---------- Forwarded Message -----------
From: Medialens Media Alerts <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: Noah Garrett Wallach <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Mon, 10 Apr 2006 09:11:30 UT
Subject: Iraq Body Count - A Shame Becoming Shameful

MEDIA LENS: Correcting for the distorted vision of the corporate media

April 10, 2006

MEDIA ALERT UPDATE: IRAQ BODY COUNT - A SHAME BECOMING SHAMEFUL

John Pilger And A Leading Epidemiologist Challenge IBC

Noam Chomsky once observed:

"If you are not offending people who ought to be offended, you're doing
something wrong."
(http://www.journalism.sfsu.edu/www/pubs/gater/spring95/apr27/chom.htm)

One indication that the Iraq Body Count (IBC) project is doing something wrong
is that it is deemed, not merely inoffensive, but is eagerly embraced by
people who really ought to be offended.

Consider Herald Sun journalist Adam Bolt, described by John Pilger as “the
lowest of journalism's low, an extreme right wing and aggressively idiotic
member of Murdoch's dominant press group in Australia“. (Email to Media Lens,
April 4, 2006)

Bolt’s recent article, ’Body of evidence,’ provides a jaw-dropping display of
propaganda. Bolt asserts, for example, that Saddam Hussein “claimed on average
between 90 and 120 victims each day. Every day. For 24 years. That's three or
four times higher than the daily deaths in fighting in Iraq today”. (Bolt,
‘Body of evidence,’ Herald Sun, March 22, 2006;
http://www.heraldsun.news.com.au/printpage/0,5481,18552865,00.html)

While this is sheer fantasy, Bolt +does+ accurately cite IBC’s maximum tally
for reported civilian deaths by mid-March - 37,800 - to make his point:

“It is a shocking loss of life, but see how many more Saddam killed or ordered
to their death each day.”

Elsewhere, a Media Lens reader challenged one G. Jefferson Price III - an
editor at the Baltimore Sun - on his reference to the claim that there have
been “about 35,000 Iraqi dead”
(http://www.commondreams.org/views06/0404-21.htm). Our reader suggested to
Jefferson Price that, assuming IBC had been the source of his figure, he
should be aware that IBC’s methodology and figures have been subject to
challenge. Jefferson Price responded:

“Thank you for your note. I will definitely take that into account the next
time. I've used the 35,000 figure because that is the lowest number but still,
tragically, too high.” (Forwarded to Media Lens, April 6, 2006)

One hardly knows whether to laugh or cry! Instead, we asked Jefferson Price
why he felt the need to choose “the lowest number” - we received no reply.

Sometimes the use of IBC’s figures borders on the surreal. The website of the
Liberal Democrat party - which proudly proclaims its opposition to the war -
currently features this comment:

“Well over 15,000 Iraqi civilians have died, and thousands more injured – in
military operations and the ensuing insurgency. (Figures correct to February
16th 2006.)” (http://www.libdems.org.uk/internationalaffairs/issues/iraq.html)

When challenged, a Lib Dem press person pleaded ignorance other than to say
“the number comes from a site on the
internet”. (Email from Gabriele Zamparini, April 7, 2006)

It certainly does - it comes from IBC in early December 2004 - some 16 months 
ago!

These uses of IBC’s figures give the lie to the website’s sole substantive
response to criticisms we have made in our Media Alerts. The comments appear
on page 14 of a recent addition to their website:

"Somewhat more surprising are approaches to our work from some sectors of the
political left, who take the difference between our total and that of the
‘Lancet study’ to indicate that we are witting or unwitting lackeys of the
Pentagon in helping them massage the figures downwards: (See, for instance,
‘Paved with Good Intentions: Iraq Body Count’ (David Edwards, Medialens.org,
January 25 2006). We are particularly surprised at this line of argument,
because all but a handful of media commentaries use our figures -
appropriately - as a means of highlighting the tragedy of the civilian death
toll, rather than to engage in a comparison between different estimates."
(http://www.iraqbodycount.net/onibc/)

