-Caveat Lector-

From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: LIES, DMN LIES & MAPS
Date: Tuesday, May 11, 1999 12:35 PM


Dear reader,
Feel free to distribute this in any way you wish.
-- jared

HOW NATO & THE MEDIA MISREPRESENTED THE
CHINESE EMBASSY BOMBING

Opponents of the war against Serbia argue that much of what
passes for news these days is really a kind of war propaganda,
that NATO puts out misinformation and the media disseminates
the stuff uncritically.

A case in point is the coverage of the bombing of the Chinese
Embassy in Belgrade.  I download wire service reports from the AOL
world news database (accessible at
aol://4344:30.WORLD.338815.464449182
if you are an AOL member.  This allows me to see exactly
how wire services and newspapers change the news from hour
to hour.  Very instructive for studying how misinformation
is disseminated.

Studying misinformation is a special interest of mine.
If you'd like to see some of my previous work in this area,
send me a note and I'll email you The Emperor's Clothes,
which analyzes how the NY Times misinformed its readers
about the bombing of a Sudanese pill factory in August, 1998.

Before we examine the news coverage of the bombing of the
Chinese Embassy, let me recount a very interesting report from
a Chinese intellectual, currently at Harvard's Kennedy
Institute, who spoke on May 8th at the weekly Boston
anti-war rally (held at 3:00 every Sat. in Copley Square).

The man had conferred with people overseas and thus had direct
knowledge of the attack on the Chinese  Embassy.  He said three
missiles had struck the Embassy compound, hitting three
apartments where one or both adult family members was
a journalist.  The missiles apparently carried a light
explosive charge.

Why NATO Targeted Chinese Journalists

Why, asked the speaker, did all three missiles strike journalists'
apartments?

Clearly, he said, the goal was to punish China for sympathizing
with the Yugoslav people against NATO.  More specifically, the
intention was to terrorize Chinese newspeople in Yugoslavia,
thus silencing yet another non-NATO information source.

Does that seem too nightmarish to be true?  Keep in mind,
NATO has consistently bombed Serbian news outlets with
the stated intention of silencing sources of "lying propaganda."
Why would it be so far-fetched for them to do the same to
Chinese newspeople?

Perhaps NATO wants to silence ALL non-NATO reporting on the
war, even at the risk of starting World War III.

Or perhaps NATO, or a part of NATO, such as the U.S. government,
wants to provoke a fight with China before China gets too strong
to be crushed?

Let's take a look at the "news" coverage.


SORRY, WRONG BUILDING

NATO spokesman Jamie Shea's first response to the Embassy
bombing was a) to apologize and b) to explain that the NATO missiles
had gone astray.  NATO had intended to hit a building across the
street, a building that houses what SHEA called the "Federal Directory
for the Supply and Procurement."

Said Shea:  "'I understand that the two buildings are
close together."' (Reuters, May 8)

(If they ever catch the terrorists who bombed the US
Embassy in Kenya and bring them to trial, could their
legal team utilize the Shea Defense which consists of
a) first you say I'm very sorry and b) then you say you
meant to blow up the building across the street?)

But getting back to the "news" -- according to Jamie
Shea the Chinese Embassy is close to the "Federal
Directory for the Supply and Procurement."  But the
Chinese Embassy is in fact located in the middle of a
park in a residential neighborhood and:

"The embassy stands alone in its own grounds surrounded
by grassy open space on three sides.  Rows of high-rise
apartment blocs are located 200 (600 feet) metres away and a
line of shops, offices and apartments sits about 150
meters (450 feet) away on the other side of a
wide tree-lined avenue, [called]...Cherry Tree Street."
(Reuters, 5/8)


NEARBY BUILDING?  WHAT NEARBY BUILDING?

Apparently realizing that a "Federal Directory for the Supply
and Procurement" would not be placed in an
apartment complex -- or on a 1000 foot lawn - NATO spun
a new story a few hours later:

"Three NATO guided bombs which slammed into the
Chinese embassy in Belgrade overnight struck precisely
at the coordinates programmed into them, but it was
not the building NATO believed it to be.

'They hit bang on the three aim points they were given,'
a military source said....

