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echo: worldtlk
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from: Steve Asher
date: 2003-02-11 13:01:18
subject: Baby-Killing Hoax Led To First War...

BABY-KILLING HOAX LED TO FIRST WAR IN IRAQ, NOW COMES THE REMATCH

By Bill Gallagher

"I saw the Iraqi soldiers come into the hospital with guns. They took the 
babies out of the incubators, took the incubators and left the children to 
die on the cold floor. It was horrifying." -- Nayirah, Kuwaiti Citizen, 
testifying before Congressional Human Rights Caucus, Oct. 10, 1990.

Her eyes were so sorrowful and she told her story with such painful 
poignance. As the tears streamed down her face, you were gripped with 
emotion, riveted to her compelling words spoken in perfect English. 

She had seen the horror as a young volunteer at a Kuwaiti hospital and 
was here to tell the world the truth. She was anguished, convincing and 
beautiful. The world watched and believed. 

Fifteen-year-old Nayirah could not reveal her last name, because of fear 
of reprisal against her family still in Kuwait. 

Saddam kills babies. His troops kill helpless babies for sport. Saddam's 
invasion of Kuwait was now taking on the biblical dimensions of evil.

Baby killer, you say. That's like King Herod, who slaughtered the 
innocent, hoping to rid his kingdom of a rival, the feared messiah, 
the child he heard of from the Magi. 

And this baby-killing stuff has happened before. Remember Pharaoh, 
who slaughtered the firstborn of all his Hebrew slaves? His intelligence 
sources told him that, among the Jews making bricks in Goshen, a child 
had been born who would lead his people from the bondage of Egypt.

Baby Moses was spared when Pharaoh's daughter plucked him from 
the Nile, but anyone who's read the Book of Exodus knows how bad 
those Egyptian soldiers were, hellbent on carrying out mass infanticide.

Baby killers in scripture and history are lightning rods for righteous 
indignation and draw out a visceral urge for vengeance. Now it is written: 
Pharaoh, Herod and Saddam are cut from the same murderous cloth.

After Nayirah's testimony, the United Nations Security Council heard 
more tales of horror. A man known as Dr. Issah Ibraham reported, "The 
hardest thing was burying the babies. Under my supervision, 120 newborn 
babies were buried in the second week of the invasion. I myself buried 
40 newborn babies that had been taken from their incubators by soldiers." 

The world was outraged, and the administration of former President 
George H.W. Bush and the government of Kuwait had just the right 
hook and public relations plan to show the world Saddam was a demon 
of the desert who had to be stopped. 

Bush the Elder began using the stories in his speeches. He rallied 
public opinion to wage war against Iraq with indignant references to 
"newborn babies thrown out of the incubators and then the incubators 
being shipped to Baghdad." 

Six times in a little over a month, Bush the Elder pointed to the story, 
and the American people and media nodded in shared rage. Saddam kills 
babies. 

Within days of the Iraqi invasion, as Americans were being pumped up 
for war, the government of Kuwait formed a front group, Citizens for 
a Free Kuwait. 

Hill & Knowlton, the powerful and politically well-connected public 
relations firm, was hired and collected $11 million in fees over the 
next several months to represent Citizens for a Free Kuwait. That 
meant selling the Congress and the American people on the wisdom of war. 

With a huge war chest of money for propaganda, Hill & Knowlton did 
careful research on the public's attitudes toward Saddam. They 
organized focus groups to review the issues.

People were asked about Saddam's invasion of Kuwait. Most people 
didn't even know where Kuwait was and cared less. 

What about Saddam's lust to control oil in the Middle East and possibly 
invade Saudi Arabia, "our friend"? What difference does it make which 
Arab despot we pay for our gas, the focus groups responded. 

What about Saddam gassing the Kurds? "Who the hell are the Kurds?" 
they asked. 

Aren't you worried about Saddam developing nuclear and other weapons 
of mass destruction? Sure, that's a problem, but the Indians and 
Pakistanis already have nuclear weapons in their volatile part of 
the world. So we have one more dictator with the bomb. 

Now the clincher. What about Saddam killing babies? The focus group's
measurement meters went right off the scale. Outrage, anger: "We must 
avenge this atrocity."

