[Another example of how the thoroughly corrupt mainstream media are
manipulating American public opinion on behalf of the neoconservative
agenda.]

Sent to you by Sean McBride via Google Reader: Journalists, McCain and
the false Iran/al-Qaida link via Salon: Glenn Greenwald by Glenn
Greenwald on 3/24/08
(updated below - Update II - Update III)

Isn't it self-evident that this is a very serious problem for political
journalism -- from Chuck Todd yesterday on Meet the Press (C&L has the
video of this exchange here):MR. RUSSERT: McCain had some problems when
he was in Jordan, he talked about al-Qaeda being trained by the
Iranians.

MR. TODD: Mm-hmm.

MR. RUSSERT: And then, then Lindsey Graham, who he was with, and then
Joe Lieberman both tried to say to him, al-Qaeda is Sunni, not trained
by the Shiite Iranian government. Does that kind of stumble hurt a
McCain candidacy?

MR. TODD: . . . You know, he's -- because of the age issue, he can't
ever look like he's having a senior moment. So instead, he's better off
going ahead and saying, you know, OK, so he misspoke. Even if he gets
dinged on the experience stuff, "Oh, he says he's Mr. Experience.
Doesn't he know the difference between this stuff?" He's got enough of
that in the bank, at least with the media, that he can get away with
it. I mean, the irony to this is had either Senator Clinton or Senator
Obama misspoke like that, it'd have been on a running loop, and it
would become a, a big problem for a couple of days for them.That
exchange came only after several minutes of discussions of Jeremiah
Wright (complete with the 1,000th showing of the same video snippet of
his 9/11 sermon), followed by a debate over whether Bill Clinton
questioned Barack Obama's patriotism and whether that makes Bill
Clinton like Joseph McCarthy, followed by an analysis of whether
Hillary lied about her plane's landing in Bosnia -- and only then did
they get to the matter of McCain falsely (and repeatedly) claiming a
link between Iran and Al Qaeda. And even then, the McCain topic was
confined to this one exchange with Todd -- tacked on virtually at the
end of the show.

But Todd's admission that journalists protect McCain because they're
convinced he's a true expert in national security is nonetheless
extraordinary because it is clearly what journalists -- by their own
admission -- are doing. It echoes exactly what The Washington Post's
Ruth Marcus said last week:I thought that was an odd comment from Sen.
McCain, and I do think that it would have gotten a lot more attention
were it not coming from someone who is generally judged to have a lot
of foreign policy expertise . . . . Probably won't break through the
chatter, and I agree, would be a bigger deal if the speaker had been
different.And numerous other journalists last week acknowledged much
the same thing, dismissing the importance of the story on the ground
that this is John McCain we're talking about, so it just can't be that
he was ignorant about the Middle East or being deceitful, no matter how
clearly the facts proved that he was. Many of them, like both Russert
and Todd here, went out of their way to describe falsely what McCain
did, to make it seem as though it was a one-time "stumble" (Russert) or
just McCain "misspeaking" (Todd -- though to Todd's credit, he pointed
out that McCain had been using this false claim repeatedly as
a "talking point").

One can acknowledge that all of the topics on which the Meet the Press
panel harped endlessly are legitimate topics to discuss. But by
comparison to those petty sideshows, consider the towering significance
of what McCain was really doing all of last week and even before that.

The vast bulk of the country believes they were deliberately deceived
about the nature of the threat posed by Iraq. And a principal reason
why we ended up in Iraq is because the Bush administration was
permitted to spew all sorts of falsehoods about the Iraqi threat while
the media uncritically passed along those falsehoods, depicting Bush
officials as Serious, honorable national security protectors whose word
could be trusted and whose knowledge was beyond questioning.