[NATO military spokesman General Walter] Jertz declined
to say what sort of weapon hit the Chinese embassy, except
that it was 'smart' or guided munitions and not free-fall bombs.
He denied planners were 'using old maps, wrong maps.'"
(Reuters, May 8)

OK.  Three smart missiles or bombs hit the three
locations they were supposed to hit.  It was a misidentified
target.  And the Pilot(s) wasn't misled by old or bad maps.

On the face of it, what is the likelihood of NATO picking
target coordinates that just happen to coincide with three
apartments occupied by journalists?  I mean, one computer-guided
bomb destroying a journalist's home would not be unlikely.  But
three hitting three journalists' homes?


TOO MANY SPOKESMEN

In the same Reuters story, another expert suggests
it would be highly unlikely for NATO to make the kind
of mistake Jertz is suggesting:

"'Target identification and pilot preparation would have been
extensive in this case, because of the military importance
of the intended target and because Belgrade is heavily
defended by Serb forces,' [Air Force Maj. Gen. Charles Wald,
a strategic planner for the Joint Chiefs of Staff] said at a briefing
for reporters.

'`'The way targeting works ... the higher the threat, the more
valued the target, the more time you would study it.  The more
time you have to study it, the better,' Wald said."

Based on what Wald is saying here, isn't it pretty much unlikely
that an embassy would be mistaken for a "Federal Directory for the
Supply and Procurement?"

TOO MANY PLACES

Which brings us to yet another problem.  Because in
the same MAY 8 Reuters Story the name of the place
which NATO intended to bomb mysteriously changes -- not
once but twice.  Read the following quote from General
Jertz carefully:

 "Careful to avoid making excuses, NATO military spokesman
 General Walter Jertz said NATO went after the target because
 it thought it was the weapons warehouse of the Federal
 Directorate for Supply and Procurement.

 'The information we had was that in this building was the
 headquarters of the Directorate, and we have no evidence
 that we were misled,' he said."

 So now the thing they thought they were bombing was:

a) the Federal Directory for the Supply and Procurement;

 b) Weapons warehouse of the Federal
 Directorate for Supply and Procurement;  and

c) the headquarters of the Directorate.

 No wonder they couldn't be misled.  They couldn't
 even name the place.

TOO MANY MISSILES

NATO's next spin-control effort was an attempt to simplify
things.  Retelling the story again a bit later on the 8th, AP
reported that:

"The precision-guided weapon that hit the Chinese
embassy in Belgrade apparently did just what it was told. .."

One weapon.  That does make things more believable,
unless of course the reader has seen the previous stories
that refer to Three missiles....

Since few people read multiple news stories about the
same topic, and even fewer read them carefully, moving
from three to one missile is a pretty safe gambit.  But the
problem still remains: how could NATO targeteers, pouring
over their maps, not notice the label CHINESE EMBASSY
on a building they were planning to bomb?

IT WAS THE MAPS!

NATO's answer: switch positions on the map question.

What was the source of "the erroneous B-2 bomber attack,
which dropped several satellite-guided bombs on the embassy"?

Here's the latest explanation:

"In mistakenly targeting the Chinese Embassy in Belgrade
Friday night, U.S. intelligence officials were working from an
outdated map issued before China built its diplomatic compound
several years ago, American and NATO authorities said yesterday.

'The tragic and embarrassing truth is that our maps simply did
not show the Chinese Embassy anywhere in that vicinity,' a
senior NATO official said." (Washington Post, May 10)

Let's consider the implications of what we've just read.

First, the Post accepts without question NATO's assertion
that the embassy bombing was accidental.  Indeed
the Post doesn't mention the highly newsworthy
fact that the news media stories are so mutually contradictory.
Doesn't that tell us something about these news agencies,
about their attitude toward NATO and this war?  That they are
really part of NATO's public relations effort, dutifully
reporting whatever they are told without pointing out the
implications of NATO's ever-evolving explanations.

Second, the claim that using "old maps" was the problem
flatly contradicts an equally confident assertion made
about 36 hours earlier by NATO' spokesman, General Jertz.
You remember: "He [that is., Gen. Jertz] denied planners
were 'using old maps, wrong maps.'" (Reuters, May 8)

Third, consider the phrase "outdated map issued before China
built its diplomatic compound several years ago."
This clearly refers to PAPER maps.

