By James Corbett, grtv.ca, 2 January, 2012
Below is a transcript by James Corbett of his video “Faking It: How the Media Manipulates the World into War”.
Below is a transcript by James Corbett of his video “Faking It: How the Media Manipulates the World into War”.
View the original filmed report here.
NB: Does anyone remember Dustin Hoffman's Wag The Dog?
It is a film about a president who, after being caught in a scandalous situation just a few days before the elections, has to find a way to re-polish his public image tainted by his indiscretions. In this light, the presidential team contracts a top Hollywood producer in order to, through a faked media campaign, convince the public that a war with Albania is imminent. Ultimately, the yellow media saves the president as he gets to play the hero who ends this presumed war, created by the media, and ended through the media!!!
----------------------------------------------------------------------
As the drums of war begin to beat once again in Iran, Syria,
the , and other potential hotspots and flashpoints around the globe, concerned
citizens are asking how a world so sick of bloodshed and a population so tired
of conflict could be led to this spot once again.
To
understand this seeming paradox, we must first understand the centuries-long
history of how media has been used to whip the nation into wartime frenzy,
dehumanize the supposed enemies, and even to manipulate the public into
believing in causes for war that, decades later, were admitted to be completely
fictitious.
The term “yellow journalism” was
coined to describe the type of sensationalistic, scandal-driven, and often erroneous
style of reporting popularized by newspapers like William Randolph Hearst’s New
York Journal. In one of the most egregious examples of this phenomenon,
Hearst’s papers widely trumpeted the sinking of the Maine as the work of the
Spanish. Whipped into an anti-Spanish frenzy by a daily torrent of stories
depicting Spanish forces’ alleged torture and rape of Cubans, and pushed over
the edge by the Maine incident, the public welcomed the beginning of the
US-Spanish war. Although it is now widely believed that the explosion on the
Maine was due to a fire in one of its coal bunkers, the initial lurid reports
of Spanish involvement stuck and the nation was led into war.
In many ways, the phrase infamously attributed to Hearst in
reply to his illustrator “You furnish the pictures and I’ll furnish the war,”
apocryphal as the story may be, nevertheless perfectly encodes the method by
which the public would be led to war time and again through the decades.
The US was drawn into World War I by the sinking of the
Lusitania, a British ocean liner carrying American passengers that was
torpedoed by German U-boats off the coast of Ireland, killing over 1,000 of its
passengers. What the public was not informed about at the time, of course, was
that just one week before the incident, then-First Lord of the Admiralty
Winston Churchill had written to the President of the Board of Trade that
it was “most important to attract neutral shipping to our shores, in the hopes
especially of embroiling the United States with Germany.” Nor did reports of
the attack announce that the ship was carrying rifle ammunition and other military
supplies. Instead, reports once again emphasized that the attack was an
out-of-the-blue strike by a maniacal enemy, and the public was led into the
war.
The US involvement in World War II was likewise the result of
deliberate disinformation. Although the Honolulu Advertiser had even predicted the
attack on Pearl Harbor days in advance, the Japanese Naval codes had
already been
deciphered by that time,
and that even Henry Stimson, the US Secretary of War, had noted in his
diary the week before that
he had discussed in a meeting with Roosevelt “how we should maneuver them [the
Japanese] into the position of firing the first shot without allowing too much
danger to ourselves,” the public were still led to believe that the Pearl
Harbor attack had been completely unforeseen. Just last month, a newly-declassified
memo emerged showing that FDR had been warned of an impending
Japanese attack on Hawaii just three days before the events at Pearl Harbor,
yet the history books still portray Pearl Harbor as an example of a surprise
attack.
In August 1964, the public was told that the North Vietnamese
had attacked a US Destroyer in the Gulf of Tonkin on two separate occasions.
The attacks were portrayed as a clear example of “communist aggression” and a resolution
was soon passed in Congress authorizing President Johnson to begin deploying US
forces in Vietnam. In 2005, an internal NSA
study was released concluding that the second attack in fact never
took place. In effect, 60000 American servicemen and as many as three million
Vietnamese, let alone as many as 500,000 Cambodians and Laotians, lost their
lives because of an incident that did not occur anywhere but in the imagination
of the Johnson
administration and the pages of the American media.
In 1991, the world was introduced to the emotional story of Nayirah, a Kuwaiti girl
who testified about the atrocities committed by Iraqi forces in Kuwait.
What the world was never told was that the incident had in fact
been the work of a public
relations firm, Hill and Knowltown, and the girl had actually been
the daughter of the Kuwaiti ambassador. Once again, the public was whipped into
a frenzy of hatred for the Hussein regime, not for the documented atrocities
that it had actually committed on segments of its own population with weapons
supplied to them by the United States itself, but on the basis of an imaginary
story told to the public via their televisions, orchestrated by a PR firm.
