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http://www.consortiumnews.com/2003/020603a.html
Trust Colin Powell?

A Retrospective
February 6, 2003

The U.S. news media promoted two "themes" about Secretary of State
Colin Powell's trip to the United Nations where he buttressed George W.
Bush’s case for war with Iraq by presenting satellite photographs of trucks
outside buildings and snippets of intercepted conversations.


While the “evidence” on its face didn’t seem to prove much of anything,
the media's first "theme" was that Powell is a trustworthy man of principle,
a straight talker who wouldn't be part of some cheap propaganda ploy. The
second "theme" was that Powell’s appearance before the United Nations
was a kind of sequel to Adlai Stevenson’s convincing case that Soviet
missiles had been installed in Cuba in 1962.

But both themes – Powell’s trustworthiness and the Cuban missile
precedent – may be misleading, as articles below from the
Consortiumnews.com Archives will demonstrate.

Powell’s press clippings aside, his real history is one of consistent political
opportunism. For the full picture, see the series, “Behind Colin Powell’s
Legend” or read the excerpt below that recounts how Powell advanced
his political standing with the first Bush administration at the expense of
the U.S. field commanders during the Persian Gulf War in 1991.

On the second "theme," instead of the Cuban missile crisis, a better
historical parallel may be the Reagan administration’s fabricated
presentation to the UN following the Soviets’ downing of the Korean
Airlines Flight 007 after it flew over Russian territory. Though the evidence
supported a case of outrageous Soviet bungling, that was not enough for
the Reagan administration, which was determined to exaggerate the case
and chose to willfully mislead the American people and the world
community by insisting that the incident was cold-blooded murder.

To achieve that propaganda coup, U.S. diplomats manipulated the release
of intercepted radio communications from the Soviet military to give the
impression of premeditation. This disinformation caper was later admitted
by a participant in the scheme, Alvin A. Snyder in his book, Warriors of
Disinformation. Snyder explained that in such situations, "the key is to lie
first." The Consortiumnews.com's full story about the KAL 007 incident is
republished below.

First, an excerpt on Powell's behind-the-scenes role in the Persian Gulf
War drawn from “Behind Colin Powell’s Legend” written by Robert Parry
and Norman Solomon:

Powell & the Persian Gulf War

An enduring image from the Persian Gulf War is the picture of the two
generals -- Colin Powell and Norman Schwarzkopf -- celebrating the 1991
military victory in ticker-tape parades.

They seemed the perfect teammates, a politically smooth chairman of the
Joint Chiefs of Staff (Powell) and the gruff field commander (Schwarzkopf).

But the behind-the-scenes reality often was different. Time and again in
the march toward a ground war in Kuwait and Iraq, Powell wavered
between siding with Schwarzkopf, who was willing to accept a peaceful
Iraqi withdrawal, and lining up with President Bush, who hungered for a
clear military victory.

The tension peaked in the days before the ground war was scheduled to
begin. Iraqi forces already had been pummeled by weeks of devastating
allied air attacks both against targets in Iraq and Kuwait.

As the clock ticked toward a decision on launching a ground offensive,
Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev tried to hammer out a cease-fire and a
withdrawal of Iraqi forces from Kuwait. President Bush and his political
leadership desperately wanted a ground war to crown the American
victory.

Schwarzkopf and some of his generals in the field felt U.S. goals could be
achieved through a negotiated Iraqi withdrawal that would end the
slaughter and spare the lives of U.S. troops. With a deadline for a decision
looming, Powell briefly joined the Schwarzkopf camp.

On Feb. 21, 1991, the two generals hammered out a cease-fire proposal for
presentation to the National Security Council. That last- minute peace
deal would have given Iraqi forces one week to march out of Kuwait while
leaving their armor and heavy equipment behind. Schwarzkopf thought he
had Powell’s commitment to pitch the plan at the White House.

But Bush was fixated on a ground war. According to insiders, he saw the
war as advancing two goals: to inflict severe damage on Saddam Hussein’s
army and to erase the painful memories of America’s defeat in Vietnam.

