> John Pilger - In the freest press on earth, humanity is
> reported in terms of its usefulness to US power
>
> John Pilger
> Monday 19th February 2001
> The New Statesman
> http://www.newstatesman.co.uk/200102190008.htm
>
> Washington
>
> Long before the Soviet Union broke up, a group of Russian writers
> touring the United States were astonished to find, after reading the
> newspapers and watching television, that almost all the opinions on
> all the vital issues were the same. "In our country," said one of
> them, "to get that result we have a dictatorship. We imprison people.
> We tear out their fingernails. Here you have none of that. How do you
> do it? What's the secret?"
>
> The secret is a form of censorship more insidious than a totalitarian
> state could ever hope to achieve. The myth is the opposite.
> Constitutional freedoms unmatched anywhere else guard against
> censorship; the press is a "fourth estate", a watchdog on democracy.
> The journalism schools boast this reputation, the influential East
> Coast press is especially proud of it, epitomised by the liberal
> paper of record, the New York Times, with its masthead slogan: "All
> the news that's fit to print."
>
> It takes only a day or two back in the US to be reminded of how deep
> state censorship runs. It is censorship by omission, and voluntary.
> The source of most Americans' information, mainstream television, has
> been reduced to a set of marketing images shot and edited to the
> rhythms of a Coca-Cola commercial that flow seamlessly into the
> actual commercials. Rupert Murdoch's Fox network is the model, with
> its peep-shows of human tragedy. Non-American human beings are
> generally ignored, or treated with an anthropological curiosity
> reserved for wildlife documentaries.
>
> Not long ago, Kenneth Jarecke was talking about this censorship.
> Jarecke is the American photographer who took the breath-catching
> picture of an Iraqi burnt to a blackened cinder, petrified at the
> wheel of his vehicle on the Basra Road where he, and hundreds of
> others, were massacred by American pilots on their infamous "turkey
> shoot" at the end of the Gulf war. In the United States, Jarecke's
> picture was suppressed for months after what was more a slaughter
> than a war. "The whole US press collaborated in keeping silent about
> the consequences of that war," he said.
>
> The famous CBS anchorman Dan Rather told his prime-time audience:
> "There's one thing we can all agree on. It's the heroism of the 148
> Americans who gave their lives so that freedom could live." What he
> omitted to say was that a quarter of them had been killed, like their
> British comrades, by other Americans. He made no mention of the Iraqi
> dead, put at 200,000 by the Medical Educational Trust. That American
> forces had deliberately bombed civilian infrastructure, such as water
> treatment plants, was not reported at the time. Six months later, one
> newspaper, Newsday, published in Long Island, New York, disclosed
> that three US brigades "used snow plows mounted on tanks to bury
> thousands of Iraqi soldiers - some still alive - in more than 70
> miles of trenches".
>
> The other day, both the Washington Post and the New York Times
> referred to Iraq without mentioning the million people now estimated
> to have died as a direct result of sanctions imposed, via the UN, by
> the United States and Britain. That, writes Brian Michael Goss of the
> University of Illinois, is standard practice. Goss examined 630
> articles on sanctions published in the New York Times from 1996 to
> 1998. In those three years, just 20 articles - 3 per cent of the
> coverage - were critical of the policy or dwelt upon its civilian
> impact. The rest reflected the US official line, identifying 21
> million people with Saddam Hussein. The scale of the censorship is
> placed in perspective by Professors John and Karl Mueller, of the
> University of Rochester. "Even if the UN estimates of the human
> damage to Iraq are roughly correct," they write, sanctions have
> caused "the deaths of more people in Iraq than have been slain by all
> so-called weapons of mass destruction throughout history."
>
> A third of the people of East Timor were put to death by the Suharto
> dictatorship during Indonesia's 24-year occupation. Yet the American
> media skirted this epic crime until shortly before the 1999
> referendum. Their silence was in striking contrast to the saturation
> coverage of the "genocide" in Kosovo, used to justify the Nato
> bombing campaign, and was in line with suppression of the
> post-bombing disclosure that there was no genocide. In East Timor,
> the United States helped Suharto execute his invasion, secretly and
> illegally, with weapons and aircraft. For most of the 24 years of
> bloody occupation, the US media maintained a virtual blackout on East
> Timor.
>
> In the freest press on earth, humanity is reported in terms of its
> usefulness to American power. Kosovo was a major story; it
> demonstrated the "credibility" of Nato and America's control over the
> Balkans. East Timor was a non-story, "a road bump on the way to
> Indonesia", according to a State Department official. In a study of
> the New York Times and Washington Post cited by Goss, 75 per cent of
> the sources were government officials - a record not that far behind
> the old Pravda. Truly independent reporters such as Seymour Hersh are
> described, revealingly, as "dissidents" and "advocates". What is most
> telling is the media's presumption of innocence of the rapacious
> American imperial role, rather like Hollywood's post-Vietnam
> celebration of America as a noble victim. In a lead editorial
> recently, the New York Times identified the problems of the world,
> ranging from poverty to terrorism to disease, as "challenges to
> American safety and well-being". That the United States consumes a
> quarter of the world's resources, controls the channels of world
> trade and the institutions of inequality, and squeezes whole nations,
> such as Iraq, to death, is simply not news.
>
> © The Author © New Statesman Ltd. 2000.
>



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