On 4/29/2011 2:06 PM, Fernando Cassia wrote:
> On Fri, Apr 29, 2011 at 2:57 PM, Louis Proyect<[email protected]>  wrote:
>> http://louisproyect.wordpress.com/2011/04/29/libya-the-left-and-journalistic-integrity/
>
>
> "from the BBC, the very fucking imperialist mouthpiece whose
> propaganda stoked the fire for wars in Yugoslavia and Iraq. "
>

The BBC And Iraq: Myth and Reality

by John Pilger

Greg Dyke, the BBC’s director general, has attacked American 
television reporting of Iraq. "For any news organisation to act as 
a cheerleader for government is to undermine your credibility," he 
said. "They should be... balancing their coverage, not banging the 
drum for one side or the other." He said research showed that, of 
840 experts interviewed on American news programmes during the 
invasion of Iraq, only four opposed the war. "If that were true in 
Britain, the BBC would have failed in its duty."

Did Dyke say all this with a straight face? Let’s look at what 
research shows about the BBC’s reporting of Iraq. Media Tenor, the 
non-partisan, Bonn-based media research organisation, has examined 
the Iraq war reporting of some of the world’s leading 
broadcasters, including the US networks and the BBC. It 
concentrated on the coverage of opposition to the war.

The second-worst case of denying access to anti-war voices was ABC 
in the United States, which allowed them a mere 7 per cent of its 
overall coverage. The worst case was the BBC, which gave just 2 
per cent of its coverage to opposition views – views that 
represented those of the majority of the British people. A 
separate study by Cardiff University came to the same conclusion. 
The BBC, it said, had "displayed the most pro-war agenda of any 
[British] broadcaster."

Consider the first Newsnight broadcast after the greatest 
political demonstration in British history on 15 February. The 
studio discussion was confined to interviews with a Tory member of 
the House of Lords, a Tory MP, an Oxford don, an LSE professor, a 
commentator from the Times and the views of the Foreign Secretary, 
Jack Straw. Not one marcher was invited to participate, not one 
representative of the two million who had filled London in 
protest. Instead, a political reporter, David Grossman, asked 
perversely: "What about the millions who didn’t march? Was going 
to the DIY store or watching the football on Saturday a 
demonstration of support for the government?"

A constant theme of the BBC’s Iraq coverage is that Anglo-American 
policy, although capable of "blunders," is essentially benign, 
even noble. Thus, amazingly, Matt Frei, the BBC’s Washington 
correspondent, declared on 13 April: "There’s no doubt that the 
desire to bring good, to bring American values to the rest of the 
world, and especially now to the Middle East... is now 
increasingly tied up with military power." The same "good" 
military power had just slaughtered at least 15,000 people in an 
illegal, unprovoked attack on a largely defenceless country.

No doubt touched by this goodness, Newsnight’s Kirsty Wark asked 
General Sir Mike Jackson, Chief of the General Staff, if 
"coalition" troops "are really powerless to help civilians 
targeted by Iraqi forces in Basra." Clearly, she felt no need to 
check the veracity of the British claim that Iraqi forces had been 
targeting civilians in Basra, a claim that proved to be baseless 
propaganda.

During the bombing of Serbia in 1999, Wark interviewed another 
general, Wesley Clark, the Nato commander. The Serbian city of Nis 
– had just been sprayed with American cluster bombs, killing 
women, old people and children caught in the open: the horrific 
handiwork of one of Nato’s "precision-guided" missiles, of which 
only 2 per cent hit military targets. Wark asked not a single 
question about this, or about any civilian deaths.

These are not isolated examples, but the BBC "style." What matters 
is that the received wisdom dominates and is protected. When a US 
missile killed 62 people at a market in Baghdad, BBC News affected 
a fake "who can tell who’s responsible?" neutrality, a standard 
technique when the atrocity is "ours." On Newsnight, a BBC 
commentator dismissed the carnage with these words: "It’s a war 
after all... But the coalition aim is to unseat Saddam Hussein by 
winning hearts and minds." His voice trailed over images of 
grieving relatives.

Regardless of the spat over Andrew Gilligan’s attempt to tell the 
truth about the Blair government’s lying, the BBC’s amplifying of 
government lies about a "threat" from Iraq was routine. Typically 
on 7 January, BBC1’s 6pm news bulletin reported that British army 
reservists were being called up "to deal with the continuing 
threat posed by Iraq." What threat?

During the 1991 Gulf war, BBC audiences were told incessantly 
about "surgical strikes" so precise that war had become almost a 
bloodless science. David Dimbleby asked the US ambassador: "Isn’t 
it in fact true that America, by dint of the very accuracy of the 
weapons we’ve seen, is the only potential world policeman?"

Dimbleby, like his news colleagues, had been conned; most of the 
weapons had missed their military targets and killed civilians.

In 1991, according to the Guardian, the BBC told its broadcasters 
to be "circumspect" about pictures of civilian death and injury. 
This may explain why the BBC offered us only glimpses of the 
horrific truth – that the Americans were systematically targeting 
civilian infrastructure and conducting a one-sided slaughter. 
Shortly before Christmas 1991, the Medical Education Trust in 
London estimated that more than 200,000 Iraqi men, women and 
children had died in the "surgical" assault and its immediate 
aftermath.

An archive search has failed to turn up a single BBC item 
reporting this. Similarly, a search of the BBC’s coverage of the 
causes and effects of the 13-year embargo on Iraq has failed to 
produce a single report spelling out that which Madeleine 
Albright, Bill Clinton’s secretary of state, put so succinctly 
when asked if the deaths of half a million children were a price 
worth paying for sanctions. "We think the price is worth it," she 
replied.

There was plenty of vilifying of the "Beast of Baghdad," but 
nothing on the fact that, up to July 2002, the United States was 
deliberately blocking more than $5bn worth of humanitarian and 
reconstruction aid reaching Iraq – aid approved by the UN Security 
Council and paid for by Iraq. I recently asked a well-known BBC 
correspondent about this, and he replied: "I’ve tried, but they’re 
not interested."

There are honourable exceptions to all this, of course; but just 
as BBC production values have few equals, so do its self-serving 
myths about objectivity, impartiality and balance have few equals 
– myths that have demonstrated their stamina since the 1920s, when 
John Reith, the BBC’s first director general, secretly wrote 
propaganda for the Tory Baldwin government during the General 
Strike and noted in his diaries that impartiality was a principle 
to be suspended whenever the established order and its consensus 
were threatened.

Thus, The War Game, Peter Watkins’s brilliant film for the BBC 
about the effects of a nuclear attack on Britain, was suppressed 
for 20 years. In 1965, the chairman of the BBC’s board of 
governors, Lord Normanbrook, secretly warned the Wilson government 
that "the showing of the film on television might have a 
significant effect on public attitudes towards the policy of the 
nuclear deterrent."

Generally speaking, outright bans are unnecessary, because "going 
too far," which Watkins did, is discouraged by background and 
training. That the BBC, like most of the Anglo-American media, 
reports the fate of whole societies according to their usefulness 
to "us," the euphemism for western power, and works diligently to 
minimise the culpability of British governments in great crimes, 
is self-evident and certainly unconspiratorial. It is simply part 
of a rich tradition.

December 5, 2003
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