----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Media Lens Media Alerts" <[email protected]
Sent: Thursday, October 01, 2009 1:50 PM
Subject: Iran - The War Dance


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


 October 1, 2009

 MEDIA ALERT: IRAN - THE WAR DANCE


 On September 19, the Irish Times reported:

 "Israel has rejected the call by the International Atomic Energy Agency 
 (IAEA) to join the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) and open up its 
 atomic sites to international inspection." (Mark Weiss, 'Israel spurns 
 nuclear watchdog's call to open atomic sites to inspection,' Irish Times, 
 September 19, 2009; 
 http://www.irishtimes.com/newspaper/world/2009/0919/1224254860406.html)

 The IAEA, which met in Vienna on September 18, adopted a resolution 
 expressing concern about "Israeli nuclear capabilities" and called on 
 agency chief Mohamed ElBaradei to work on the issue. The motion was 
 adopted by 49 votes to 45, with 16 abstentions. Russia and China, both 
 permanent members of the UN security council, voted in favour. The United 
 States and the European Union initially tried to block the vote, and then 
 voted against it. David Danieli, deputy director of Israel's atomic energy 
 commission, said: "Israel will not co-operate in any matter with this 
 resolution." 
 
(http://english.aljazeera.net/news/middleeast/2009/09/2009918173136830771.ht
ml)

 Despite this defiance, despite Israel's appalling record of violating 
 international law, despite its record of waging and threatening war in the 
 region, and despite possessing as many as 400 nuclear warheads, no Western 
 journalist suggested that Israel should be bombed or blockaded as a 
 result. Indeed, apart from the tiny left-wing Morning Star newspaper and a 
 couple of wire agencies, it appears the Irish Times was the only 
 English-language media outlet to cover this story.

 Israel is one of three countries, along with India and Pakistan, which is 
 not a signatory to the NPT. The treaty is intended to prevent the spread 
 of nuclear weapons, but Article VI constitutes a specific obligation on 
 nuclear-weapon states like Britain and the United States to disarm 
 themselves of nuclear weapons, an obligation they have conspicuously 
 failed to meet.

 On September 27, the Financial Times was also a lonely voice in reporting 
 that India "can now build nuclear weapons with the same destructive power 
 as those in the arsenals of the world's major nuclear powers". According 
 to New Delhi's senior atomic officials, India has built weapons with 
 yields of up to 200 kilotons. It is estimated to have manufactured 
 weapons-grade plutonium for at least 100 warheads. (James Lamont and James 
 Blitz, 'India raises nuclear stakes,' Financial Times, September 27, 2009; 
 
http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/d63f3a70-ab90-11de-9be4-00144feabdc0.html?nclick_c
heck=1)

 India has no problem delivering these weapons. Britain supplied the Hawk 
 ground-attack aircraft used to train Indian pilots to fly Jaguar 
 nuclear-capable bombers, also built by BAE Systems. In 2003, the 
 Independent reported:

 "The deal comes after intense lobbying by the British Government, with 
 Prime Minister Tony Blair, Deputy Prime Minister John Prescott, Defence 
 Secretary Geoff Hoon and Foreign Secretary Jack Straw taking it in turns 
 to persuade the Indians to buy the jets." (Clayton Hirst and George 
 Fernandes, 'BAE to enjoy Indian summer with £1bn order for Hawk jets,' The 
 Independent, August 3, 2003)


 Propaganda Stunts

 Meanwhile, news that Iran has a "secret underground uranium enrichment 
 plant south of Tehran" at Qom, 
 (http://www.guardian.co.uk/global/2009/sep/25/iran-nuclear-plant-qanda) 
 generated a fevered war dance right across the liberal media. Simon 
 Tisdall wrote in the Guardian:

 "Today's disclosure, and the concomitant conclusion that Iran's leaders 
 are congenital double-dealers, will further spur the debate among regional 
 neighbours, in particular Saudi Arabia, Turkey and Egypt, about acquiring 
 nuclear capabilities of their own. Thus does the feared, fabled Middle 
 East nuclear arms race inch closer." (Tisdall, 'Iran has been caught 
 red-handed,' The Guardian, September 25, 2009; 
 
http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2009/sep/25/iran-secret-nuclear-plan
t)

 Tisdall made no mention of the September 18, IAEA resolution that was a 
 clear reminder that "the feared, fabled Middle East nuclear arms race" has 
 long since been started by Israel. Tisdall added:

 "For its part Israel will be gratified that Iran, long its 'existential' 
 security issue, is now being treated with equal seriousness by western 
 countries and Russia."

