MEDIA LENS: Correcting for the distorted vision of the corporate media
June 1, 2007
MEDIA ALERT: ILLEGAL, IMMORAL, UNWINNABLE - A BRITISH ARMY OFFICER REPLIES TO MARK URBAN
Yesterday, in response to our latest Media Alert, ‘Newsnight Diplomatic Editor Mark Urban Responds,’ we received a further reply from Mark Urban.
Urban argued that our analysis “is put together by you sitting at home, sifting current events through a dense filter of ideology”. In particular, he lampooned our view of the US motivation in Iraq:
“I do however think that your desire to force all of the elements in a woefully complex situation into a simple proposition such as, ‘America's real objective is to smother all opposition so they can pinch the oil‘, to be a sorry form of fundamentalism.” (Email to Media Lens, May 31, 2007)
We hope to discuss Urban’s reply in more detail later (readers can see his email here: http://www.medialens.org/forum/viewtopic.php?p=8615#8615).
Meanwhile, we have also received a copy of an important and courageous email sent to Urban by a serving British Army officer. The officer has given us permission to publish his message, which reveals much that is normally hidden about the true military view of the Iraq war. He has asked to remain anonymous.
We have invited Mark Urban to respond to the email that follows:
Dear Mr Urban,
I am a serving British Army officer with operational experience in a number of theatres. I am concerned regarding the effect of your recent reports from Baghdad. I have been forwarded the correspondence between yourself and David Edwards of medialens.org, and would like to highlight that it is not merely medialens users, who are concerned about embedded coverage with the US Army. The intentions and continuing effects of the US-led invasion and subsequent occupation of Iraq have been questioned by too few people in the mainstream media and political parties, primarily only the Guardian and Independent, and the Liberal Democrats, respectively.
There is a widespread, and well-sourced, belief based on both experience and evidence, in both the British military and academia, that the US is not "just in Iraq to keep the peace, regardless of what the troops on the ground believe. It is in Iraq to establish a client state amenable to the requirements of US realpolitik in a key, oil-rich region. To doubt this is to be ignorant of the motives that have guided US foreign policy in the post-war period* and a mountain of evidence since 2003." (quote from medialens)
That the invasion was 'illegal, immoral and unwinnable', and the 'greatest foreign policy blunder since Suez' - to paraphrase the Liberal Democrats - is the overwhelming feeling of many of my peers, and they speak of loathsome six-month tours, during which they led patrols with dread and fear, reluctantly providing target practice for insurgents, senselessly haemorrhaging casualties, and squandering soldiers' lives, as part of Bush's vain attempt to delay the inevitable Anglo-US rout until after the next US election. Given a free choice most of us would never have invaded Iraq, and certainly would have withdrawn long ago. Hopefully, Tony Blairs's handover to Gordon Brown will herald a change of policy, and rapid withdrawal, but skewed pro-US coverage inhibits proper public debate, and is deeply unhealthy; lethally-so to many of us deployed to Iraq.
The [inadvertent] dangers of bias of embedded journalism are well known and there is a risk that the 'official line' can be conflated with evidence and facts. Jon Snow graphically demonstrated the effect of this during the initial invasion of Iraq in his programme The True Face of War**. I am conscious that reporting independently, outside of the 'green zone' in Iraq is nigh on impossible, but I would merely request that the 'official line/White House propaganda' be handled with an appropriate degree of scepticism, and be caveated accordingly.
Thank you for your time,
<name omitted>
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US motives = “Full Spectrum Dominance” (FSD)…aka Global Totalitarianism
http://nether-world.blogspot.com/2007/06/new-cold-war.html
Blair calls it the “Unipolar World”…ie US and the “international community” (eg UK) acting as ‘Big Brother’…or Global Bully…
Is the BBC conveying a matter-of-fact picture of the situation in Iraq? Does BBC genuinely pursuing the promotion of objectivity in the media?
On many occasions it shies away from airing discerning views. If all is well (as Mark Urban usually portrays) then how come US is going to face such high cost and its even higher consequences as the following quick example suggests:
According to Joseph E. Stiglitz, a Columbia University professor and Nobel laureate, so many soldiers are being injured that the costs of caring for them over their lifetimes is likely to be $350 billion, or up to twice that, depending on how long the war lasts. The high cost is the result of huge advances in military medicine that have greatly reduced the chances that a soldier injured in Iraq will die. As a result, the ratio of injuries to deaths 16:1 by his estimate is higher than in any other war in U.S. history.
Nobody recalls Newsnight offering adequate coverage on testimonies given by Private Jessica Lynch and Army Ranger Pat Tillman. Could one ever expect Newsnight web sites carry the testimonies they made in the senate recently from: oversight.house.gov/documents/20070424110022.pdf
The BBC has simply become the official State Broadcaster in this country – a kind of media propaganda agency of the Government and its Security Services – ever since Lord Ryder’s abject apology to the Government (eg Alastair Campbell) – after the WMD scandal, the BBC Director General’s departure and Dr David Kelly’s death.
“Objectivity” and truth-seeking are now concepts which are rarely witnessed within the BBC – tragically.
Yes, that’s what’s become of the BBC, a medium I always used to admire.
But I think this discussion which is centered on the US’s behaviour re Iraq, should be deviated a little bit to express why the US has acted as the means, because the country has acted as the means of the oil companies and all other corporations interested in keeping oil as the main source of energy, for obvious reasons.
Matters, horwever, are becoming more and more difficult for Bush and Co.: the Turks massing up forces at the frontier, the oil unions striking to make the government stop the process of “donating” the oil to the international oilers, and on top of that the so-called insurgents – in my opinion patriotic guerrilla – suicide-bombing and otherwise-bombing around.
Let’s think more in those corporations than in the US as a state whose inhabitants may not have anything to do with the invasion, if only a bit irresponsible for not having checked the lies spread by their rogue government.