This is truly shocking. First, comparisons are extremely common. Consider
recent comments made by Helen Boaden, the BBC’s director of news:

“The Lancet study is a snapshot taken more than 18 months ago and though the
methodology has been widely acknowledged as standard, there has been argument
about whether the sampling method is the most appropriate for this kind of
survey... I have also consulted our specialist in our analysis and research
department and we conclude that the best source is probably the Iraq Body
Count website." (Email to Media Lens, March 31, 2006)

Second, as the Bolt and Lib Dem examples indicate, any number of politicians
and journalists, particularly of the pro-war variety, have leapt on IBC’s
figures precisely to +downplay+ the tragedy of the civilian death toll. They
are using the lowest number they can find to suggest, for example, that the
results of the invasion have been far less severe than the consequences of
leaving Saddam Hussein in power.

As Stephen Soldz has commented: “That IBC misses this elementary point is
quite disturbing. I would have to put on my psychoanalyst hat to speculate as
to why this is the case.” (Soldz, ‘Iraq Body Count replies to critics but
ignores criticism,’ March 29, 2006;
http://psychoanalystsopposewar.org/blog/2006/03/29/iraq-body-count-replies-to-critics-but-ignores-criticism/)

“Run By Amateurs” - A Professional Epidemiologist Speaks

IBC insist that they do not have the resources to challenge the use and abuse
of their figures by incompetents and cynics in the media. Even accepting this
argument at face value, questions remain.

Is the IBC project characterised by flaws and oversights that have helped make
it serviceable to power? Is it in fact right for IBC to present itself as a
rigorously scientific enterprise? Could it be much more scientific, much more
professional, and as a result less open to cynical use and abuse? Could its
propaganda value be, in part, the result of IBC personnel being scientifically
out of their depth?

One of the world’s leading professional epidemiologists, who has chosen to
speak anonymously, has this to say:

“IBC is run by amateurs. It is easy to calculate the sensitivity of their
surveillance system. They would take another list or independent sample, and
see the fraction of that sample that appeared in their data base. I have asked
them to do this over a year ago, they have not.

“There are other databases out there (NCCI being the most complete), they
could do a capture-recapture analysis (as lots of experts have been calling
for) and see how many people have died but they have not.

“Attached is a graph [not included here] of deaths in Guatemala from 1960 to
1995 put together by Patrick Ball at UC Berkeley. Murders are with the black
line, the % reported in the press with the dashed line. Note, when violence
goes up, reporting in the press goes down. I have calibrated surveillance
systems during times of war (always in Africa admittedly) and would be
astonished if their system could capture 50% of deaths.

“In Saddam's time, morgues + hospital reports + death certificates reported to
the central Gov. only accounted for about 1/3 of the deaths that must have
been occurring in Iraq. There have now been 15,000 excess violent deaths just
in the Baghdad Morgues! If Baghdad is about 1/5th of the country, and the
morgues do not capture all deaths, what does this imply... the UNDP number
(more than twice IBC at the time it was done) is known by the authors to be an
underestimate and was based on a couple of questions out of a long (88 min.?)
interview.” (Email to Media Lens, March 23, 2006)

What does it tell us that, according to this leading epidemiologist, the
organisation providing the most commonly cited figures for civilian deaths in
Iraq - one of the most important political issues of our time - is “run by
amateurs”?

How many journalists are aware that IBC is not in fact run by professional
epidemiologists? What would we say if, in discussing climate change,
politicians and journalists consistently highlighted information supplied by a
group deemed by professional climate scientists to be “amateurs”?

And why have the amateurs at IBC not responded to elementary suggestions made
by professional experts in the field to test the accuracy of their
surveillance system? Why were the two suggestions described above not pursued?
Why is the graph of deaths in Guatemala not available on the IBC site and its
implications for the project explored? What, again, would we say of amateur
climate researchers who failed to respond to such obvious suggestions and
points made by eminent, professional climate scientists?