 Israel will also be gratified that its own capacity to pose "existential" 
 threats to its enemies is being treated with the standard seriousness - 
 zero - by its allies.

 Intriguingly, the Guardian's former Middle East editor (2000-2007) Brian 
 Whitaker, who is now an editor on the Guardian's Comment is Free website, 
 posted the following message in the comments' section under Tisdall's 
 article:

 "This smells of a propaganda stunt by western intelligence agencies. It's 
 not clear that Iran has actually broken any ruies [sic] on disclosure, 
 since the plant is said to be non-operational." (Whitaker comment, 
 September 25, 2009, 4:44pm; 
 
http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2009/sep/25/iran-secret-nuclear-plan
t)

 Tisdall has form on propaganda stunts. His May 22, 2007 front-page 
 Guardian story described 'Iran's secret plan for summer offensive to force 
 US out of Iraq.' You can see the front page here: 
 www.medialens.org/alerts/07/screenshots/guardian_070522_cover.jpg

 Iran, it seemed, was "forging ties with al-Qaida elements and Sunni Arab 
 militias in Iraq in preparation for a summer showdown with coalition 
 forces intended to tip a wavering US Congress into voting for full 
 military withdrawal". 
 (www.guardian.co.uk/frontpage/story/0,,2085195,00.html)

 To use the term favoured by the late, great playwright Harold Pinter, this 
 was "bollocks".

 A rare voice of sanity in the Guardian, Scott Ritter, former chief UN 
 weapons inspector in Iraq, put the latest revelations in context, noting 
 that: "when Obama announced that 'Iran is breaking rules that all nations 
 must follow', he is technically and legally wrong". Ritter explained:

 "The Qom plant, if current descriptions are accurate, cannot manufacture 
 the basic feed-stock (uranium hexaflouride, or UF6) used in the 
 centrifuge-based enrichment process. It is simply another plant in which 
 the UF6 can be enriched.

 "Why is this distinction important? Because the IAEA has underscored, 
 again and again, that it has a full accounting of Iran's nuclear material 
 stockpile. There has been no diversion of nuclear material to the Qom 
 plant (since it is under construction). The existence of the alleged 
 enrichment plant at Qom in no way changes the nuclear material balance 
 inside Iran today.

 "Simply put, Iran is no closer to producing a hypothetical nuclear weapon 
 today than it was prior to Obama's announcement concerning the Qom 
 facility." 
 
(http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/cifamerica/2009/sep/25/iran-secret-
nuclear-plant-inspections)

 Even if the claims of Iranian military intent are true, Ritter added, 
 "this interpretation would still require the diversion of significant 
 nuclear material away from the oversight of IAEA inspectors, something 
 that would be almost immediately evident. Any meaningful diversion of 
 nuclear material would be an immediate cause for alarm, and would trigger 
 robust international reaction, most probably inclusive of military action 
 against the totality of Iran's known nuclear infrastructure".

 Instead, it is "more likely, an attempt on the part of Iran to provide for 
 strategic depth and survivability of its nuclear programme in the face of 
 repeated threats on the part of the US and Israel to bomb its nuclear 
 infrastructure".

 The Guardian editors were unimpressed. The following day, a leader, 'Iran: 
 Time to come clean,' described: "the US president stressing that a 
 negotiated solution still existed, while Mr Brown talked of serial 
 deception and drawing lines in the sand. The truth is that neither man has 
 the luxury of waiting to find out what Iran's true intentions are". 
 (Leading article, 'Iran: Time to come clean,' The Guardian, September 26, 
 2009)

 Again, no mention of Israel's refusal to come clean. The previous day, a 
 Guardian leader had warned feverishly of how "the whirring centrifuges 
 spin Iran ever closer to the threshold of being able to manufacture a 
 nuclear bomb". (Leading article, 'Iran: Spinning out of control,' The 
 Guardian, September 25, 2009)

 As ever, thoughts of military action came naturally to the Guardian 
 editors:

 "Iranian negotiators should realise that their centrifuges are reaching 
 their highest trade-in value. Push it any further, and Iran will not have 
 an internationally monitored production line of enriched uranium to feed 
 its nuclear reactors. Instead of international finance and trade, it will 
 attract blockades and bombs."

