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echo: worldtlk
to: All
from: Steve Asher
date: 2002-12-10 01:42:22
subject: US Propaganda & Second Gulf War

U.S. PROPAGANDA 
IS IT FUELING THE SECOND GULF WAR, TOO? 

By: Jim Moore

So thinks Maggie O'Kane, editorial director of GuardianFilms in 
England, and European Journalist of the Year." And she should know, 
having had a ringside seat at the Baghdad Hustle once before.  

No pacifist by any stretch of the imagination, O'Kane nonetheless 
contends that provoking Saddam Hussein further at this time would be 
"criminally irresponsible" by President Bush, irrespective of any motives 
for doing so.  

What leads 0'Kane to say this? The d?ja vu situation. The only 
difference being that this time around Saddam Hussein is now cornered, 
and he knows it. It is also rumored that he is dying of cancer. In a war in 
which his own survival is unlikely, he has nothing to lose. Which, like a 
cornered rat, makes him extremely dangerous. Therefore, provoking him 
more, speculates O'Kane, would be unforgivable on Bush's part.  

Even with a familiar scenario unfolding, O'Kane sees no more reason for 
jumping the gun on Hussein than she saw the first time.  

It would be difficult to gainsay her assessment of the situation, given 
her knowledge and experience acquired in Baghdad, where she was 
assigned to cover Saddam Hussein and his maneuverings in the first 
Gulf War, "the biggest story of a lifetime" -as she called it.  

In pleading the case for a less knee-jerk response to Saddam Hussein 
this time around, O'Kane sites two glaring examples of how the U.S. 
propaganda machine worked to draw America into the first Gulf War. 
And how a similar formula may be in the planning stages for getting 
America into another Gulf war, this time perhaps with a less healthy 
Hussein.  

Example one. Just prior to the first Gulf war, the Pentagon insisted 
they had satellite photos showing Saddam Hussein not only NOT 
withdrawing from Kuwait, but he had 250,000 troops poised to pounce 
on Saudi Arabia. Yet, subsequent commercial satellite photos and 
declassified information indicated that there were no Iraqi troops 
massed at the border.  

Only aircraft sitting wingtip-to-wingtip in Riyadh airport. Still, 
in spite of the absence of Iraqi troops poised to enter Saudi Arabia, 
the war machine was turned on.  

"So what will the fake (Pentagon) satellite pictures show this time," 
asks Maggie O'Kane, "a massive chemical installation with Iraqi goblins 
cooking up anthrax?"  

Example two The second propaganda tactic used to get America into 
Gulf War 1 was a classic called "dead babies". It seems that Nijirah-al 
Sabah, the daughter of the Kuwaiti ambassador in Washington, 
described how she had watched Iraqi soldiers looting incubators to take 
back to Baghdad, pitching the Kuwaiti babies out onto the cold floor to 
die.  

Except it never happened. Two Filipina nurses who worked in the 
maternity ward in question said they had never seen Ms. Al Sabah in 
their lives. Amnesty admitted being duped, and Middle East Watch 
confirmed the fabrication. But it came too late: The U.S.. Congress had 
already voted for war, due in no small part to Bush senior's mention of 
the "incubator babies" seven times in his pre-war rallying speeches.  

By the time the truth came out, months later, the war was over. What 
U.S. propaganda techniques will be used to garner a consensus for the 
second attack on Iraq? Ms O'Kane thinks she sees the beginning of it in 
action already. In her own country of Britain, she says that Jack Straw's 
new human rights dossier on Iraq seems conveniently timed with the 
military build-up.  

Also, an odd cog in the propaganda machine is Hans Blix, the U.N.'s 
chief weapons inspector, whose work is, in the words of former CIA 
director James Wolsey, "of limited value." He's a pussycat compared 
to Saddam Hussein. But then, what did they expect? Blix was Kofi 
Annan's second choice for the job.  

In a final comment on American politics as it relates to U.S. 
propaganda, Ms. O'Kane lays it right on the line: "The greatest irony, 
and most important issue, is that although the war on Iraq may indeed 
get George Bush re-elected, it will not win the war on terrorism. It 
will instead fuel it."  

I guess it takes a gal like Maggie O'Kane, working at the Guardian in 
England, to explain to us what we can't seem to figure out for ourselves. 

"Published originally at EtherZone.com : republication allowed with this  
notice and hyperlink intact."

                             -==-

Source: Ether Zone - http://etherzone.com/2002/moor121602.shtml


Cheers, Steve..

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