In the lead-up to the war on Iraq, the American media infamously
took the lead in framing the debate about the Iraqi government’s weapons of
mass destruction NOT as a question of whether or not they even existed, but as
a question of where they had been hidden and what should be done to disarm
them. The New York Times led the way with Judith Miller‘s
now infamous reporting on the Iraqi WMD story, now known to have been based on
false information from untrustworthy sources, but the rest of the media fell into line with the
NBC Nightly News asking “what precise threat Iraq and its weapons of mass
destruction pose to America”, and Time debating whether Hussein was “making a
good-faith effort to disarm Iraq’s weapons of mass destruction.” Reports about
chemical weapons stashes were reported on before they were confirmed, although headlines
boldly asserted their existence as indisputable fact. We now know that in fact
the stockpiles did not exist, and the administration premeditatedly lied the
country into yet another war, but the most intense opposition the Bush
administration ever received over this documented war crime was some polite correction on the Sunday political talk show circuit.
Remarkably, the public at large has seemingly learned nothing
from all of these documented historical manipulations. If anything, the media
has become even bolder in its attempts to manipulate the public’s perceptions,
perhaps emboldened by the fact that so few in the audience seem willing to
question the picture that is being painted for them on the evening news.
Later that year, CNN aired footage of a bombed out Tskhinvali in
South Ossetia, falsely labeling
it as footage of Gori, which they said had been attacked by the Russians.
In 2009, the BBC showed a cropped image
of a rally in Iran which they claimed was a crowd of protesters who assembled
to show their opposition to the Iranian government. An uncropped version of the
same photograph displayed on the LA Times’ website, however, revealed that the
photo in fact came from a rally in support of Ahmedinejad.
In August of 2011, the BBC ran footage of what they
claimed was a celebration in Tripoli’s Green Square. When sharp-eyed viewers
noticed that the flags in the footage were in fact Indian flags, the BBC was forced to admit
that they had “accidentally” broadcast footage from India instead of Tripoli.
Also that month, CNN reported
on a story from the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights claiming that eight
infants in incubators had died in a hospital in Hama when Syrian authorities
cut off power in the area. Some news sites even carried pictures
of the infants. The images were later admitted
to have been taken in Egypt and no evidence has ever emerged to back up the
accusations.
As breathtaking as all of these lies, manipulations and
so-called “mistakes” are, they in and of themselves don’t represent the only
functions of the media for the war machine. Now, the US government is taking
the lead in becoming more and more directly involved with the shaping of the
media message on war propaganda, and the general public is becoming even more
ensnared in a false picture of the world through the Pentagon’s own lens.
In 2005, the Bush White House admitted to producing videos that were
designed to look like news reports from legitimate independent journalists, and
then feeding those reports to media outlets as prepackaged material ready to
air on the evening news. When the Government Accountability Office ruled that
these fake news reports in fact constituted illegal covert propaganda, the
White House simply issued a memo
declaring the practice to be legal.
In April 2008, the New York Times revealed
a secret US Department of Defense program that was launched in 2002 and
involved using retired military officers to implant Pentagon talking points in
the media. The officers were presented as “independent analysts” on talk shows
and news programs, although they had been specially briefed beforehand by the
Pentagon. In December of 2011, the DoD’s own Inspector General released a report
concluding that the program was in perfect compliance with government policies
and regulations.
Earlier this year, it was revealed the US government had contracted with
HBGary Federal to develop software that create fake social media accounts in
order to steer public opinion and promote propaganda on popular websites. The
federal contract for the software sourced back to the MacDill Air Force Base in
Florida.
As the vehicle through which information from the outside world
is captured, sorted, edited and transmitted into our homes, the mass media has
the huge responsibility of shaping and informing our understanding of events to
which we don’t have first-hand access. This is an awesome responsibility in
even the most ideal conditions, with diligent reporters guided by trustworthy
editors doing their level best to report the most important news in the most straightforward
way.
But in a media landscape where a handful of
companies own virtually all
of the print, radio and television media in each nation, the only recourse the
public has is to turn away from the mainstream media altogether. And that is
precisely what is happening.
As study after study and report after report has shown, the death of the old media has
accelerated in recent years, with more and more people abandoning newspapers
and now even television as their main source of news. Instead, the public is
increasingly turning toward online sources for their news and information,
something that is necessarily worrying for the war machine itself, a system
that can only truly flourish when the propaganda arm is held under monopolistic
control.
But as citizens turn away from the New York Times and toward
independent websites, many run and maintained by citizen journalists and
amateur editors, the system that has consolidated its control over the minds of
the public for generations seems to finally be showing signs that it may not be
invincible.
Surely this is not to say that online media is impervious to the
defects that have made the traditional media so unreliable. Quite the contrary.
But the difference is that online, there is still for the time being relative
freedom of choice at the individual level. While internet freedom exists,
individual readers and viewers don’t have to take the word of any website or
pundit or commentator on any issue. They can check the source documentation
themselves, except, perhaps not coincidentally, on the websites of the
traditional media bastions, which tend not to link source material and
documentation in their articles.
Hence the SOPA Act, Protect IP,
the US government’s attempts to seize websites
at the domain name level, and all of the other concerted attacks we have seen
on internet freedoms in recent years.
Because ultimately, an informed and engaged public is far less
likely to go along with wars waged for power and profit. And as the public
becomes better informed about the very issues that the media has tried to lie
to them about for so long, they realize that the answer to all of the
mainstream media’s war cheerleading and blatant manipulation is perhaps simpler
than we ever suspected: All we have to do is turn them off.
© James Corbett, grtv.ca