And now -- by their own admission -- they're doing exactly the same
thing with McCain. These Iran/Al Qaeda episodes occurred when McCain
was traveling around the Middle East with his closest ally, warmonger
Joe Lieberman -- who has already explicitly advocated an American
military attack on Iran -- and it involved McCain's repeatedly making
patently false assertions in order to tie Iran to Al Qaeda and to
exaggerate wildly the Iranian threat, exactly the sort of deceit that
misled large majorities of Americans into believing that Saddam was
responsible for the 9/11 attacks.

And then, when McCain gets caught doing this, the establishment press
corps comes right out and admits that they barely even consider it a
real story because it was something that was done by John McCain, as
opposed to Clinton, Obama or some Unserious liberal war opponent. It
was just a momentary "stumble" that can't possibly call into question
something as certain and beyond reproach as McCain's expertise and
honor.

Garden-variety media criticism consists of nothing more than each side
just reflexively complaining, with little or no proof, that their side
is being treated unfairly. But with McCain, that exercise is
unnecessary. Journalists themselves continuously acknowledge without
much shame that they treat McCain differently, and better, because they
have such a high opinion of him. Here's what Time's Ana Marie Cox told
Howie Kurtz earlier this year:The journalists who covered McCain in
2000 feel very self-conscious about the criticism that the press came
under for apparently being so taken with John McCain. There's a sense
that the first time was so fun and exciting, but this time we're really
going to be sober and critical and the dispassionate observers we're
supposed to be.That rehabilitative project doesn't seem to be working
out too well. While media stars focus incessantly on petty Democratic
surrogate wars and what Time's Michael Scherer aptly calls "phony
second-degree scandals," here is John McCain serially engaging in a
replica of the worst and most destructive behavior of the Bush
administration -- spewing outright falsehoods about a country that he
may attack and which his most stalwart allies want to attack -- and
journalists have decided that it's not newsworthy because McCain is far
too good, smart and honest to be depicted in such unflattering terms,
just like George Bush, Dick Cheney, Don Rumsfeld and Colin Powell were.

* * * * *

I was on Antiwar Radio with Scott Horton a couple of days ago to talk
about these McCain episodes (as well as issues relating to the FISA and
telecom amnesty victory). That interview can be heard here.

UPDATE: The media's ongoing faith in John McCain's foreign policy
expertise and wisdom -- despite his full-throated advocacy of the
invasion of Iraq -- ties back perfectly to the Anne-Marie Slaughter
discussion from late last week: there is no accountability and no loss
of credibility for those who cheered on this supremely destructive war.

As ramoncreager says in comments regarding Chuck Todd's statement
that "[McCain]'s got enough of that [national security expertise] in
the bank, at least with the media":Really, what kind of bank is Mr.
Todd talking about? One that is engaging in sub-prime lending, no
doubt. Only to these pundits could such a long history of being wrong
about foreign policy issues constitute a positive bank balance.I don't
necessarily blame Todd -- he might have been describing rather than
defending the media's favorable treatment of McCain -- but the point is
the same. The political and media establishment are filled -- still --
with people who supported the war.

Therefore, those like McCain who supported the war are the ones who
presumptively are serious experts in national security, while those
like Obama who opposed the war are presumptively unserious and likely
of questionable judgment. It really is so illustrative that the
candidate who is most closely aligned with the Iraq disaster is still
deemed by the press to be the one whose national security expertise and
veracity can't be questioned.

UPDATE II: SomeNYGuy points to one of the worst, most inaccurate, and
most biased defenses of McCain of all -- from an extremely unsurprising
source, Howie Kurtz in The Washington Post:Speaking of McCain, A.J.
Rossmiller at Americablog jumps on his gaffe of saying Iran was
training al-Qaeda operatives, which the senator corrected a moment
later. . . . A blunder, to be sure, but can the Democratic candidates
really argue that they know more about foreign policy?Of course not;
perish the thought. No Democrat -- or any other human being -- could
ever possibly claim to know more about foreign policy than John McCain.
His record over the last seven years is virtually perfect, establishing
him as a wise and brilliant national security scholar.