At the NSC meeting, Powell reportedly did reiterate his and Schwarzkopf’s
support for a peaceful settlement, if possible. But sensing Bush’s mood,
Powell substituted a different plan, shortening the one-week timetable to
an unrealistic two days and, thus, making the ground war inevitable.

Set on a Ground War

Though secret from the American people at that time, Bush had long
determined that a peaceful Iraqi withdrawal from Kuwait would not be
tolerated. Indeed, U.S. peace initiatives in early 1991 had amounted to
window-dressing, with Bush privately fearful that the Iraqis might
capitulate before the United States could attack.

To Bush, exorcising the "Vietnam Syndrome" demons had become an
important priority of the Persian Gulf War, almost as central to his thinking
as ousting Saddam's army from Kuwait.

Conservative columnists Rowland Evans and Robert Novak were among the
few who described Bush's obsession publicly at the time. On Feb. 25, 1991,
they wrote that the Gorbachev initiative brokering Iraq's surrender of
Kuwait "stirred fears" among Bush's advisers that the Vietnam Syndrome
might survive the Gulf War.

"There was considerable relief, therefore, when the President ... made
clear he was having nothing to do with the deal that would enable Saddam
Hussein to bring his troops out of Kuwait with flags flying," Evans and Novak
wrote.

"Fear of a peace deal at the Bush White House had less to do with oil,
Israel or Iraqi expansionism than with the bitter legacy of a lost war. 'This
is the chance to get rid of the Vietnam Syndrome,' one senior aide told
us."

In the book, Shadow, author Bob Woodward confirmed that Bush was
adamant about fighting a war, even as the White House pretended that it
would be satisfied with an unconditional Iraqi withdrawal.

“We have to have a war,” Bush told his inner circle of Secretary of State
James Baker, national security adviser Brent Scowcroft and Powell,
according to Woodward.

“Scowcroft was aware that this understanding could never be stated
publicly or be permitted to leak out. An American president who declared
the necessity of war would probably be thrown out of office. Americans
were peacemakers, not warmongers,” Woodward wrote.

On Jan. 9, 1991, when Iraqi foreign minister Tariq Aziz rebuffed an
ultimatum from Baker in Geneva, “Bush was jubilant because it was the
best news possible, although he would have to conceal it publicly,”
Woodward wrote.

The Air War

On Jan. 15, U.S. and allied forces launched a punishing air war, hitting
targets in Baghdad and other Iraqi cities as well as Iraqi forces in Kuwait.
Weeks of devastating bombing left tens of thousands of Iraqis dead,
according to estimates.

The Iraqi forces soon seemed ready to crack. Soviet diplomats were
meeting with Iraqi leaders who let it be known that they were prepared to
withdraw their troops from Kuwait.

Still, Bush recognized the military and psychological value of a smashing
ground offensive. A ground war could annihilate the Iraqi forces as they
retreated while proving America’s war-fighting mettle once again.

But Schwarzkopf saw little reason for U.S. soldiers to die if the Iraqis were
prepared to withdraw and leave their heavy weapons behind. There was
also the prospect of chemical warfare that might be used by the Iraqis
against advancing American troops. Schwarzkopf saw the possibility of
heavy U.S. casualties.

Powell found himself in the middle. He wanted to please Bush while still
representing the concerns of the field commanders. Stationed at the front
in Saudi Arabia, Schwarzkopf thought Powell was an ally.

"Neither Powell nor I wanted a ground war," Schwarzkopf wrote in his
memoirs, It Doesn't Take a Hero.

At key moments in White House meetings, however, Powell sided with Bush
and his hunger for outright victory. "I cannot believe the lift that this crisis
and our response to it have given to our country," Powell told Schwarzkopf
as American air sorties pummeled Iraq.

In mid-February 1991, Powell also bristled when Schwarzkopf acceded to a
Marine commander's request for a three-day delay to reposition his troops.

"I hate to wait that long," Powell fumed. "The President wants to get on
with this." Powell explained that Bush was worried about the pending
Soviet peace plan which sought to engineer an Iraqi withdrawal with no
more killing.

