Published on Monday, September 25, 2006 by
CommonDreams.org  

Media Tall Tales for the Next War  
by Norman Solomon 
  
The Sept. 25 edition of Time magazine illustrates how
the U.S. news media are gearing up for a military
attack on Iran. The headline over the cover-story
interview with Iran's president, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad,
is "A Date With a Dangerous Mind." 

The big-type subhead calls him "the man whose swagger
is stirring fears of war with the U.S.," and the
second paragraph concludes: "Though pictures of the
Iranian president often show him flashing a peace
sign, his actions could well be leading the world
closer to war." 

When the USA's biggest newsweekly devotes five pages
to scoping out a U.S. air war against Iran, as Time
did in the same issue, it's yet another sign that the
wheels of our nation's war-spin machine are turning
faster toward yet another unprovoked attack on another
country. 

Ahmadinejad has risen to the top of Washington's --
and American media's -- enemies list. Within the last
20 years, that list has included Manuel Noriega,
Saddam Hussein and Slobodan Milosevic, with each
subjected to extensive vilification before the
Pentagon launched a large-scale military attack. 

Whenever the president of the United States decides to
initiate or intensify a media blitz against a foreign
leader, mainstream U.S. news outlets have dependably
stepped up the decibels and hysteria. But the
administration can also call off the dogs of war by
going silent about the evils of some foreign tyrant. 

Take Libya's dictator, for instance. For more than a
third of a century, Col. Muammar al-Qaddafi has been a
despot whose overall record of repression makes
Noriega or Milosevic seem relatively tolerant of
domestic political foes. But ever since Qaddafi made a
deal with the Bush administration in December 2003,
the silence out of Washington about Qaddafi's evilness
has been notable. 

When Qaddafi publicly celebrated the 37th anniversary
of his dictatorship a few weeks ago, he declared in a
speech on state television: "Our enemies have been
crushed inside Libya, and you have to be ready to kill
them if they emerge anew." The New York Times noted
that Qaddafi's regime "criminalizes the creation of
opposition parties." 

Today, while the human rights situation in Iran is
reprehensible, the ongoing circumstances are far worse
under many governments favored by Washington. Here at
home, media outlets should be untangling double
standards instead of contributing to them. But so many
reporters and pundits have internalized Washington's
geopolitical agendas that the mainline institutions of
journalism continue to rot from within. That the rot
goes largely unnoticed is testimony to how Orwellian
"doublethink" has been normalized. 

These are not issues of professionalism any more than
concerns about public health are issues of medicine.
The news media should be early warning systems that
inform us before current events become unchangeable
history. 

But when the media system undermines the free flow of
information and prevents wide-ranging debate, what
happens is a parody of democracy. That's what occurred
four years ago during the media buildup for the
invasion of Iraq. 

Now, warning signs are profuse: The Bush
administration has Iran in the Pentagon's sights. And
the drive toward war, fueled by double standards about
nuclear development and human rights, is getting a big
boost from U.S. media coverage that portrays the
president as reluctant to launch an attack on Iran.
 
Time magazine reports that "from the State Department
to the White House to the highest reaches of the
military command, there is a growing sense that a
showdown with Iran ... may be impossible to avoid." 
The same kind of media spin -- assuming a sincere Bush
desire to avoid war -- was profuse in the months
before the invasion of Iraq. The more that news
outlets tell such fairy tales, the more they become
part of the war machinery. 

Norman Solomon is executive director of the Institute
for Public Accuracy and the author of "War Made Easy:
How Presidents and Pundits Keep Spinning Us to Death."
E-mail to: [EMAIL PROTECTED]  


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