And contrary to Kurtz's excuse that this was a "blunder" that "the
senator corrected a moment later," McCain made the same statement three
times (at least) before that without ever "correcting" it. Kurtz's
claim is just false. He's hosting a live chat session today at noon EST
where he can be asked about such matters. Shouldn't Kurtz retract his
false claim that McCain immediately corrected his statements about Al
Qaeda and Iran when, in fact, he said it repeatedly before that? And
doesn't his repeated invocation of this standard, false neocon "talking
point" strongly suggest a deliberate intent to deceive rather than a
mere "blunder"?

UPDATE III: Several commenters here were able to submit questions to
Kurtz on the McCain episodes, beginning with this one:Acton, Mass.: Mr
Kurtz, you have written about McCain's "gaffe of saying Iran was
training al-Qaeda operatives, which the senator corrected a moment
later." But McCain previously made that statement at least three times
on his trip without correction. It is clear that this represents a
severe policy misconception on McCain's part, not just a
one-time "gaffe." So why are you (and the media in general) playing
this as just a slip of the tongue?

Howard Kurtz: I was just recounting what happened. The fact that McCain
has made this "mistake" before suggests that either that he believes
Iran is actually training al-Qaeda operatives or is not being very
careful about sticking to established facts.The whole point, of course,
is that Kurtz and so many of his colleagues "recounted what happened"
with complete inaccuracy by suggesting it was a one-time "blunder"
which McCain immediately corrected. Here, Kurtz is forced to
acknowledge that it was a statement McCain repeatedly made. Thus, Kurtz
said, this shows "either [a] that [McCain] believes Iran is actually
training al-Qaeda operatives" (something which is clearly not true,
since the McCain campaign retracted the statement) or [b] that
McCain "is not being very careful about sticking to established facts."

So, McCain is "not being very careful about sticking to established
facts" with regard to the threat posed by Iran -- meaning he's either
lying or being completely reckless in trying to convince Americans of a
nonexistent link between Iran and Al Qaeda. Isn't that a rather
significant story for reasons too self-evident to require elaboration?

And then there is this:Portland, Ore.: If John McCain "believes Iran is
actually training al-Qaeda operatives or is not being very careful
about sticking to established facts," then why does he have a
reputation as someone who knows what he's talking about, or as
a "straight talker"? What, exactly, is his "bank" of foreign policy
experience based on? And is simply having opinions on foreign policy --
even if they're blatantly incorrect -- a reasonable bar for the media
to claim that someone has "foreign policy experience"?

Howard Kurtz: You're welcome to criticize McCain's foreign policy
views, but I think to say he doesn't have experience in this area is
simply not true. He has more than Ronald Reagan, Bill Clinton and
George W. Bush combined when they were presidential candidates. He led
a Navy squadron during the Vietnam War. He's been in the forefront of
national security debates for two decades. He just completed his eighth
visit to Iraq. He was a major proponent of the surge. Now experience
isn't everything, as Obama frequently points out, citing the very
experienced Cheney and Rumsfeld and how they botched the war. But
McCain is not a newcomer to these matters.The issue isn't whether he
has "experience" but, instead, whether he has "expertise" -- meaning,
does he know what he's talking about and is his judgment entitled to a
presumption of reliability? The fact that a politician has worked on an
issue for a long time doesn't mean they know what they're talking
about, particularly where -- as in McCain's case -- their history is
filled with destructively wrong positions and wildly inaccurate claims.

But the more important point here is this. Whether McCain's foreign
policy views are entitled to respect is something that the voters ought
to be deciding in the election. By deciding the question in advance in
McCain's favor, and thus suppressing facts that show he's ignorant or
deceitful when it comes to national security, the media is trying to
decide something in McCain's favor -- namely, whether he's trustworthy
on national security -- that ought to be decided by voters. How about
just having journalists do their jobs and report newsworthy events such
as McCain's serial misstatements on Iran and let voters decide if his
national security posture is entitled to respect?

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