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http://www.zmag.org/sustainers/content/2007-08/17solomon.cfm

==================================

ZNet Commentary
Media Blitz for War: The Big Guns of August September 12, 2007
By Norman Solomon

The U.S. media establishment is mainlining another fix for the Iraq war: It
isn't so bad after all, American military power could turn wrong into
right, chronic misleaders now serve as truth-tellers. The hit is that the
war must go on.

When the White House chief of staff Andrew Card said five years ago that
"you don't introduce new products in August," he was explaining the need to
defer an all-out PR campaign for invading Iraq until early fall. But this
year, August isn't a bad month to launch a sales pitch for a new and
improved Iraq war. Bad products must be re-marketed to counteract buyers'
remorse.

"War critics" who have concentrated on decrying the lack of U.S.  military
progress in Iraq are now feeling the hoist from their own  petards. But
that's to be expected. Those who complain that the war  machine is
ineffective are asking for more effective warfare even when  they think
they're demanding peace.

If Michael O'Hanlon and Kenneth Pollack didn't exist, they'd have to be
invented. The duo's op-ed piece on July 30 in the New York Times, under the
headline "A War We Just Might Win," was boilerplate work from elite
foreign-policy technicians packaging themselves as "two analysts who have
harshly criticized the Bush administration's miserable handling of  Iraq." A
recent eight-day officially guided tour led them to conclude  that "we are
finally getting somewhere in Iraq, at least in military terms."

Both men have always been basic supporters of the Iraq war. O'Hanlon is a
prolific writer at the Brookings Institution. Pollack's credits  include
working at the CIA and authoring the 2002 bestseller "The  Threatening
Storm: The Case for Invading Iraq." In the years since the  candy and
flowers failed to materialize, their critiques of the Iraq war  have been
merely tactical.

The media maneuvers of recent days are eerily similar to scams that worked
so well for the Bush administration during the agenda-setting for  the
invasion. Vice President Cheney and his top underlings kept leaking
disinformation about purported Iraqi weapons of mass destruction and  links
to Al Qaeda -- while the New York Times and other key media  outlets
breathlessly reported the falsehoods as virtual facts. Then  Cheney, Donald
Rumsfeld, Condoleezza Rice and other practitioners of  warcraft quickly went
in front of TV cameras and microphones to cite the  "reporting" in the Times
and elsewhere that they had rigged in the first  place.

The ink was scarcely dry on the July 30 piece by O'Hanlon and Pollack
before the savants were making the rounds of TV studios and other media
outlets -- doing their best to perpetuate a war that they'd helped to
deceive the country into in the first place.

The next day, Cheney picked up the tag-team baton. On CNN's "Larry King
Live," he declared that the U.S. military "made significant progress now
into the course of the summer. ... Don't take it from me. Look at the  piece
that appeared yesterday in the New York Times, not exactly a  friendly
publication -- but a piece by Mr. O'Hanlon and Mr. Pollack on  the situation
in Iraq. They're just back from visiting over there. They  both have been
strong critics of the war."

On August 1, the U.S. News & World Report website noted: "The news that the
U.S. death toll in Iraq for July, at 73, is the lowest in eight  months
spurred several news organizations to present a somewhat  optimistic view of
the situation in Iraq. The consensus in the coverage  appears to be that
things are improving militarily, even as the  political side of the equation
remains troubling."

Such media coverage is a foreshadowing of what's in store big-time this
fall when the propaganda machinery of the warfare state goes into high
gear. The media echo chamber will reverberate with endless claims that the
military situation is improving, American casualties will be  dropping and
Iraqi forces will be shouldering more of the burden.

Arguments over whether U.S. forces can prevail in Iraq bypass a truth  that
no amount of media spin can change: The U.S. war effort in Iraq has always
been illegitimate and fundamentally wrong. Whatever the prospects  for
America's war there, it shouldn't be fought.

During the Vietnam War, the U.S. news media were fond of disputes about
whether light really existed at the end of the tunnel. Framed that way, the
debate could -- and did -- go on for many years. The most important  point
to be made was that the United States had no right to be in the  tunnel in
the first place.

