August 10, 2006
THE VALUE OF BLOOD
Sovereignty Shattered By Brute Force
“My job in Vietnam was to kill people. By the time I was first
injured in combat (two or three months into my tour), I had already been
directly responsible for the deaths of several hundred people. And today,
each day, I can still see many of their faces.”
So writes Claude Anshin Thomas of his role as a crew chief on US assault
helicopters in the Vietnam war. Thomas recounts one particular incident
among many:
“We flew in with a heavy-fire team... opened fire, and without
thought destroyed the entire village. We destroyed everything. The killing
was complete madness. There was nothing there that was not the enemy.
We killed everything that moved: men, women, children, water buffalo,
dogs, chickens. Without any feeling, without any thought. Simply out of
this madness. We destroyed buildings, trees, wagons, baskets, everything.
All that remained when we were finished were dead bodies, fire, and smoke.
It was all like a dream; it didn’t feel real. Yet every act that
I was committing was very real.” (Thomas, At Hell’s Gate -
A Soldier’s Journey From War To Peace, Shambhala, 2004, p.20)
Like veterans of every conflict on all sides, the war never ended for Thomas.
The suffering he had inflicted and experienced drove him to further violence,
hatred, self-hatred, drug abuse, alcohol abuse, homelessness, the brink
of suicide and other torments. In his book, At Hell’s Gate - A Soldier’s
Journey From War To Peace, Thomas describes how he found sanity in awareness
and acceptance of his suffering, and in compassion for himself and others.
Having ordained as a Zen Buddhist monk, Thomas has devoted his life to peace
activism, visiting war zones around the world, and completing a 5,000-mile
peace pilgrimage from Auschwitz in Poland to Vietnam.
Thomas has a key message for all of us about the real nature and origins
of violence:
“It is important to realise that veterans are not the only ones
who bear responsibility for the atrocities of war. Nonveterans sanction
war, support the waging of war, supported troops being sent to Vietnam
- and it is nonveterans who so often turn their backs on the returning
soldiers in an effort to avoid their own complicity in the war... But
if we look deeply into this matter, we can know that those who don‘t
fight are not separate from those who fight; we are all responsible for
war. War is not something that happens external to us; it is an extension
of us, its roots within our very nature. It happens within all of us.”
(Ibid, pp.50-51)
What does it say about our culture, after all, Thomas asks, that we seem
to thrive on violence, both staged and real; that our DVD shops and film
channels are simply packed with killing?
Journalists and politicians also experience the dream-like sense that their
actions are disconnected from the suffering they cause. But their actions,
also, are very real.
It is astonishing to reflect, for example, that our mass media system is
not in fact state-controlled. Who could guess from the unvarying support
of our media corporations for mass violence committed by our government
and its allies? From their eager demonisation of leaders and countries labelled
‘enemies’ of the state? From their consistent indifference to
the mass death of our victims? As Respect MP George Galloway recently told
one hapless Sky News interviewer:
“You don’t give a damn. You don’t even know about the
Palestinian families. You don’t even know that they exist... Because
you believe, whether you know it or not, that Israeli blood is more valuable
than the blood of Lebanese or Palestinians. That’s the truth, and
the discerning of your viewers already know it.” (Galloway, Sky
News, http://news.sky.com/shared/videoasx/
0,,galloway_060806-31200-bb,00.asx)
But do journalists see themselves as instruments of a killing machine?
The idea strikes them as preposterous - they are just doing a job like anyone
else.
In 1999, the journalist John Gray joined a government-inspired chorus of
media outrage:
“Air power alone cannot stop ethnic massacres. Hi-tech weaponry
can inflict considerable damage on the military infrastructures of government
that sanction such savagery. They cannot round up the ethnic militias
which commit the atrocities. For that, the boots of a disciplined army
need to be firmly on the ground. The logic of Nato intervention in Kosovo
points inexorably to the use of ground troops.” (Gray, ‘Bring
on the boot,’ The Guardian, March 31, 1999)
In response to Iraq's invasion of Kuwait in August 1990, the Times (London)
called for "a worldwide expression of anger at a small nation's sovereignty
rudely shattered by brute force". (Leader, 'Iraq's naked villainy,'
The Times, August 3, 1990)
The cause in Kuwait was "simple on a world scale", the Times
observed five months later, "the defence of the weak against aggression
by the strong". (Leader, 'No mock heroics,' The Times, January 18,
1991)
As John Pilger recently wrote so well:
“How silent are these crusaders now, their selective compassion
reserved demonstrably for causes of state, ‘our’ causes.”
