This War Brought to You by Rendon Group
By Ian Urbina

Asia Times Online 
http://www.atimes.com

WASHINGTON, Nov 12, 2002 -- "Word got around the department that I was a good 
Arabic translator who did a great Saddam imitation," recalls the Harvard grad 
student. "Eventually, someone phoned me, asking if I wanted to help change the 
course of Iraq policy."

So twice a week, for US$3,000 a month, the Iraqi student says, under condition 
of anonymity, that he took a taxi from his campus apartment to a Boston-area 
recording studio rented by the Rendon Group, a DC-based public relations firm 
with close ties to the US government. His job: translate and dub spoofed Saddam 
Hussein speeches and tongue-in-cheek newscasts for broadcast throughout Iraq.

"I never got a straight answer on whether the Iraqi resistance, the CIA or 
policy makers on the Hill were actually the ones calling the shots," says the 
student, "but ultimately I realized that the guys doing spin were very well and 
completely cut loose." And that's how Baghdad's best-known opposition radio 
personality was born six years ago - during the Clinton administration. It was 
one of many disinformation schemes cooked up by the Rendon Group, which has 
worked for both Democratic and Republican administrations fighting the psy-op 
war in the Middle East. 

"The point was to discredit Saddam, but the stuff was complete slapstick," the 
student says. "We did skits where Saddam would get mixed up in his own lies, or 
where [Saddam's son] Qusay would stumble over his own delusions of grandeur." 
Transmissions were once a week from stations in northern Iraq and Kuwait. "The 
only thing that was even remotely funny," says the student, "were the mockeries 
of the royal guard and the government's clumsy attempts to deceive arms 
inspectors." 

The Saddam impersonator says he left Rendon not long ago out of frustration 
with what he calls the lack of expertise and oversight in the project. It was 
doubly frustrating, he says, because he despises Saddam, although he adds that 
he never has been involved with any political party or opposition group. "No 
one in-house spoke a word of Arabic," he says. "They thought I was mocking 
Saddam, but for all they knew I could have been lambasting the US government." 
The scripts, he adds, were often ill conceived. "Who in Iraq is going to think 
it's funny to poke fun at Saddam's mustache," the student notes, "when the vast 
majority of Iraqi men themselves have mustaches?" 

There were other basic problems, too. Some of the announcers hired for the 
radio broadcasts, he says, were Egyptians and Jordanians, whose Arabic accents 
couldn't be understood by Iraqis. "Friends in Baghdad said that the radio 
broadcasts were a complete mumble," the student says. One CIA agent familiar 
with the project calls the project's problem a lack of "due diligence", and 
adds that "the scripts were put together by 23-year-olds with connections to 
the Democratic National Committee." 

Despite the fumbling naivete of some of its operations, the Rendon Group is no 
novice in the field. For decades, when US bombs have dropped or foreign leaders 
have been felled, the public relations shop has been on the scene, just far 
enough to stay out of harm's way, but just close enough to keep the spin cycle 
going. 

As Franklin Foer reported in the New Republic, during the campaign against 
Panama's Manuel Noriega in 1989, Rendon's command post sat downtown in a high-
rise. In 1991, during the Gulf War, Rendon operatives hunkered down in Taif, 
Saudi Arabia, clocking billable hours on a Kuwaiti emir's dole. In Afghanistan, 
group founder John Rendon joined a 9:30am conference call every morning with 
top-level Pentagon officials to set the day's war message. Rendon operatives 
haven't missed a trip yet - Haiti, Kosovo, Zimbabwe, Colombia. 

The firm is tight-lipped, however, about its current projects. A spokesperson 
refuses to say whether Rendon is doing any work in preparation for the 
potential upcoming invasion of Iraq. But a current Rendon Arabic translator 
commented, "All I can say is that nothing has changed - the work is still an 
expensive waste of time, mostly with taxpayer funds." However, Rendon may just 
prove to be one step ahead of the game. If Saddam is toppled, a Rendon creation 
is standing by to try to take his place. The Iraqi National Congress (INC), a 
disparate coalition of Iraqi dissidents touted by the US government as the best 
hope for an anti-Saddam coup, has gotten the go-ahead from US officials to arm 
and train a military force for invasion. The INC is one of the few names you'll 
hear if reporters bother to press government officials on what would come after 
Saddam. 

At the helm of the INC is Ahmed Chalabi, a US-trained mathematician who fled 
from Jordan in 1989 in the trunk of a car after the collapse of a bank he 
owned. He was subsequently charged and sentenced in absentia to 22 years in 
prison for embezzlement. Back home in Iraq, he's referred to by some as the so-
called limousine insurgent and is said to hold little actual standing with the 
Iraqi public. Shuttling between London and DC, Chalabi hasn't been in Iraq for 
over years, and draws "more support on the Potomac than the Euphrates," says 
Iraq specialist Andrew Parasiliti of the Middle East Institute in Washington 
DC. 

"Were it not for Rendon," a State Department official remarked, "the Chalabi 
group wouldn't even be on the map." 