"President Bush was in a bind," Powell wrote in My American Journey.
"After the expenditure of $60 billion and transporting half a million troops
8,000 miles, Bush wanted to deliver a knock-out punch to the Iraqi invaders
in Kuwait. He did not want to win by a TKO that would allow Saddam to
withdraw with his army unpunished and intact."

On Feb. 18, Powell relayed a demand to Schwarzkopf from Bush's NSC for
an immediate attack date. Powell "spoke in the terse tone that signaled he
was under pressure from the hawks," Schwarzkopf wrote. But one field
commanders still protested that a rushed attack could mean "a whole lot
more casualties," a risk that Schwarzkopf considered unacceptable.

"The increasing pressure to launch the ground war early was making me
crazy," Schwarzkopf wrote. "I could guess what was going on. ... There had
to be a contingent of hawks in Washington who did not want to stop until
we'd punished Saddam.

“We'd been bombing Iraq for more than a month, but that wasn't good
enough. There were guys who had seen John Wayne in 'The Green
Berets,' they'd seen 'Rambo,' they'd seen 'Patton,' and it was very easy for
them to pound their desks and say, 'By God, we've got to go in there and
kick ass! Got to punish that son of a bitch!'

“Of course, none of them was going to get shot at. None of them would
have to answer to the mothers and fathers of dead soldiers and Marines."

Dodging Peace

On Feb. 20, Schwarzkopf sought a two-day delay because of bad weather.
Powell exploded. "I've got a President and a Secretary of Defense on my
back," Powell shouted. "They've got a bad Russian peace proposal they're
trying to dodge. ... I don't think you understand the pressure I'm under."

Schwarzkopf yelled back that Powell appeared to have "political reasons"
for favoring a timetable that was "militarily unsound." Powell snapped back,
"Don't patronize me with talk about human lives."

By the evening of Feb. 21, however, Schwarzkopf thought he and Powell
were again reading from the same page, looking for ways to avert the
ground war. Powell had faxed Schwarzkopf a copy of the Russian cease-fire
plan in which Gorbachev had proposed a six-week period for Iraqi
withdrawal.

Recognizing that six weeks would give Saddam time to salvage his military
hardware, Schwarzkopf and Powell devised a counter-proposal. It would
give Iraq only a one-week cease-fire, time to flee from Kuwait but without
any heavy weapons.

"The National Security Council was about to meet," Schwarzkopf wrote,
"and Powell and I hammered out a recommendation. We suggested the
United States offer a cease-fire of one week: enough time for Saddam to
withdraw his soldiers but not his supplies or the bulk of his equipment. ...

“As the Iraqis withdrew, we proposed, our forces would pull right into
Kuwait behind them. ... At bottom, neither Powell nor I wanted a ground
war. We agreed that if the United States could get a rapid withdrawal we
would urge our leaders to take it."

An Angry President

But when Powell arrived at the White House late that evening, he found
Bush angry about the Soviet peace initiative. Still, according to
Woodward’s Shadow, Powell reiterated that he and Schwarzkopf “would
rather see the Iraqis walk out than be driven out.”

Powell said the ground war carried serious risks of significant U.S.
casualties and “a high probability of a chemical attack.” But Bush was set:
“If they crack under force, it is better than withdrawal,” the president
said.

In My American Journey, Powell expressed sympathy for Bush’s
predicament. "The President's problem was how to say no to Gorbachev
without appearing to throw away a chance for peace," Powell wrote.

"I could hear the President's growing distress in his voice. 'I don't want to
take this deal,' he said. 'But I don't want to stiff Gorbachev, not after he's
come this far with us. We've got to find a way out'."

Powell sought Bush's attention. "I raised a finger," Powell wrote. "The
President turned to me. 'Got something, Colin?'," Bush asked. But Powell
did not outline Schwarzkopf’s one-week cease-fire plan. Instead, Powell
offered a different idea intended to make the ground offensive inevitable.