(Pilger, ‘Bloodshed and hope,’ Guardian Unlimited, July 28,
2006)
Thus, Mary Dejevsky, who writes, tragicomically, this week in the Independent:
“As a die-hard opponent of the war in Iraq - a war that flouted
the will of the UN, ignored history, relied on faulty intelligence and
has now reaped the whirlwind - I regret that the anti-war movement has
aligned itself so swiftly, and so uncritically, with those who object
to Israeli action against Hizbollah.” (Dejevsky, ‘Israel has
an entitlement to defend its security,’ The Independent, August
9, 2006)
Imagine Dejevsky declaring herself a “die-hard opponent of the war"
in 2002 and early 2003, when it mattered. The suggestion that the war merely
flouted the UN, ignored history, and relied on faulty intelligence, indicates
the truth of Dejevsky’s “die-hard” opposition to what
was in fact the supreme war crime. Dejevsky adds:
“It is easy from the comparative safety of Britain or the US to
assert with all confidence that Israel's action against Hizbollah has
been ‘disproportionate‘... However contentious its origins,
however, Israel has the same right as any other state to national security
and the same right to defend its borders.”
And it is easy to toss exhausted platitudes in the face of mass death -
children blasted and buried in their hundreds, a million lives shattered
- when the blood is of a lesser value.
Anyone who recommended a ground invasion of Israel in response to Lebanon’s
“sovereignty rudely shattered by brute force“ would of course
be deemed quite mad by our media.
In November 2002, we raised many a liberal hackle when we observed that
the Guardian’s George Monbiot had written:
"... if war turns out to be the only means of removing Saddam, then
let us support a war whose sole and incontestable purpose is that and
only that..." (Monbiot, ‘See you in court, Tony,‘ The
Guardian, November 26, 2002)
We noted that Monbiot would doubtless deny to his last breath that his
support for an assault against just this shattered Third World country as
a last resort had anything to do with the relentless effusions of the Bush/Blair
propaganda machine. (Media
Alert Update: Iraq - Panorama Editor and Guardian Editor Respond )
Monbiot‘s comments, however, were symptomatic of
the insidious power of state propaganda to shape reality - our sense of
what is conceivable and reasonable - in a society where conformity is relentlessly
rewarded and dissent heavily punished.
Noam Chomsky has suggested that, but for the catastrophic turn of events
in Iraq, Venezuela might well have been the next target for US-UK “humanitarian
intervention“. In which case, who can doubt that our press would have
filled with assertions that, alas, military intervention was the only way
to save the Venezuelan people from dictatorship? Currently, of course, no
such suggestions are being made - the idea seems bizarre to most people
- but that would quickly change if the state propaganda machine cranked
into action.
An Elemental Struggle
Earlier this month, Tony Blair declared:
“What is happening today out in the Middle East, in Afghanistan
and beyond is an elemental struggle about the values that will shape our
future.
"It is in part a struggle between what I will call reactionary Islam
and moderate mainstream Islam but its implications go far wider.”
(‘Blair calls for complete rethink of Middle East policy,’
Press Association, August 1, 2006)
In the real world, the struggle is not “elemental” but merely
political. Robert Pape, author of the forthcoming book, Dying to Win: Why
Suicide Terrorists Do It, writes:
“Researching my book, which covered all 462 suicide bombings around
the globe, I had colleagues scour Lebanese sources to collect martyr videos,
pictures and testimonials and biographies of the Hizbollah bombers. Of
the 41, we identified the names, birth places and other personal data
for 38. We were shocked to find that only eight were Islamic fundamentalists;
27 were from leftist political groups such as the Lebanese Communist Party
and the Arab Socialist Union; three were Christians, including a female
secondary school teacher with a college degree. All were born in Lebanon.
“What these suicide attackers - and their heirs today - shared
was not a religious or political ideology but simply a commitment to resisting
a foreign occupation.” (Pape, ‘What we still don't understand
about Hizbollah,’ The Observer, August 6, 2006)
Responding to Blair’s latest lesson in sixth form ethics, Patrick
Wintour and Ewen MacAskill wrote in the Guardian:
“Tony Blair will face down his critics today over his controversial
handling of the Middle East crisis by insisting that he has been working
throughout for a ceasefire in Lebanon and that his position has been misunderstood.
