News Coverage Misinforms Americans on the Bergdahl Swap
by Sheldon Richman June 10, 2014
In national-security matters, the news media couldn’t do a better job misinforming the public if they tried. The latest example is their portrayal of the five Taliban officials traded for Bowe Bergdahl.
The media of course have an incentive to accentuate controversy. In the Bergdahl deal, this includes portraying the five Taliban prisoners as, in Sen. John McCain’s words, “hard-core jihadis responsible for 9/11.” McCain is wrong, but the major news outlets don’t care. Over and over, the five are identified as terrorists. Facts take a back seat to drama and conflict.
President Obama fed this narrative:
- In terms of potential threats, the release of the Taliban who were
being held in Guantánamo was conditioned on the Qataris keeping eyes on
them and creating a structure in which we can monitor their activities.
We will be keeping eyes on them. Is there a possibility of some of them
trying to return to activities that are detrimental to us?
Absolutely.
There have been a few hints that the prisoners are not accurately described. A rare example is from the government’s former chief prosecutor at the American prison at Guantánamo Bay, retired Air Force Colonel Morris Davis. Davis punctured the “hardest of the hard-core” narrative when he said:
- We had screened all of the detainees and we had focused on about 75
that had the potential to be charged with a crime. When I saw the names
[of those traded] … [I] wasn’t familiar with any of these names.… If we
could have proven that they had done something wrong that we could
prosecute them for I’m confident we would have done it, and we
didn’t.
Before being captured, these Taliban officers were treated as potential allies by the CIA or the U.S.-installed government of Hamid Karzai. Anand Gopal, author of No Good Men Among the Living: America, the Taliban, and the War Through Afghan Eyes, writes that
- all five of the swapped prisoners were initially captured while
trying to cut deals, and … three had been attempting to join, or had
already joined, the Afghan government at the time of their arrest.
- This history shows that the categories we take as rigid and unchanging, such as “terrorist,” are in fact remarkably fluid in the context of Afghan politics. Uncovering the stories of these men tells us much about Guantanamo, the Taliban, and the possibility of a negotiated end to the conflict.
- This history shows that the categories we take as rigid and unchanging, such as “terrorist,” are in fact remarkably fluid in the context of Afghan politics. Uncovering the stories of these men tells us much about Guantanamo, the Taliban, and the possibility of a negotiated end to the conflict.
For example, Gopal writes, Mohammad Nabi Omari, who was part of the Bergdahl exchange,
- was a small-time commander linked to pro-Taliban strongman Jalaluddin
Haqqani in the 1990s. After 2001, he was among the many Haqqani followers
who switched allegiances to the Karzai government.… [Omari] and other
former Haqqani commanders began working for the CIA.… Some Afghan
officials in Khost allege that Omari reaped profits from falsely accusing
others of al Qaeda membership. If so, he certainly accrued enemies, and
in September 2002, he, too, was accused of insurgent membership by rival
warlords and politicians, despite being publicly aligned with the Karzai
government.
“Instead of being recalcitrant terrorists bent on fighting America,” Gopal concludes, “this history indicates that all five can make pragmatic deals if the conditions are right.”
The U.S. invasion-occupation of Afghanistan was a war of choice not necessity. American forces made it worse by indiscriminately placing a price on the head of any Afghan whom someone else was willing to destroy.
http://fff.org/explore-freedom/article/news-coverage-misinforms-americans-on-the-bergdahl-swap/ --
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