"We don't stiff Gorbachev," Powell explained. "Let's put a deadline on
Gorby's proposal. We say, great idea, as long as they're completely on their
way out by, say, noon Saturday," Feb. 23, less than two days away.

Powell understood that the two-day deadline would not give the Iraqis
enough time to act, especially with their command-and-control systems
severely damaged by the air war. The plan was a public- relations strategy
to guarantee that the White House got its ground war.

"If, as I suspect, they don't move, then the flogging begins," Powell told a
gratified president.

The next day, at 10:30 a.m., a Friday, Bush announced his ultimatum. There
would be a Saturday noon deadline for the Iraqi withdrawal, as Powell had
recommended.

Schwarzkopf and his field commanders in Saudi Arabia watched Bush on
television and immediately grasped its meaning. "We all knew by then which
it would be," Schwarzkopf wrote. "We were marching toward a Sunday
morning attack."

When the Iraqis predictably missed the deadline, American and allied
forces launched the ground offensive at 0400 on Feb. 24, Persian Gulf time.

Though Iraqi forces were soon in full retreat, the allies pursued and
slaughtered tens of thousands of Iraqi soldiers in the 100-hour war. U.S.
casualties were light, 147 killed in combat and another 236 killed in
accidents or from other causes.

"Small losses as military statistics go," wrote Powell, "but a tragedy for each
family."

On Feb. 28, the day the war ended, Bush celebrated the victory. "By God,
we've kicked the Vietnam Syndrome once and for all," the president
exulted.



Second, a 1998 story by Robert Parry on the KAL-007 incident and the
modern Republican tendency to use propaganda as an everyday tool of
politics.

GOP & KAL-007: 'The Key Is to Lie First'

By Robert Parry

It's not entirely clear when the Republican Party made disinformation a
political weapon of choice.

Some trace the pattern back to the late 1940s when Joe McCarthy and
Richard Nixon used an exaggerated Red Scare to throw the Truman
administration on the defensive and clear the way for the GOP's Cold War
dominance of the White House.

Others argue, however, that Republican lying is nothing special; that it's
just the nature of politics; that it's always been that way; that the
Democrats -- or the Greens and the Libertarians, for that matter -- are no
better.

But I believe there are shades of gray in politics, that a disingenuous
"spin" or a defensive equivocation are not the same as an outright
falsehood intended to defame an enemy or to inflame the public. It seems
to me that the modern Republican Party is unusual in that it not only steps
across the line from time to time, but has relocated on the wrong side.
Distortion and character assassination have become almost a political way
of life.

My personal experience with this disturbing trend started in December
1980, when I worked for The Associated Press and was part of the AP's
Special Assignment Team. In my earlier reporting career -- covering state
politics in Rhode Island and congressional politics in Washington -- I had
seen lots of the lighter forms of lying from both parties. Indeed, most of
my early investigative stories were about Democratic misdeeds and damage
control.

But in covering the emerging U.S. policy toward Central America in late
1980, I encountered a systematic strategy of lying. The incoming Reagan
administration apparently saw "disinformation" as just one more ideological
weapon in the Cold War arsenal, with the ends justifying the means.

The victorious Republicans didn't blink, for instance, in protecting political
murderers in El Salvador, even when the victims were four American
churchwomen who were raped and butchered by a right-wing military.

Coming as he did from movies, President Reagan seemed to have only a
casual relationship with the truth anyway. But his persistent acts of
deception over his eight years in the White House cannot be so glibly
explained or excused. In his handling of foreign policy, in particular,
Reagan routinely misled the American people.

The KAL Deception

One of the baldest -- and now admitted -- lies was the case of Korean Air
Lines flight 007. On the night of Aug. 30, 1983, the KAL 747 jumbo jet
strayed hundreds of miles off-course and penetrated some of the Soviet
Union's most sensitive air space, by flying over military facilities in
Kamchatka and Sakhalin Island.

