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December 5, 2006
ABANDON SHIP!The Media War-Mongers Take To The LifeboatsComedian Armando Iannucci recently argued that humorists are increasingly taking on the 'watchdog' role that has been vacated by journalists. David Aaronovitch was good enough to summarise in the Times:
Iannucci described his own response to Iraq:
Aaronovitch found this absurd:
In fact, Aaronovitch, Miles and Parris will not. Parris is an interesting example. One of the most thoughtful journalists writing in the mainstream, his work is firmly rooted in a propaganda framework of assumptions. A self-proclaimed "dove", Parris gave this advice to opponents of the looming Iraq war in February 2003:
This reads even more like irony now than it did then, but it was intended seriously. Parris helped slam the door on an honest discussion of just why Iraq is so important to the United States:
If even "doves" rejected the issue, it surely had to be nonsense. In fact the invasion was primarily about oil - about de facto ownership and control of this coveted resource, and denial of the same to regional rivals. Former US treasury secretary, Paul O'Neill, reported seeing a memorandum preparing for war dating from the first days of the Bush administration. O'Neill also saw a Pentagon document entitled "Foreign Suitors For Iraqi Oilfield Contracts," which discussed dividing Iraq's fuel reserves up between the world's oil companies. The near-complete suppression of discussion of this obvious motive is one of the great achievements of modern propaganda. Instead, Parris claims that the war was motivated by a perceived need to ensure the security of oil supplies. He has repeatedly argued, for example, that US-UK policy was driven by a fear that Iran would grab Iraqi oil. Teheran is capable of oil conspiracies, but not the "good" men running the "good" governments of the West. Parris concluded:
If superpower strong-arm tactics at the UN, the commission of the supreme war crime and its consequent terrorising impact on the wider world, had borne fruit, the peaceniks would have been required to hang their heads in shame. Much of Parris's writing is rooted in false assumptions of this kind - the concept of "facts" capable of "chilling" the nuclear-armed West (ageing mustard gas in artillery shells perhaps) is a good example. Rescuing The DeceptionBut one has to admire Aaronovitch's audacity in so brazenly celebrating his own honesty in holding the powerful to account. It takes a special kind of chutzpah to make the claim when the words he has written are readily accessible. In reality, Aaronovitch is one of a group of journalists who came to the government's rescue after the lies on WMD and al Qaeda became indefensible. They helped repackage one of the most audacious campaigns of political deception ever seen - intelligence on Iraq's weapons had been "flawed", they told us, but the government had meant well. And anyway, overthrowing Saddam Hussein was part of a deeper US-UK determination to spread democracy in the Middle East. WMD were suddenly transformed into a kind of excuse allowing the West to sacrifice billions of dollars and numerous lives out of a selfless determination to bring freedom to the Iraqi people. But even these stenographers to power are now distancing themselves from their former heroes. Thus, in a melancholy piece in the Observer last month, Rawnsley felt Tony Blair's pain:
Bitter words from the crusading philanthropist. Even now, Blair - manipulator, liar, and friend of unlovely Machiavellians like Peter Mandelson and Alastair Campbell - is presented as an idealist. Mandelson, it was, who said of New Labour ahead of the 1997 election, "we are seriously relaxed about people becoming very, very rich". (Quoted, Oliver James, 'New Labour's love of money is the root of all our troubles,' The Guardian, October 23, 2006) Asking a close adviser why leading Blairites were themselves so infatuated with becoming wealthy, Rawnsley was told: "They spend too much time with very rich people." Rawnsley concluded that "ministers argue themselves into believing that they deserve a similar level of lifestyle to the mega-rich". (Ibid) Consigning all of this to oblivion, and with the evidence of 650,000 Iraqi corpses staring him in the face, Rawnsley concluded:
Rawnsley writes of "the Prime Minister" in the same way that earlier counterparts wrote of "His Majesty" and "His Holiness" - formal titles and deferential language are used to suggest gravitas and dignity where none exist. Blair need not feel downcast by his political impotence - he +has+ changed the world for millions of people. That is clear enough from the many Iraqi gutters, ditches and A&E departments packed full of civilian dead. As early as February 2002, Rawnsley was boosting Blair's propaganda:
This should have read: "The Prime Minister claims that the intelligence material he sees makes him genuinely disturbed..." But scepticism about Blair's sincerity, or indeed sanity, was the last thing on Rawnsley's mind. The "Humanitarian Arguments"In similar vein, in the crucial period ahead of the war, Johann Hari wrote in January 2003:
It is clear now, as it was clear then, that "we" the people had nothing whatever to do with Blair's policy. The whole point was to deceive and pacify the public. Two months later, Hari reiterated his case:
At this same, key moment, Aaronovitch generated a stream of invective confidently mocking anti-war campaigners marching to prevent the war. He wrote:
Today, by contrast (when it doesn't matter), Aaronovitch wrote in reference to Iraq:
Something failed to add up about these writers' concentration on freedom and democracy for just Iraq. Notably, neither Hari nor Aaronovitch had shown any concern for the awesome suffering of the Iraqi people, including the deaths of some 500,000 children under five, under UN sanctions from 1990-2003. Why would a journalist ardently affirm their government's claimed passion for liberating Iraq after ignoring the same government's genocidal sanctions over the previous 14 years? Was the issue the protection of the Iraqi people, or the protection of government policy? In October 2004, some 18 months after his calls for Iraqi freedom and his refusal to march for peace, we checked how often Hari had subsequently written of the problems afflicting post-invasion Iraqi society. We found he had made no mention in his Independent column of the words cancer, child mortality, disease, depleted uranium, electricity, hospitals, landmines, malnutrition, water - all the focus of immense suffering in Iraq Last month, Hari returned to the subject of Iraq with some contrition:
Last March, Hari wrote an article titled: "I was wrong, terribly wrong - and the evidence should have been clear all along." (The Independent, March 20, 2006) This completed a process, begun in September 2005, of backing down in his support for the invasion, when Hari wrote:
But admissions of error and apologies are not enough. What the Iraqi people have needed over the last three years is unflinching, honest commentary drawing attention to US-UK crimes, to the lack of medicines and health care, to the malnutrition, to the chaos in the hospitals in Basra, to the children dying in unprecedented numbers, and to the need for genuinely international, peaceful solutions to Iraq's tragedy. Three months after Hari backed off, Aaronovitch also distanced himself from the catastrophe:
Aaronovitch could not resist offering one last defence of the disaster:
In the year since his apology, Aaronovitch has mentioned Iraq 17 times, mostly in passing, in the Times. Over the same period, Hari has mentioned Iraq some 21 times, again mostly in passing, in his Independent articles. Both have essentially ignored the suffering they helped cause. As for Matthew Parris, he surely hit the mark when he described the real concern of Hari, Aaronovitch and others:
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