He will argue at a Downing Street press conference that he wanted a ceasefire,
but only if it was coupled with a clear understanding that the Hizbullah
militia would be disarmed. Mr Blair, who returned from his US trip yesterday,
will say that he is trying to secure a durable settlement, rather than
a short-term fix which would leave armed militias operating on the border
of Israel.” (Wintour and MacAskill, ‘Blair: You've misunderstood
me over the Middle East,’ The Guardian, August 3, 2006)
As Vietnam veteran Claude Anshin Thomas suggests, it is absurd to believe
that violence is just about the pilots who drop the bombs, or the soldiers
who fire the guns. Violence is born in bias, in prejudicial compassion and
indifference to others. Wintour and MacAskill became part of the killing
machine by reporting as uncontroversial, as unworthy of comment, Blair’s
insistence that just Hezbollah - dismissed as “armed militias”
- should be disarmed. Would the Guardian provide some kind of ‘balancing’
comment, some alternative viewpoint, if a world leader suggested that agreement
was impossible until the Israeli Defence Force had been completely disarmed
while Hezbollah retained its weapons? If these weapons constituted one of
the world’s premier military machines, including several hundred nuclear
weapons?
This is how ‘objective’ news reporting consistently fuels violence
- the ‘controversial’ voices of our ’enemies’ are
balanced by counter-arguments, the ‘respectable’ voices of our
leaders are not. This directly conditions us to support mass violence over
and over again, decade after decade.
Thus BBC online reported US-UK obstructionism at the Middle East summit
in Rome in an article entitled ‘”World backs Lebanon offensive”’.
The article reported: “Israel says diplomats’ failure to call
for a halt to its Lebanon offensive... has given it the green light to continue.”
The BBC cited Israel's Justice Minister Haim Ramon:
"We received yesterday at the Rome conference permission from the
world... To continue the operation." (‘”World backs Lebanon
offensive,’” BBC Online, July 27, 2006)
Not only did the BBC's title give credence to this outrageous lie but no
contradictory viewpoints were provided anywhere in the piece. Ramon was
even given space to argue, again without challenge: "All those now
in south Lebanon are terrorists who are related in some way to Hezbollah."
Three days later, 28 of these "terrorists", including 16 children,
were bombed to death in Qana.
Crushing The Scorpions
In an August 7 discussion, ironically, of the power of propaganda, the
BBC’s Newsnight programme focused on alleged tampering of photographs
of Israeli attacks on Beirut. Had a photographer added an extra flare falling
from an Israeli bomber for dramatic effect? Did the same photographer alter
clouds of smoke to make them seem more ominous? Had Hezbollah propagandists
needlessly carried the body of a dead child around in Qana to ensure journalists
got the picture?
More importantly, but undiscussed - what was the moral value of promoting
scepticism, based on such trivial concerns, towards the overwhelming evidence
of the undeniable catastrophe that has befallen Lebanon? What was the moral
value of muddying the reality that the Lebanese child really had been killed
by an Israeli attack on Qana? Can we imagine a discussion of whether the
fiery colours at the heart of the fireball from the second jet to hit the
World Trade Centre on 9/11 was enhanced for effect? Would journalists have
highlighted the issue on national television, or would they have dismissed
it out of hand? How can we explain the difference? The answer lies in the
value of blood.
The BBC's security correspondent Frank Gardner reported that Israeli critics
likened the Israeli army’s campaign against Hezbollah to someone "using
a sledgehammer to kill a scorpion" - "quite a good analogy",
Gardner observed. (BBC News 24, August 1, 2006)
Imagine the furore if a BBC journalist expressed approval for a Hezbollah
description of Israeli forces as vermin to be crushed. But Hezbollah, like
Hamas and insurgents in Iraq, are consistently treated as less than human
by our media. It rarely occurs to journalists to bother to estimate Hezbollah's
military casualties, for example. Every last Israeli or British military
death is worthy news - but not the dead on the other side. For the same
reason, the "scorpions" are reflexively depicted as crazed fanatics
responding to "fundamentalist values" rather than genuine political
grievances. This is convenient as it obviates the need to consider rationally
our own role in these grievances. Much better to talk of “values“
when the political realities are so ugly.