We asked IBC co-founder John Sloboda (April 6) if it was true that IBC had not
responded to the above suggestions. Sloboda responded:

Dear Davids,

Thanks for your letter.

Unfortunately the events of the last three months have convinced us that
direct correspondence with you is unproductive. We've said it before, and we
say it again, though we do so with regret.

Yours sincerely,

John Sloboda (April 7, 2006)

Isn’t it clear that none of the above questions have been investigated or
deemed to matter by our media for the simple reason that powerful interests
care so much about the dead of Iraq? That is, they care deeply that the true
number of dead be +obscured+ as far as possible. Isn’t it clear that this is
why the lowest suggested tally for Iraqi dead - however flawed, however
amateurish - has sailed effortlessly through the propaganda filters and biases
protecting the powerful?

One remarkable consequence is that IBC is able to pass judgement on the work
of leading experts in the field. The November 2004 report estimating 100,000
excess civilian deaths was produced by some of the world’s premier research
organisations - the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Columbia
University, and Baghdad's Al-Mustansiriya University - and published in the
prestigious science journal, The Lancet, following an intensive peer-review
process. And yet it is of this report that the amateurs at IBC declared in 
March:

“We have little confidence in the estimates based on the Lancet study and
recent extrapolations, for the reasons explained. We think that the UNDP study
offers a more reliable estimate for the period covered by the Lancet, and one
which is not inconsistent with the type of data we have gathered. (para 6.0 a
of ‘On IBC‘).”

This was written by John Sloboda, a professor of psychology at the University
of Keele, described on his university website as “internationally known for
his work on the psychology of music”
(http://www.keele.ac.uk/depts/ps/jasbiog.htm). The second author is listed as
Hamit Dardagan, described on the IBC site as “a freelance researcher currently
working in London. He has made an in-depth study of the research methods of
Professor Marc Herold, who pioneered a media-based methodology for estimating
civilian deaths in the Afghan war of 2001-2”.
(http://www.iraqbodycount.org/contacts.php)

A Shame Becoming Shameful - John Pilger Challenges John Sloboda

On March 15, in response to our earlier Media Alerts, John Pilger wrote to
John Sloboda:

Dear John

I hope this finds you well. Congratulations on the good work IBC did in the
early days when others shied away from the subject of civilian deaths in Iraq.
How times have changed and, as one who has read most of the studies on
civilian deaths, I am puzzled why you and your colleagues do not engage in the
vital debate initiated by Media Lens, whose good faith and integrity I can
personally vouch for. There is no doubt in my mind that the issue of the
civilian slaughter is one of those that can end the suffering in Iraq. In my
experience of war, silence will prolong it.

“I intend to write about this, and I urge you and your colleagues to engage
the crucial questions raised by Media Lens.

All good wishes

John Pilger (March 15, 2006)

Sloboda responded:

Dear John,

Thanks for this. Your position is understood.

Before you write anything, I wonder if you would do us the courtesy of reading
our most recent article, which went up on our web site today. the direct link
is http://www.iraqbodycount.org/onibc/

If you want to print it out to read on paper, there is a pdf button near the
bottom of the first page.

A number of people have written to us as a result of the Media Lens pieces. We
are sending them the reply below [not included here], which you may also find
of interest.

Sincerely,

John (March 16, 2006)

Pilger wrote again on March 16:

Dear John

I did you the courtesy, as you suggested, and read your "presentation" to a
conference. It answers none of the questions raised about IBC's appropriation
by defenders of the Iraq invasion, including George W. Bush.

