CNN Claims Iran Shot at a US Drone, Revealing the News Network's Mindset
Its Pentagon reporter parrots significant, inflammatory government claims 
without an iota of skepticism or balance
by Glenn Greenwald 
Barbara Starr, CNN's Pentagon reporter (more accurately known as: the 
Pentagon's reporter at CNN), has an exciting exclusive today. Exclusively 
relying upon "three senior officials" in the Obama 
administration (all anonymous, needless to say), she claims that "two 
Iranian Su-25 fighter jets fired on an unarmed US Air Force Predator 
drone in the Persian Gulf last week," while "the drone was in 
international airspace east of Kuwait . . . engaged in routine maritime 
surveillance." The drone was not hit, but, says CNN, "the incident 
raises fresh concerns within the Obama administration about Iranian 
military aggression in crucial Gulf oil shipping lanes."
Iranian guards with the US RQ-170 Sentinel drone they claim to have brought 
down electronically. Photo/AFPFirst things first: let us pause for a moment to 
extend our thoughts and 
prayers to this US drone. Although it was not physically injured, being 
shot at by the Iranians - while it was doing nothing other than 
peacefully minding its own business - must have been a very traumatic 
experience. I think I speak on behalf of everyone, regardless of 
political views, when I say that we all wish this brave hero a speedy 
recovery and hope it is back in full health soon, protecting our 
freedom.
The CNN report on this incident is revealing indeed. Every paragraph - 
literally - contains nothing but mindless summaries of the claims of US 
government officials. There is not an iota of skepticism about any of 
the assertions, including how this incident happened, what the drone was doing 
at the time, or where it took place. It is pure US government 
press release - literally; I defy anyone to identify any differences if 
the US government had issued its own press release directly rather than 
issuing it masquerading as a leaked CNN report.
Most notably, CNN does not even bother with the pretense of trying to include 
the claims of the Iranian government about what happened. There is no 
indication that the self-described news outlet even made an 
effort to contact Tehran to obtain their rendition of these events or 
even confirmation that it occurred. It simply regurgitates the 
accusations of anonymous US officials that Iran, with no provocation, 
out of the blue decided to shoot at a US drone in international 
airspace. (Although CNN does not mention it, last December Iran shot down a US 
drone which, it claims (and the US does not deny) was in Iranian air space).
That CNN's prime mission is to serve the US government is hardly 
news. But given the magnitude of these kinds of accusations - their 
obvious ability, if not intent, to bolster animosity on the part of the 
US public toward Iran and heighten tensions between the two nations - 
shouldn't CNN at least pretend to be a bit more skeptical and 
even-handed about how it is reporting these claims? Anonymous Bush 
officials claim Saddam is reconstituting his nuclear program; anonymous 
Obama officials claim Iran illegally shot at a US drone for no reason.
But nothing can top this sentence from CNN, intended to explain the 
significance of this alleged event: "Iran has, at times, been 
confrontational in the region." Yes, indeed they have - in stark 
contrast to the peaceful United States, which never is. Or, as Jeremy 
Scahill today, anticipating how Starr might present her report on-air on CNN 
later today: "Iran, which has launched airstrikes in Pakistan, 
Yemen, Somalia and [holding earpiece] -- wait, what's that, Wolf? Oh, 
right. The US, which has..." Scahill was being a bit generous to Wolf 
Blitzer there, who would be far more likely to add; "yes, that's right, 
Barbara: and we should also remind our viewers how Iran, just a few 
short years ago, attacked its neighbor Iraq, destroyed the country, and 
then occupied it for almost a decade, showing how aggressive the mullahs are 
willing to be in this region."
In case any of you thought the US media would change its future 
behavior in light of the debacle during the run-up to the Iraq War - 
and, really, were any of you thinking they would? - this is your answer. The 
pre-Iraq-War behavior wasn't an abandonment of their purpose but 
the supreme affirmation of it: to drape the claims of the US government 
with independent credibility, dutifully serve its interests, and 
contrive an appearance of a free press. This is our adversarial, 
watchdog media in action.
Iranian evil
This all reminds me of a debate I did a couple years ago on MSNBC 
with Arianna Huffington and the Washington Post's Jonathan Capehart over Iran 
and whether it should be viewed as an aggressor and enemy of the 
US. For most of the debate, MSNBC kept showing scary video footage of a 
test of a mid-range missile which Iran had just conducted, and then 
Capehart picked up on that to tell me, in essence: how can you say Iran 
isn't aggressive when they're testing these missiles? Yes, because, 
clearly, countries of peace (such as the US and Israel) would never do 
something as belligerent as testing missiles, much like no real Country of 
Peace would ever want to acquire a nuclear weapon.
© 2012 Guardian/UK 
Glenn Greenwald is a columnist on civil liberties and US national security 
issues for the Guardian. A former constitutional lawyer, he 
was until 2012 a contributing writer at Salon.  His most recent book is, With 
Liberty and Justice for Some: How the Law Is Used to Destroy Equality and 
Protect the Powerful. His other books include: Great American Hypocrites: 
Toppling the Big Myths of Republican Politics,  A Tragic Legacy: How a Good vs. 
Evil Mentality Destroyed the Bush Presidency, and How Would a Patriot Act? 
Defending American Values from a President Run Amok. He is the recipient of the 
first annual I.F. Stone Award for Independent Journalism.

http://www.commondreams.org/view/2012/11/08-12

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