On the day of one particular attack in Iraq, the BBC told us this week,
four US soldiers had been drinking whisky and practising golf strokes at
a checkpoint south of Baghdad. According to sworn testimony, one of the
soldiers, Steven Green, said he “wanted to go to a house and kill
some Iraqis“. The BBC report added:
“The four eventually went to a house about 200 metres away and
put the parents and their five-year old daughter in the bedroom, but kept
the older girl in the living room.
“According to Mr Barker's statement, he and Mr Cortez took it in
turns to rape or attempt to rape her.
“Mr Barker heard shots from the bedroom, and Steven Green emerged
with an AK-47 in his hand saying ‘They're all dead. I just killed
them.’
“According to the testimony, Mr Green then also raped the girl
and shot her dead. Her body was doused in kerosene and set alight.”
(‘Troops “took turns” to rape Iraqi,’ http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/
1/hi/world/middle_east/5253160.stm August 7, 2006)
Who was responsible for this atrocity? Was it the young troops drowning
in the madness and death of a ferocious war, sent by cynics to kill and
die for the ugliest of causes? What about the people who sent them and supported
their sending - people sitting in air-conditioned offices, not under constant
threat of violent death, not required to witness the killing and maiming
of close friends?
What was the BBC’s role? As we have documented many times, the BBC,
like the rest of the media, is a powerful conditioning force that has made
the Iraq war possible. Endless ‘objective’ BBC reports have
passed on Blair’s obvious lies as impassioned sincerity. Endless reports
avoided even the most childishly obvious objections to claims about weapons
of mass destruction, about alleged Iraqi obstructionism, and about alleged
benevolent US-UK dreams of democracy. BBC journalists did not physically
rape and kill the 14-year-old Iraqi girl, but they helped create the conditions
out of which that violence emerged - they share responsibility with those
four US soldiers. That seems inconceivable to a journalist sitting at a
desk in a London office, but it is the reality.
The Guardian’s Emma Brockes claims to have experienced a personal
epiphany regarding the chaotic state of the world. One night last week,
she writes, the 10'clock news was packed with endless horrors: Israel sending
troops and tanks into Lebanon, people crawling out of bomb-damaged housing,
three British soldiers killed in an ambush in Afghanistan, a further British
soldier killed in a mortar attack in Iraq, and so on. Brockes’s conclusion
is that we are in deep trouble. Her response:
“There is nothing to do, of course, or at least there is nothing
constructive to do.” (Brockes, ‘Oh God (redux),’ The
Guardian, August 5, 2006)
This from the journalist who, last November, did her utmost to smear the
efforts of an individual, Noam Chomsky, who has moved mountains in precisely
‘doing something’.
But Brockes is exactly wrong - it is impossible for nothing to be done.
To do ‘nothing’ means ‘getting on with our lives’,
which means focusing primarily on our personal needs and the needs of the
people closest to us. And this matters, Claude Anshin Thomas reminds us,
because everything is interconnected. If we reserve our compassion for a
select few - ourselves, our family, our troops, our civilian victims of
violence - then we are acting to place other men, women and children beyond
the circle of compassion. That means they are more likely to be bombed,
shot, incinerated, raped and killed to serve our needs. That is the reality
that faces everyone who does and says anything - journalists very much included.
And of course there is plenty that can be done in the other direction.
We can withdraw support from dangerously delusional leaders like Tony Blair,
from compromised newspapers and conformist journalists who support violence.
We can resign, as Labour MP Jim Sheridan has courageously done. We can educate
ourselves and others to see options beyond the fraudulent ‘tough choices’
of realpolitik. We can refuse to cooperate - we can obstruct, protest, resist
and build alternative movements to change the world around us.
We can strengthen compassion in ourselves and others based on the undeniable
truth that all blood, all suffering, all heartbreak, is equal. We can learn
even to be outraged at our ingrained tendency to act in our own favour as
though this were not the case. We can learn to act on the understanding
that the interests of two, three, 100, 1 million people really do take precedence
over the interests of one - ourselves.
If this were not absolutely, demonstrably the case, the world’s propaganda
machines - which thunder so relentlessly, so ruthlessly, in their determination
to manipulate us - would be silent and still.
SUGGESTED ACTION
The goal of Media Lens is to promote rationality, compassion and respect
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Write to Mary Dejevsky
Email: m.dejevsky@independent.co.uk
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Email: steve.herrmann@bbc.co.uk
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Email: peter.barron@bbc.co.uk
Write to director of BBC News, Helen Boaden
Email: HelenBoaden.Complaints@bbc.co.uk
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Email: alan.rusbridger@guardian.co.uk
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