With funding first from the CIA throughout the 1990s and more recently the 
Pentagon, Rendon managed the INC's every move, an INC spokesperson 
acknowledges, even choosing its name, coordinating its annual strategy 
conferences, and orchestrating its meetings with diplomatic heavy hitters, such 
as James Baker and Brent Scowcroft. Not that the Rendon Group was the first 
purveyor of psy-op tactics for promoting US foreign policy in the region. In 
fact, some of the most impressive spin maneuvers and disinformation campaigns 
occurred during the Gulf War in 1991, the lessons of which are particularly 
pertinent as the US again gears up. 

Most notorious was the work of PR giant Hill & Knowlton (H&K) (for which 
current Pentagon spokesperson Torie Clarke worked after she was an aide to John 
McCain and Bush's dad). Subsidized by the Kuwaiti royal family, H&K dedicated 
119 executives in 12 offices across the country to the job of drumming up 
support within the United States for the 1991 war. It was an all-out grassroots 
blitz: distributing tens of thousands of "Free Kuwait" T-shirts and bumper 
stickers at colleges across the US and setting up observances such as National 
Kuwait Day and National Student Information Day. H&K also mailed 200,000 copies 
of a book titled The Rape of Kuwait to American troops stationed in the Middle 
East. The firm also massaged reporters, arranging interviews with handpicked 
Kuwaiti emissaries and dispatching reams of footage of burning wells and oil-
slicked birds washed ashore. 

But nothing quite compared to H&K's now infamous "baby atrocities" campaign. 
After convening a number of focus groups to try to figure out which buttons to 
press to make the public respond, H&K determined that presentations involving 
the mistreatment of infants, a tactic drawn straight from W R Hearst's playbook 
of the Spanish-American War, received the best reaction. 

So on October 10, 1990, the Congressional Human Rights Caucus held a hearing on 
Capitol Hill at which H&K, in coordination with California Democrat Tom Lantos 
and Illinois Republican John Porter, introduced a 15-year-old Kuwaiti girl 
named Nayirah. (Purportedly to safeguard against Iraqi reprisals, Nayirah's 
full name was not disclosed.) Weeping and shaking, the girl described a 
horrifying scene in Kuwait City. "I volunteered at the al-Addan hospital," she 
testified. "While I was there I saw the Iraqi soldiers come into the hospital 
with guns and go into the room where babies were in incubators. They took the 
babies out of the incubators, took the incubators, and left the babies on the 
cold floor to die." Allegedly, 312 infants were removed. 

The tale got wide circulation, even winding up on the floor of the United 
Nations Security Council. Before Congress gave the green light to go to war, 
seven of the main pro-war senators brought up the baby-incubator allegations as 
a major component of their argument for passing the resolution to unleash the 
bombers. Ultimately, the motion for war passed by a narrow five-vote margin. 

Only later was it discovered that the testimony was untrue. H&K had failed to 
reveal that Nayirah was not only a member of the Kuwaiti royal family, but also 
that her father, Saud Nasir al-Sabah, was Kuwait's ambassador to the US. H&K 
had prepped Nayirah in her presentation, according to Harper's publisher John R 
MacArthur, in his book Second Front: Censorship and Propaganda in the Gulf War. 
Of the seven other witnesses who stepped to the podium that day, five had been 
prepped by H&K and had used false names. When human rights organizations 
investigated later, they could not find that Nayirah had any connection to the 
hospital. Amnesty International, among those originally duped, eventually 
issued an embarrassing retraction. 

When asked if it acknowledges the incubator story as a deception, H&K's media 
liaison, Suzanne Laurita, only responded: "The company has nothing to say on 
this matter." Pushed further on whether such deception was considered part of 
the public relations industry, she reiterated, "Please know again that this 
falls into the realm that the agency has no wish to confirm, deny or comment 
on." Years later, Scowcroft, the national security adviser at the time, 
concluded that the tale was surely "useful in mobilizing public opinion". 

H&K's baby-atrocity routine really won over the hearts, but for the minds of 
realpolitik skeptics the Pentagon had other methods. To sway them, the Pentagon 
flooded the major media outlets with reports of a top-secret satellite image 
that allegedly showed 250,000 Iraqi troops and 1,500 tanks amassed at the Iraqi-
Saudi border. 

Once again, this was misinformation. When the US military refused to hand the 
satellite image over to the press, several investigative journalists opted to 
purchase commercially available, but equally detailed, satellite images on the 
open market. Shots of the exact same region, during the same time frame, 
revealed no Iraqi soldiers anywhere near the border. The journalists hired a 
coterie of experts, including a former Defense Intelligence Agency analyst who 
specialized in desert warfare imagery, and the verdict was the same: no Iraqis, 
just desert and a lot of US jet fighters sitting wing-tip to wing-tip at nearby 
Saudi bases. 

But by the time those questions began circulating about the Pentagon's supposed 
satellite image and the web of decisions being spun around it, the US military 
was already set on course. Once again, a similar mobilization is in high gear, 
with skeptical questions lagging behind.

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