Over Sakhalin, KAL-007 was finally intercepted by a Soviet Sukhoi-15 fighter.
The Soviet pilot tried to signal the plane to land, but the KAL pilots
apparently did not see the repeated warnings. Amid confusion about the
plane's identity -- a U.S. spy plane had been in the vicinity hours earlier --
Soviet ground control ordered the pilot to fire. He did, blasting the plane
out of the sky and killing all 269 people on board.

The Soviets soon realized they had made a horrendous mistake. U.S.
intelligence also knew from sensitive intercepts that the tragedy had
resulted from a blunder, not from a willful act of murder (much as on July
3, 1988, the USS Vincennes fired a missile that brought down an Iranian
civilian airliner in the Persian Gulf, killing 290 people, an act which Reagan
explained as an "understandable accident").

But in 1983, the truth about KAL-007 didn't fit Washington's propaganda
needs. The Reagan administration wanted to portray the Soviets as wanton
murderers, so it brushed aside the judgment of the intelligence analysts.
The administration then chose to release only snippets of the taped
intercepts packaged in a way to suggest that the slaughter was
intentional.

"The Reagan administration's spin machine began cranking up," wrote Alvin
A. Snyder, then-director of the U.S. Information Agency's television and
film division, in his 1995 book, Warriors of Disinformation.

USIA director Charles Z. Wick "ordered his top agency aides to form a
special task force to devise ways of playing the story overseas. The
objective, quite simply, was to heap as much abuse on the Soviet Union as
possible," Snyder recalled.

In a boastful but frank description of the successful disinformation
campaign, Snyder noted that "the American media swallowed the U.S.
government line without reservation. Said the venerable Ted Koppel on
the ABC News 'Nightline' program: 'This has been one of those occasions
when there is very little difference between what is churned out by the
U.S. government propaganda organs and by the commercial broadcasting
networks.'"

Of course, if the journalists hadn't gone along, they could have expected
to be flogged for disloyalty. So, most Washington reporters ran with the
pack. Newsweek published a cover line: "Murder in the Sky," exactly the
"theme" that the White House wanted conveyed to the public.

Mistranslation

At the AP, I made a small contribution to questioning the official story. I
felt the released intercepts were suspicious. So I took the English language
translation, as well as the original Russian, to Russian language experts,
including one who taught Pentagon personnel how to translate Russian
military transmissions.

The Russian language experts noted one important error in the English
translation released by the State Department. In the context of the Soviet
pilot trying to communicate with the KAL plane, the administration
translated the Russian word "zapros," or inquiry, as "IFF" for "identify:
friend or foe." The AP's experts, however, said "zapros" could mean any
kind of inquiry, including open radio transmissions or physical warnings.

The significance of the mistranslation was central to the administration's
case. U.S. officials had extrapolated from "IFF" to advance the "murder in
the sky" argument. Since an IFF transmission can only be received by Soviet
military aircraft, that was further proof that the Russians made no attempt
to warn the civilian airliner.

Still, the mistranslation was only one of the ways the tapes were doctored,
as Snyder discovered when the intercepts were delivered to his office for
transfer into a video presentation that was to be made at the United
Nations.

"The tape was supposed to run 50 minutes," Snyder observed. "But the
tape segment we [at USIA] had ran only eight minutes and 32 seconds. ...
'Do I detect the fine hand of [Nixon's secretary] Rosemary Woods here?' I
asked sarcastically.'"

But Snyder had a job to do: producing the video that his superiors
wanted. "The perception we wanted to convey was that the Soviet Union
had cold-bloodedly carried out a barbaric act," Snyder noted.

Only a decade later, when Snyder saw the complete transcripts --
including the portions that the Reagan administration had hidden -- would
he fully realize how many of the central elements of the U.S. presentation
were false.

The Soviet pilot apparently did believe he was pursuing a U.S. spy plane,
according to the intercepts, and he was having trouble in the dark
identifying the plane. At the instructions of Soviet ground controllers, the
pilot had circled the KAL airliner and tilted his wings to force the aircraft
down. The pilot said he fired warning shots, too. "This comment was also
not on the tape we were provided," Snyder stated.

