Great post from a Great site. It's an exchange between Media Lens participants and NY Times workers showing how the media is once again deceiving the public to allow another invasion.
Also Includes GUEST MEDIA ALERT: DAVID PETERSON RESPONDS TO OLIVER KAMM below
When George Bush arrived in Britain last week as part of his "farewell
tour", the real reasons for the visit were buried well out of sight.
The tour was not, as the Guardian suggested, a mere "continental au
revoir". The purpose was to coerce Gordon Brown into raising troop
levels in Afghanistan and to support toughened sanctions on Iran. Bush
said pressure on Iran was necessary to "solve this problem
diplomatically", but warned: "Iranians must understand, however, that
all options are on the table." (http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/
uk_news/politics/7456081.stm)
The remarks raised fears in London that Bush is "determined to take
action against Iran before he leaves office in January," the
Independent reported. (http://www.independent.co.uk/
news/world/politics/bush-threatens-iran-with-military-action-848488.html)
Mohamed ElBaradei, director general of the International Atomic
Energy Agency (IAEA), warned that any attack on Iran would transform
the region into a "ball of fire." Even from the West's point of view an
attack would be disastrous:
"A military strike would spark the launch of an emergency programme
to make atomic weapons, with the support of all Iranians, including
those living abroad."
(http://afp.google.com/article/ALeqM5hWSpmwY-Ckcf_V2Kf5RRNOgDh7Hg)
ElBaradei added that an attack would make it impossible for him to continue as head of the IAEA.
In support of Bush warmongering, French President Nicolas Sarkozy declared, on cue:
"Today, the most immediate threat is that of a terrorist attack.
Thanks to the effectiveness of our security forces, France has not been
attacked in recent years. But the threat is there, it is real and we
know that it could tomorrow take on a new form, even more serious, by
nuclear, chemical and biological means."
(http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/7458650.stm)
Sarkozy's propaganda contribution was splashed all over the BBC
website as "Breaking News." The previous weekend, the Times had hinted
at machinations behind the scenes, noting that "the French President
has quite deliberately donned the mantle once worn by Tony Blair,
defiantly - even triumphantly - talking up his love for all things
American". (http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/
news/world/europe/article4133574.ece)
Sarkozy had delighted Washington by saying the West must choose
between "an Iranian bomb and the bombing of Iran". "The frost is over,"
according to one French government aide. "We want to show the warmth
that now exists between the two countries after the frictions of the
recent past." (Ibid)
The "warmth" translates as French obedience to US power - a policy
change which will make France far more, not less, likely to be targeted
for terrorist attack, particularly if Iran becomes the next victim of a
US-led terrorist 'coalition'.
Madness In Search Of War
The BBC also found space to boost Bush-Brown propaganda:
"Iran has been accused of not co-operating with the UN over its
nuclear programme, amid fears it is enriching uranium to use in
weapons." (http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/ uk_news/politics/7456081.stm)
No mention was made of last November's US National Intelligence
Estimate (NIE), which summarised the work of the 16 American
intelligence agencies. The report disclosed that Iran had not been
pursuing a nuclear weapons development programme for the previous four
years:
"We judge with high confidence that in fall 2003 Tehran halted its nuclear weapons programme."
The report added:
"Tehran's decision to halt its nuclear weapons programme suggests
it is less determined to develop nuclear weapons than we have been
judging since 2005." (http://www.guardian.co.uk/
world/2007/dec/04/politics.topstories3)
It is 'balanced' BBC reporting to mention alleged "fears" about
Iran as genuine, but not to mention an intelligence report that
undermines the credibility of those fears. This, recall, even as the
catastrophe in Iraq - based on identical US-UK propaganda and identical
BBC servility - is ongoing.
We asked Bronwen Maddox, chief foreign commentator at the Times, why
she had failed to mention the NIE report in her June 17 article on
Iran. She replied on June 17:
WE HAVE DELETED MADDOX’S EMAIL AFTER THREATS OF LEGAL AND POLICE
ACTION FROM ALASTAIR BRETT, LEGAL MANAGER OF TIMES NEWSPAPERS ON JUNE
28 AND JULY 2.
We replied on June 23:
Dear Bronwen
Many thanks for such a speedy response; it's very much appreciated.
I'm co-editor of Media Lens, a website that monitors media issues.
You write that WE HAVE DELETED MADDOX’S COMMENT AFTER THREATS OF LEGAL
AND POLICE ACTION FROM ALASTAIR BRETT, LEGAL MANAGER OF TIMES
NEWSPAPERS ON JUNE 28 AND JULY 2.
You also write that WE HAVE DELETED MADDOX’S COMMENT AFTER THREATS OF
LEGAL AND POLICE ACTION FROM ALASTAIR BRETT, LEGAL MANAGER OF TIMES
NEWSPAPERS ON JUNE 28 AND JULY 2.
