-Caveat Lector-

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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