It was clear to Snyder that in the pursuit of its Cold War aims, the Reagan
administration had presented false accusations to the United Nations, as
well as to the people of the United States and the world. To these
Republicans, the ends of smearing the Soviets had justified the means of
falsifying the historical record.

In his book, Snyder acknowledged his role in the deception and drew an
ironic lesson from the incident. The senior USIA official wrote, "The moral
of the story is that all governments, including our own, lie when it suits
their purposes. The key is to lie first."

'Public Diplomacy'

Another key to the propagandists' success has been to soften up the
Washington news media, to ensure that journalists were ready to accept
whatever lies were told. To that end, Reagan assigned aggressive "public
diplomacy" teams to intimidate and discredit the few Washington
journalists who asked pointed questions and tried to get at the truth. [For
details, see Robert Parry's Lost History.]

In this regard, another interesting disclosure in Snyder's book is the quasi-
official USIA role played by Accuracy in Media's Reed Irvine. Irvine is
commonly described as a "media watchdog" and is addressed personably as
"Reed" when he appears on Koppel's "Nightline." According to Snyder,
however, Irvine also was an adviser to the Reagan administration's
propaganda apparatus.

During Reagan's second term, Irvine -- along with conservative fund- raiser
Richard Viguerie and Joe McCarthy's legendary counsel Roy Cohn -- vetted
the selection of a new Voice of America director, Snyder reported. When
the leading candidate, former ABC News president William Sheehan,
refused to answer the group's questions about his personal vote in the
presidential election, Sheehan was blackballed from getting the job.

Irvine's unpublicized collaboration with Reagan's propaganda machinery also
surfaced during the Iran-contra hearings in 1987. A White House
document, dated May 20, 1983, described how USIA director Wick held a
private White House fund-raiser which generated $400,000 for Irvine's
organization and other conservative groups.

While working behind the scenes with USIA and receiving secret subsidies
arranged by the government, Irvine carried out vituperative attacks on
skeptical journalists. I was one of the reporters who was a frequent target
of AIM.

Bringing It Home

But the end of the Cold War did not end the Republicans' reliance on
propaganda. They seem to have just taken the lessons domestic. Many of
the same individuals who thrived during the Reagan-Bush years, such as
Irvine, are employing similar disinformation tactics against the Clinton
administration.

It is as if President Clinton has replaced the former Soviet Union as the
target for the Right's "ends-justify-the-means" deceptions. Instead of lies
about KAL-007 -- or "yellow rain" chemical warfare or the KGB role in the
pope's shooting or Nicaraguan Sandinista "anti-Semitism" or a host of other
propaganda "themes" -- the disinformationists now are linking Clinton to a
variety of crimes: Vincent Foster's "murder," drug trafficking out of the
Mena, Ark., "death squad" operations in Arkansas, etc.

Indeed, in early May, congressional Republicans mounted one remarkable
disinformation operation that echoed the KAL-007 story from 15 years
earlier. Rep. Dan Burton, R-Ind., released selective excerpts from private
prison conversations that Clinton pal Webster Hubbell had with family,
friends and lawyers.

The handpicked snippets suggested that Hubbell was under White House
pressure to lie and was covering up for criminal over-billing by Hillary
Clinton when she worked at the Rose Law Firm. The Washington media had
a field day, with front-page stories that accepted Burton's spin on the
tapes.

But, just as the Reagan administration had done in the KAL-007 case,
Burton had withheld exculpatory statements from the released excerpts.
For instance, Burton chose to leave out Hubbell's declaration in the same
conversation that Mrs. Clinton had "no idea" about illegal over-billing
schemes and that he was not receiving hush money.

A red-faced news media ran clarifications. But the Washington press corps
still seems unwilling to draw lessons from the past. Special prosecutor
Kenneth Starr and other Republicans might insist that their interest now is
a principled pursuit of "the whole truth" about the "Clinton scandals." But
the party's 50-year record -- from Nixon and McCarthy to Reagan and Bush
-- leave many with an understandable sense of skepticism.

In the situational ethics of GOP politics, Snyder's advice still rings loudly:
"The key is to lie first."

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