Now is it believable that NATO would be working off old paper maps of
Belgrade?  What's the matter, they can't afford computers?
They have no technical staff?  We are after all talking about
the combined armed forces of the U.S. and most of Europe.
The whole focus of their attack on Serbia is aerial bombardment.
Aerial bombardment depends primarily on maps and intelligence.
Doesn't it fly in the face of rudimentary common sense -- indeed of
sanity -- to believe that this military force would have anything but
the most sophisticated mapping facilities, updated with satellite
photos and local intelligence reports hourly, all of it in computerized
 war rooms with giant screens, scores of technical personnel, etc.,
etc.

And isn't it equally obvious, that that one thing such an armed
force would have at its finger tips would be exact information
about sensitive installations -- such as diplomatic facilities --
precisely to make sure they did not get bombed.

Unless of course NATO wanted them to be bombed.

And of  all the diplomatic facilities in all of Yugoslavia, wouldn't
the one to which NATO would pay the most attention be
the Chinese Embassy in Belgrade - both because of China's
immense world-importance and because it is Belgrade's chief ally.

Of course NATO had up to date maps of the area around
the Chinese Embassy.  And of every square inch inside
the Embassy as well.

Fourth, since NATO claims it decided to bomb the Embassy
because of what the targeteers  saw on these "old maps" -- just
what did the targeteers see?  We are told they didn't see the
Embassy.  Did they see something else they wanted to attack
and destroy?  Just what was this something else?  Was it a
building which housed some military facility?  In the middle of
a 1000 foot lawn in a residential section of the city?  And if
there is such a map with such a building, why doesn't NATO
produce this ancient document, and show it to us?

And fifth -- did you notice we're talking about multiple missiles
again?

LET US NOW REVIEW NATO'S STORIES

According to NATO there were three --

  NO, there was only one

smart bomb that hit the Chinese Embassy by mistake because
it missed a building across the street that houses the "Federal Supply
and Procurement Office" --

  NO, that wasn't the problem.  The missiles (because we're back
to three missiles again)  didn't miss -- they hit right on target except
it turned out the target was all wrong, t wasn't the Federal Supply
and Procurement Office at all, it was the Chinese Embassy and
somehow the targeteers got it all confused but one thing is
definite: the mix-up was not the result of using old maps.

  But that's not right either because if a target is important a
great deal of care is taken, and given that this was such an
important target, even more care would be taken to make sure
it really was the a) Federal Directory for the Supply and
Procurement and

 NO, that should be the b) Weapons Warehouse of the Federal
Directorate for Supply and Procurement,

 NO,  that isn't right either it wasn't just a warehouse, it was the
c)  HEADQUARTERS of the Directorate and -

 NO!  Forget everything I've said so far.  It was the maps.
The maps were very old so you couldn't tell that the building
on that site was an Embassy.   And there were three missiles, of
course -- who ever said anything about there only being one?

A PARK, AND OTHER MILITARY TARGETS

 This writer has just spoken to a Serbian gentlemen whose
family lives a few blocks from the Embassy.  He says the
Embassy was built 4 or 5 years ago and that prior to
the building of the Embassy, the only thing there was: a park.

A park: tress and grass...

Therefore the notion that NATO could possess a map drawn
before the Chinese Embassy was built which showed any building
occupying the land on which the Embassy now stands is simply
impossible.  There was nothing there but trees and grass.

Therefore NATO is lying.

And since NATO is lying, we are left with the Chinese gentleman's
explanation.  It is the only one that makes sense.  NATO deliberately
blew up three apartments inhabited by Chinese journalists in the Chinese
Embassy.  This was a high-tech execution.  What will NATO do next?

(Note to reader: If you wish to see the complete text of the
articles I have quoted from, drop me a line and I'll be
glad to send them to you. [EMAIL PROTECTED] )

Best regards,
Jared  Israel  [EMAIL PROTECTED]

IF you know anyone to whom you would like me to send
documents and analysis of interest concerning this war and
related questions, please send me the address(es).

Thanks - [EMAIL PROTECTED]
�

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