The report noted that "substantial explanations" were still lacking for
documents suggesting that Iran had worked on atomic bomb-related
explosives and a missile warhead design. But these are documents
introduced into the process at the very last minute by Washington in
early February. Given the US record of inventing evidence on Iraqi WMD,
isn't it reasonable to assume that these may prove to be baseless
allegations designed to prevent the IAEA from resolving all
"outstanding issues" with Iran as part of US warmongering?
You write WE HAVE DELETED MADDOX’S COMMENT AFTER THREATS OF LEGAL AND
POLICE ACTION FROM ALASTAIR BRETT, LEGAL MANAGER OF TIMES NEWSPAPERS ON
JUNE 28 AND JULY 2.
But why, then, did you not mention a June 15 Reuters report that noted:
"Analysts believe that offering Iran security guarantees, an idea
floated by Russia, could help end the deadlock, seeing such guarantees
as Iran's fundamental goal given the Bush administration's 'regime
change' policy toward it." (Parisa Hafezi, Reuters, June 15, 2008)?
The US has refused to withdraw its threats. This is technically a
criminal act (the UN Charter forbids the issuing of threats) and a sure
way to prevent diplomacy. Indeed, in May 2007, Zbigniew Brzezinski, the
hawkish National Security Adviser during Jimmy Carter's presidency,
called the US approach on Iran "clumsy" and "stupid". He noted that the
US had insisted that the Iranians give up their right to enrich uranium
as a precondition for a serious dialogue on the subject. Brzezinski
commented:
"I frankly don't understand how anyone in his right mind would make
that condition if he were serious about negotiations, unless the
objective is to prevent negotiations."
(http://www.prospect.org/cs/articles?
article=a_conversation_with_zbigniew__brzezinski)
Again, you appear never to have mentioned Brzezinski's view. Why is that?
And why did you not mention the view of the Saudi press earlier
this year in response to Washington's efforts to line them up in an
anti-Iranian crusade? Arab News commented:
"In his confrontational remarks about Iran, he offers no carrot, no
inducement, no compromise-only the big U.S. stick. This is not
diplomacy in search of peace. It is madness in search of war."
(http://www.cfr.org/publication/15352/bush_
fails_to_convince_arab_states_about_iran.html)
That observation is also not out of date, and has also not been mentioned by the Times.
Finally, why did you not mention the call for a nuclear-weapons-free
zone in the Middle East? Polls suggest that such an initiative is
supported by 75% of the American people, Iran would almost certainly
accept it, and the US-UK are specifically committed to it.
After all, Bush, Blair and Brown have all attempted to offer a legal
cover for the Iraq invasion by appealing to UN Resolution 687, which
calls on Iraq to end its production of weapons of mass destruction
(which Bush and Blair of course claimed it had failed to do). Article
14 calls on parties to establish a nuclear-weapons-free zone in the
region. This is an embarrassment to the United States and particularly
to Israel, which has 150-200 nuclear warheads it is not about to give
up.
Best wishes
David
We have received no further reply.
Bush - The Damage To America's "Image"
The deep-seated tendency of the elite media to bury the crimes of
the powerful will be well to the fore as Bush prepares to leave office.
Thus, a Guardian editorial, 'Goodbye to all that,' observed of the
president:
"the damage Mr Bush has inflicted on America's image is impressive,
especially with close allies like Turkey." (http://www.guardian.co.uk/
commentisfree/2008/jun/16/georgebush.eu)
With Iraq and Afghanistan in ruins, with action on the rising
catastrophe of climate change effectively stymied, the Guardian editors
chose to focus on damage to America's "image". The editorial concluded:
"Rebuilding global trust will be the major task of the next US president."
This single sentence speaks volumes about the Guardian's conformity,
about its refusal to expose the brutal priorities of power. The major
task of the next US president will be the same as it has always been.
If you are weak and defenceless, or in the way - watch out!
SUGGESTED ACTION
The goal of Media Lens is to promote rationality, compassion and
respect for others. If you do write to journalists, we strongly urge
you to maintain a polite, non-aggressive and non-abusive tone.
Write to Bronwen Maddox at the Times
Email: bronwen.maddox@thetimes.co.uk
Write to Ian Black, Middle East editor of the Guardian
Email: ian.black@guardian.co.uk
Please send a copy of your emails to us
Email: editor@medialens.org
JUNE 26, 2008 GUEST MEDIA ALERT: DAVID PETERSON RESPONDS TO OLIVER KAMM
Yesterday, we published a media alert
(www.medialens.org/alerts/08/080625_selling_the_fireball.php), in which
we discussed our exchange with Times commentator, Bronwen Maddox. In
response, Times commentator Oliver Kamm wrote to us:
Gentlemen,
I have read your latest media alert urging your supporters to lobby
Browen [sic] Maddox, Chief Foreign Commentator of The Times. You ask
Bronwen for a reference for her comment that the authors of the NIE
report on Iran's nuclear programme believe, with hindsight, that "they
should have phrased it differently".