Neither do the other pieces you recommend to people who write to the IBC. Why
do you waste time and not answer valid criticisms? This surely suggests
something concealed. And who is the "highly respected" member of the anti war
movement [mentioned in Sloboda‘s reply]? There are plenty of similar voices
who support the Democrats' position in the US or hope Blair will see the
light. This anonymous person also apparently disapproves of a public debate,
preferring a quiet word between Media Lens and IBC, which the public would not
know about. Such a shame becoming shameful.

best wishes

John

Sloboda responded the same day:

Dear John,

Your gratuitous slur on our anonymous correspondent is offensive, inaccurate
and misplaced . We have, of course, passed it straight to him, and he must act
as he sees fit.

With the greatest of respect, but I do believe that we have responded to the
main thrust of the Media Lens attack against us through the materials now on
our site as well as previous correspondence with Media Lens. Can I walk you
through this? And then perhaps you could clarify what are these "pretty
straightforward" questions asked by Media Lens which you claim not to be
answered by what follows.

Sloboda then pasted a presentation from the website, including:

“100,000 OR MORE DEAD?

“1. We have little confidence in the estimates based on the Lancet study and
recent extrapolations, for the reasons explained. We think that the UNDP study
offers a more reliable estimate for the period covered by the Lancet, and one
which is not inconsistent with the type of data we have gathered. (para 6.0 a
of "On IBC")

“2. Thus, the Lancet is not strong evidence for a massive deficit in
accounting for war deaths (although this does mean there is not any deficit -
just that the Lancet doesn't show what that deficit is).”

The rest of the presentation can be read here: 
http://www.iraqbodycount.net/onibc/

Sloboda then concluded his email thus:

In the light of all this, only those who wish to deliberately misrepresent us
can possibly doubt where we are coming from.

We believe that public attacks on one sector of the anti-war movement towards
another are completely counterproductive. By attacking our work, you will be
giving a gift to the war camp. We do sincerely hope you do not contribute
further to Media Lens' campaign against us

Sincerely,

John Sloboda. (March 16, 2006)

Finally, Pilger wrote (March 17):

Dear John

Talk of a "gratuitous slur" on the anonymous person you quoted is silly. I
wonder how many "respected" anti war figures speaking across the world
tomorrow would be willing to put their names to supporting IBC's current
confused position. Having tied yourself to the media coverage of Iraq --
useful at the start of the invasion -- you are now trapped within its
discredited Green Zone, so to speak.

Instead of attacking The Lancet report, which, as you well know, was drawn
from a rigorous, transparent and brave academic study (by the way, it's you
who are doing the "attacking"; Media Lens seemed to me merely to be raising
crucial and, I repeat, straightforward questions which you have declined to
answer), you could have included IBC in an overdue public debate; but you have
chosen not to.

What is beyond doubt is that IBC's "conservative" figures have provided an
utterly false impression of the degree of suffering in Iraq and handed a
propaganda tool back to your sources. No one suggests you and your colleagues
intended this. As I said in an earlier message, I admired IBC's  initiative;
but you ought to be setting the record straight now; reflecting merely the
media coverage makes no sense and is wrong.

It all reminds me of how the number of victims of the embargo in the 1990s was
measured and distorted and conveniently minimised -- so that today this
horrific episode has been largely written from recent history.

Yours, as ever

John

SUGGESTED ACTION

The goal of Media Lens is to promote rationality, compassion and respect for
others. In writing letters to journalists, we strongly urge readers to
maintain a polite, non-aggressive and non-abusive tone.

Write to IBC co-founder John Sloboda
Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Write to Iraq Body Count
Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Ask journalists to investigate these issues:

Write to Andrew Buncombe at the Independent
Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Rupert Cornwell, Washington editor of The Independent:
Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

George Monbiot at the Guardian
Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Peter Barron, editor of BBC’s Newsnight
Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Paul Reynolds, the BBC's World Affairs correspondent 
Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

John Kampfner, editor of the New Statesman
Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Please also send copies of all emails to Media Lens:
Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

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------- End of Forwarded Message -------


---
TCB'n,
Noah

"The foundation of all mental illness is the unwillingness to experience
legitimate suffering."
        - Carl Jung

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