John MacArthur, author of "The Second Front," the story of the media 
and the Gulf War, wrote, "Of all the accusations made against the 
dictator, none had more impact on American public opinion than the 
one about Iraqi soldiers removing 312 babies from their incubators 
and leaving them to die on the cold hospital floors of Kuwait City." 

Amnesty International issued a report on the human rights violations 
in occupied Kuwait, saying, "Babies in the premature unit of one 
hospital had been removed from their incubators so that these, too, 
could be carried off."

Six senators specifically pointed to the baby incubator stories in 
their speeches supporting the resolution to give the president power 
to use American forces in Kuwait. The measure passed the Senate by 
a narrow five-vote margin. 

A bellicose Vice President Dan Quayle, pumped up with fervor from 
his National Guard experience during the Vietnam War, bellowed, 
"These are pictures Saddam doesn't want us to see. Pictures of 
premature babies that were tossed out of their incubators and 
left to die." 

Well, there were no pictures, and for good reason. The entire incubator 
story was a colossal lie. It never happened. The story was a complete 
fabrication that many Americans still believe to this day. 

It was a hoax the Kuwaiti government concocted, and their public relations 
firm propagated the big lie with great success.

First, the compelling Nayirah. She had good reason for keeping her last 
name secret. She was, in fact, the daughter of Sheik Saud Nasir al-Sabah, 
Kuwait's Ambassador to the United States.

She was never in a hospital in Kuwait. She never left Washington, D.C., 
and made up the entire story. A Hill & Knowlton staffer coached her on 
how to deliver the stream of lies that an uncritical media, ready to lead 
the jingoism parade, sold to the world. 

The heartbroken doctor-turned-undertaker, who brought the hoax to the 
United Nations, was really a dentist, and was nowhere near Kuwait when 
the Iraqis invaded. 

When U.S. troops "liberated" Kuwait, investigators from Amnesty 
International were quickly sent to the scene to document human 
rights abuses.

They could not find a single witness nor a scintilla of evidence to 
support the babies-thrown-from-incubators stories. Amnesty International, 
which had initially gone for the big lie, issued an embarrassed retraction.

The man who headed Hill & Knowlton's Washington office and handled the 
Citizens for a Free Kuwait account was Craig L. Fuller, an intimate of 
former President George H.W. Bush.

Fuller had been Bush's chief of staff when he was vice president and 
he had daily contact with his friends in the White House. It is beyond 
reasonable belief to think for a moment that the brass at Hill & 
Knowlton was unaware of Nayirah's outrageous lies and the fraud they 
helped spread. 

What happened was an unconscionable perversion of the democratic process, 
used to sway public opinion and, ultimately, shape decisions on war and 
peace. 

The wonderful Canadian television show, "The Fifth Estate," was one of 
the first in the media to blow the lid off the big lie. The CBC piece 
put the whole sordid story together and exposed the lies. 

When the Canadians tried to get permission to interview Nayirah, her 
father, the ambassador, angrily refused. 

Several months later, "60 Minutes" picked up on the story and aired 
a truncated, watered-down version of the CBC report. Much of the 
mainstream American media just ignored the truth.

Bush the Elder no longer tells the incubator stories, but still 
refuses to call the lies what they are: Lies. He brushes off the 
calculated deceptions, saying he knows "some babies" did die in 
Kuwait, and that's all there is to that.

Make no mistake about it, the United States is going to wage war 
on Iraq. Whatever the United Nations inspectors find or don't 
find makes no difference at all. The war plans are ready. The 
honor of Bush the Elder is at stake.

Saddam Hussein could repent for his sins, eat whatever enriched 
uranium he has, inhale his chemical and biological weapons, ask Billy 
Graham for forgiveness, become a Pentecostal and send his kids to 
Bob Jones University, and the Bushies would still bomb Baghdad. 

It's an old saw that the first casualty in war is the truth. But it 
doesn't have to be, if we watch carefully and beware of the big lies. 

Bush the Elder permitted major deceptions in Gulf War I. When Gulf 
War II begins, just remember that the apple doesn't fall far from 
the tree. 


Bill Gallagher, a Peabody Award winner, is a former Niagara Falls city 
councilman who now covers Detroit for Fox News.

                              -==-

Source: http://www.niagarafallsreporter.com/gallagher83.html

Cheers, Steve..

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