The reference is a statement by Admiral Michael McConnell, director of
the National Intelligence Council, before the Senate Intelligence
Committee on 5 February this year. Senator Evan Bayh of Indiana asked
McConnell: "You just mentioned that if you had to do it over again
[i.e. report on Iran's nuclear programme] without the heat of the
moment, some time to reflect, you would have changed a couple of
things. What would you have changed?"
McConnell replied: "I think I would change the way that we describe
[the] nuclear program; I mean, put it up front, a little diagram, what
are the component parts so that the reader could quickly grasp that a
portion of it, I would argue, maybe even at least significant portion,
was halted and there are other parts that continue."
You'll find the exchange on page 32 of the transcript, here: www.dni.gov/testimonies/ 20080205_transcript.pdf
It seems to me that you would be doing your own supporters a service if
you were to try answering your own questions before launching
imprecations at senior journalists who exercise unreasonable patience
and courtesy in responding to you. Conversely, given that your
supporters declare on your message board that the BBC World Service
broadcasts "blatant propaganda for the Jewish religion", I think
Bronwen and the other commentators you target might be forgiven if they
are unmoved by your complaints.
Sincerely,
Oliver Kamm
To quickly address the last point, it is amazing that anyone would
attempt to denigrate a website on the grounds that it hosted a
particular comment posted by a member of the public. Presumably, then,
media professionals should revile the Guardian editors, associated as
they are with the paper’s Comment is Free website, which hosts all
manner of outrageous comments. Maddox was a “target”, not of
“complaints” or “imprecations”, but of polite invitations to rational
discussion of the facts. Kamm is arguing that these should be rejected
on the grounds that a post he didn’t like appeared on our message
board. Comment is indeed free, but sometimes superfluous.
Media Lens is very much a collaborative effort. We are assisted by
a large number of friends, including specialists and expert
commentators in different fields. They are often incredibly generous in
sending us advice, comments, references and other help. On this
occasion, we circulated Kamm’s email to Noam Chomsky, John Pilger,
David Peterson and others, hoping for a couple of comments in response.
But Peterson went much further - he sent us a full demolition of both
Maddox’s and Kamm’s arguments. There’s little point trying to gild the
Peterson lily, so we are very happy to publish his reply as a Guest
Media Alert.
We would, though, first like to invite readers to reflect on how
confidently the mainstream journalists recited the official propaganda
line that the authors of the NIE report had radically changed their
testimony to highlight the Iranian ‘threat’. And notice how Maddox in
particular strongly asserted that “the IAEA's report a few weeks ago...
has injected the new urgency”, which had left the NIE report badly out
of date.
As we will see, in an almost identical replay of media performance in
2002-2003 over Iraq, these bold assertions are based on a heap of
highly questionable government claims involving captured laptops and
the like.
It is also useful to compare the quality of Peterson’s analysis with
that of Kamm and Maddox. The chasm in rationality tells us much about
why the corporate media is doing such an appalling job of informing the
public and in working to relieve human suffering.
Peterson’s response:
Dear David:
What is changed in our reading of [the NIE report] Iran: Nuclear
Intentions and Capabilities (Dec. 3, 2007) by the little excerpt that
Oliver Kamm produces from U.S. National Intelligence Director Michael
McConnell's testimony before the Senate Select Committee on
Intelligence (Feb. 5, 2008)? Kamm believes that everything is changed.
In point of fact, nothing is changed.
In the passage quoted by Kamm, McConnell's phrase is "nuclear
program" - not nuclear weapons program. There is no question that Iran
has a nuclear program.
Bronwen Maddox had written WE HAVE DELETED MADDOX’S COMMENT AFTER
THREATS OF LEGAL AND POLICE ACTION FROM ALASTAIR BRETT, LEGAL MANAGER
OF TIMES NEWSPAPERS ON JUNE 28 AND JULY 2.
I do not know by what criterion Iran has been determined to be making
"rapid progress" in uranium enrichment - (a) Iran has been at it for
years; (b) both the IAEA and Iran itself report that Iran has achieved
a reactor-grade level of enrichment between 4% and 5%; and (c) aside
from Washington's capacity to influence the way these matters are
treated internationally, what other reason could there be for calling
this "rapid progress"?
