro, ‘Briefing
Encounter,’ Comment is Free, May 22, 2007; http://commentisfree.guardian.co.uk/dilip_hiro
/2007/05/briefing_encounter.html)
Why, then, would such an implausible claim be made? Hiro explains: “[T]here
is no more potent phrase than ‘al-Qaida’ to draw the attention,
even alarm, of Americans and other westerners. And when it is bracketed
with Iran, the combination can set alarm bells ringing in most western capitals.”
Noam Chomsky described the Guardian cover story as: "Disgusting, but
not far from the norm," adding that, in any case, "the whole debate
is utterly mad." He expanded:
“Would we have had a debate in 1943 about whether the Allies were
really guilty of aiding terrorist partisans in occupied Europe? The absurdity
of the whole discussion was highlighted by a marvellous statement by Condi
Rice a few days ago. She was asked what the solution is in Iraq, and said
something like this: "It's obvious. Withdraw all foreign forces and
foreign weapons." I was waiting to see if one commentator would notice
that there happen to be some foreign troops and weapons in Iraq apart
from the Iranian ones she was of course referring to. Couldn't find a
hint.
"The basic assumption, so deeply rooted as to be invisible, is that
the US owns the world (and Britain must toddle obediently behind), so
US forces and weapons cannot be foreign anywhere, by definition. If they
were to "liberate" England, they'd be indigenous. I doubt if
any religion or totalitarian state could command such fanatic obedience.
Maybe North Korea, or some crazed religious cult.” (Email to Media
Lens, May 24, 2007)
The internet-based response to Tisdall’s piece has been extremely
fierce and widespread. It suggests that the long years when the elite media
could boost official propaganda without serious challenge, and without cost,
are coming to an end. Comments left on the Guardian website, for example,
have been overwhelmingly sceptical. One reader posed two questions:
“1 - How did a White House press release find its way on to the
Guardian front page?
“2 - Why hasn't it been replaced with an apology and the article
that should have been there? You know, the one written by a journalist
with some functioning brain cells and at least a vestige of a critical
faculty.” (Comment posted at http://commentisfree.guardian.co.uk/
dd_guttenplan/2007/05/dont_get_fooled_again.html)
Another reader asked: “why are the US/UK/western strategies never
reported by 'journalists' like Tisdall? Perhaps we could even have similar
reports about US strategy based on unnamed Iranian sources, spinning and
confabulating in order to further their own hidden plans, on the front page
of the Guardian.
“I simply can't remember ever reading a print article that discussed
the USA's long-term geo-political strategies (except from people it is
easy to dismiss as 'extremists'), or come to that, any serious examination
of Iranian strategies that aren't framed by the US's view of the matter.”
(Ibid)
Many readers feel the Guardian has simply been used as a booster for crude
US propaganda. The reputation of the paper has surely suffered.
SUGGESTED ACTION
The goal of Media Lens is to promote rationality, compassion and respect
for others. If you decide to write to journalists, we strongly urge you
to maintain a polite, non-aggressive and non-abusive tone.
Write to Simon Tisdall
Email: simon.tisdall@guardian.co.uk
Write to Alan Rusbridger, Guardian editor
Email: alan.rusbridger@guardian.co.uk
Write to Siobhain Butterworth, readers’ editor of the Guardian
Email: reader@guardian.co.uk
Write to the letters page
Email: letters@guardian.co.uk
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