For years now, many opponents of the Iraq war have assumed that the tides
of history were shifting and would soon carry American troops  home.
"President Bush may be the last person in the country to learn  that for
Americans, if not Iraqis, the war in Iraq is over," New York  Times
columnist Frank Rich wrote in August 2005. He concluded that the  United
States as a country "has already made the decision for Mr. Bush. We're
outta there."

As I wrote at the time, Rich's storyline was "a complacent message that
stands in sharp contrast to the real situation we now face: a U.S. war on
Iraq that may persist for a terribly long time. For the Americans  still in
Iraq, and for the Iraqis still caught in the crossfire of the  occupation,
the experiences ahead will hardly be compatible with  reassuring forecasts
made by pundits in the summer of 2005."

Or in the summer of 2007.

Unfortunately, what I wrote two years ago is still true: "We're not 'outta
there' -- until an antiwar movement in the United States can grow  strong
enough to make the demand stick."

The American media establishment continues to behave like a leviathan with
a monkey on its back -- hooked on militarism and largely hostile to  the
creative intervention that democracy requires.

___________________________________________________

The new documentary film "War Made Easy: How Presidents and Pundits Keep
Spinning Us to Death" is based on Norman Solomon's book of the same  title.
For information about the full-length movie, narrated by Sean  Penn and
produced by the Media Education Foundation, go to:
www.WarMadeEasyTheMovie.org

***

From: All the News That Doesn't Fit <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: [NYTr] UFPJ: IRAQ - THE PEOPLE'S REPORT

sent by David Swanson

United for Peace & Justice

For Immediate Release
Monday, September 10, 2007

contact: Sue Udry: 301-325-1201:
Leslie Cagan: 347-581-1782;
Erik Leaver: 202-787-5240

IRAQ: THE PEOPLE'S REPORT

United for Peace and Justice, the country's largest anti-war coalition,
has produced an assessment of the situation on the ground in Iraq that
contrasts sharply with the projected conclusions of  the  so-called
Petraeus Report - actually written within the White House.  Leslie
Cagan, National Coordinator of the group, which claims 1400 members,
states:  " We feel it is essential to provide a true picture of what
the shattered lives of the 25 million Iraqis look like today. Prepared
by Phyllis Bennis and Erik Leaver, researchers at the Institute for
Policy Studies, Iraq: The People's Report  takes a look at what this
war has cost Iraqis and the U.S."

Iraq: The People's Report notes that:

  a.. two million Iraqis have fled the war to seek hard-to-find refuge
in neighboring countries, and an additional two million Iraqis have
been forced by war-fueled violence to flee their homes and  remain
displaced and homeless inside Iraq. b.. most Iraqis have electricity
for only about five hours a day, clean water remains scarce for most
and unobtainable for many, and Iraq's oil production remains a fraction
of what it was before war. c.. occupation, war and violence have so
decimated the Iraqi economy that unemployment has reached up to 40% and
higher, and underemployment an additional 10% or more In spite of the
appalling conditions that most Iraqis now find themselves living in,
General Patraus and Ambassador Crocker will try to convince Congress
that the situation is improving.  "We hope that Congress will remember
that these small improvements in a horrific situation have cost U.S.
taxpayers over $480 Billion so far, with no end in sight," remarked Sue
Udry, Legislative Coordinator of United for Peace and Justice.  "That
is $480 billion that we could not spend here at home to rebuild the
Gulf Coast, improve education and healthcare and more."

The report also notes that:

  The failure of the Iraq War has also meant a huge cost to our
democracy at home. We have paid an enormous price: in the deaths and
shattered minds and bodies of our young soldiers; in the threats to an
economy ravaged by billion-dollar bills to pay for an illegal war; in
the destruction of so much of our infrastructure, security and social
fabric because of human and financial resources diverted to Iraq; and
in the shredding of our Constitution and civil rights as fear becomes a
weapon in the hands of the Bush Administration aimed at Congress, the
courts and the people of this country.

The full (4-page) report is available at
www.unitedforpeace.org/congress or
http://www.unitedforpeace.org/downloads/peoplesreport.pdf

Please see also: http://www.betrayusreport.org







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