The source of the allegations about "actual weapons" and "weapons
design" is dubious in the extreme. Here was how the Christian Science
Monitor explained it three weeks ago:
“But there is a history of imperfect intelligence tips. A report in
the Los Angeles Times last year quoted a senior diplomat at the IAEA
saying that the CIA and other Western spy agencies had been giving
sensitive information, but that ‘since 2002, pretty much all the
intelligence that's come to us has proved to be wrong.’ The story said
US officials "privately acknowledge" that much of the evidence they had
on Iran - including the detailed designs described in the current IAEA
report, reportedly taken from a laptop stolen in Iran -‘remains
ambiguous, fragmented and difficult to prove.’" (Scott Peterson,
‘Nuclear report: parsing Iran's intent,’ June 5; http://www.csmonitor.com/2008/0605/p06s02 -wome.html?page=1)
Because of the way the LA Times archives its material, this article at
the moment is inaccessible to me. However, see Julian Borger’s article
from February 23, 2007:
“One particularly contentious issue concerned records of plans to build
a nuclear warhead, which the CIA said it found on a stolen laptop
computer supplied by an informant inside Iran. In July 2005, US
intelligence officials showed printed versions of the material to IAEA
officials, who judged it to be sufficiently specific to confront Iran.
"Tehran rejected the material as forgeries and there are still
reservations about its authenticity in the IAEA, according to officials
with knowledge of the internal debate inside the agency. ‘First of all,
if you have a clandestine programme, you don't put it on laptops which
can walk away,’ one official said. ‘The data is all in English which
may be reasonable for some of the technical matters, but at some point
you'd have thought there would be at least some notes in Farsi. So
there is some doubt over the provenance of the computer.’ IAEA
officials do not comment on intelligence passed to the watchdog agency
by foreign governments, saying all such assistance is confidential.”
(Borger, ‘U.S. Intelligence on Iran Does Not Stand Up, Say Vienna
Sources,’ The Guardian, Feb. 23, 2007; http://www.guardian.co.uk/ world/2007/feb/23/topstories3.usa)
For another helpful report, also see Ewen MacAskill, ‘Intelligence expert who rewrote book on Iran,’ The Guardian, Dec. 8, 2007.
Anyway. Bronwen Maddox makes her assertions on very weak (and my hunch
is officially-sourced and meritless) grounds. Oliver Kamm's use of
Michael McConnell's February 5, 2008 exchange with U.S. Senator Evan
Bayh changes nothing in our reading of the December National
Intelligence Estimate on Iran - most certainly nothing in a direction
that warrants belief in Iran's nuclear weapons threat to international
peace and security. What is more, to resort to this exchange strikes me
as an act of desperation.
On the other hand, where Iran is concerned, the threat posed to
international peace and security by the U.S.-Israel axis is as grave or
graver than ever. But this is a categorically different point than one
derived from U.S. and Israeli allegations about Iran's nuclear program.
Last Point. In an appearance by Oliver Kamm on the BBC's Late Edition
program Kamm was once asked a question that (to roughly paraphrase it)
went something like this: The U.K. has nuclear weapons. The Government
is proposing to upgrade them and to maintain them for decades to come.
How do you justify denying nuclear weapons to other states such as Iran
and North Korea, but accept the fact that the U.K. and U.S. not only
keep but upgrade theirs? Kamm's reply was:
“We are a civilized state. Iran and North Korea are not. It's not
just a matter of the way we conduct our own affairs. Iran has conducted
systematic nuclear deception, while being a signatory to the [nuclear]
non-proliferation treaty.” (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3WHGIxIIr18)
Given that Oliver Kamm has placed himself within the
"clash-of-civilizations" camp, on the +civilized+ side of the great
divide, no less, I for one may be forgiven if I am unmoved by his
defense of Bronwen Maddox and the Washington regime's allegation that
Iran is pursuing nuclear weapons.
And I trust that the rest of Media Lens's supporters will be equally unmoved.
David Peterson
Chicago, USA
davidepet@comcast.net
Postscript. For the sake of the Media Lens archives, I will
reproduce here the relevant excerpt from Michael McConnell's February
5, 2008 exchange U.S. Senator Evan Bayh; three contemporaneous reports
that dealt with Michael McConnell's testimony; and an op-ed by John R.
Bolton, wherein this quite brutal American pre-emptively attacks
McConnell on the very day McConnell was scheduled to testify before the
U.S. Senate:
http://www.medialens.org/forum/viewtopic.php?p=9480#9480
SUGGESTED ACTION
The goal of Media Lens is to promote rationality, compassion and
respect for others. If you do write to journalists, we strongly urge
you to maintain a polite, non-aggressive and non-abusive tone.
Write to Oliver Kamm
Email: oliver.kamm@tiscali.co.uk
Write to Bronwen Maddox at the Times
Email: bronwen.maddox@thetimes.co.uk
Please send a copy of your emails to us
Email: editor@medialens.org