 Iranian policy, then, would "attract" blockades and bombs - Iran would be 
 responsible for +our+ criminal actions. The Guardian is like a habitual 
 wife-beater blaming the victim for his violence. Not a word in this 
 Guardian editorial of how the blockades and bombs attracted to Iran's 
 neighbour, Iraq, were based on a torrential outpouring of British and 
 American lies. As the World Socialist Web Site observed on September 30:

 "In an editorial published Sunday, the Financial Times of London joined 
 the media onslaught against Iran, calling its rulers 'cheats and 
 deceivers' who 'cannot be remotely trusted' in relation to the country's 
 nuclear program.

 "If the newspaper is committed to exposing 'cheats and deceivers,' why has 
 it waited so long? It could have provided its readers with this valuable 
 service nearly seven years ago during the buildup to the war against Iraq. 
 After all, this epithet perfectly fits the role played by the US and 
 British governments." 
 (http://www.wsws.org/articles/2009/sep2009/pers-s30.shtml)

 Just four weeks before the Guardian wrote of "whirring centrifuges" 
 spinning the Middle East to destruction, IAEA chief Mohamed ElBaradei told 
 the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, published by a group of prominent 
 scientists:

 "We have not seen concrete evidence that Tehran has an ongoing nuclear 
 weapons program... But somehow, many people are talking about how Iran's 
 nuclear program is the greatest threat to the world... In many ways, I 
 think the threat has been hyped. Yes, there's concern about Iran's future 
 intentions and Iran needs to be more transparent with the IAEA and the 
 international community... But the idea that we'll wake up tomorrow and 
 Iran will have a nuclear weapon is an idea that isn't supported by the 
 facts as we have seen them so far."
 
(http://www.boston.com/news/world/europe/articles/2009/09/02/un_nuclear_watc
hdog_says_iran_threat_hyped/)

 On September 30, the Guardian itself reported:

 "The UN's chief weapons inspector, Mohamed ElBaradei, said today he had 
 seen 'no credible evidence' that Iran is developing nuclear weapons, 
 rejecting British intelligence allegations that a weapons programme has 
 been going on for at least four years." (Julian Borger and Richard 
 Norton-Taylor, '"No credible evidence" of Iranian nuclear weapons, says UN 
 inspector,' The Guardian, September 30, 2009)

 On September 16, Newsweek revealed that US intelligence agencies had 
 reported that Iran had "not restarted its nuclear-weapons development 
 program" since the National Intelligence Estimate of November 2007, which 
 stated with "high confidence" that Iran had "halted its nuclear weapons 
 program" in 2003. (Mark Hosenball, 'Intelligence Agencies Say No New Nukes 
 in Iran,' Newsweek, September 16, 2009; http://www.newsweek.com/id/215529)

 On the Guardian's letter's page, John Heawood delivered a powerful 
 counterblast to the Guardian's earlier warmongering:

 "Your editorial (Time to come clean, 26 September) states 'Iran's 
 cat-and-mouse game with nuclear inspectors hands a propaganda victory on a 
 plate to Binyamin Netanyahu, the Israeli premier who has made little 
 secret of his air force's preparations for a long-range strike'.

 "This 'propaganda victory' is easily demolished by relevant facts which 
 you fail to mention. Fact: Israel has not signed the nuclear 
 non-proliferation treaty. Fact: Israel has had nuclear weapons for at 
 least 30 years. Fact: Israel has done and still does its best to conceal 
 the existence of these weapons. Fact: as recently as 18 September Israel 
 refused a request from the IAEA to open its nuclear plants to inspection. 
 Fact: an unprovoked Israeli attack on Iran would be a violation of the UN 
 charter and a war crime. And please don't claim that Iran's as-yet 
 ambiguous nuclear activities are a provocation. What Israel most fears 
 from Iran is not a nuclear threat to its territory, but a nuclear threat 
 to its own nuclear domination.

 "That western powers dangerously demonise Iran is one tragedy. That 
 newspapers uncritically imitate them is a worse one." (Heawood, Letters, 
 'Nuclear nightmare in the Middle East,' The Guardian, September 29, 2009)


 Nearing The End Game (Again)

 Like an endlessly nagging child, the Telegraph continued its push for war 
 with Iran:

 "We are nearing the endgame of diplomacy towards Iran... If the Kremlin 
 vetoes or dilutes a sanctions resolution, this will make a peaceful 
 resolution of the confrontation with Iran far less likely, and shorten the 
 odds on a war in the Middle East next year." (Leading article, 'Obama is 
 gambling with Europe's security,' The Daily Telegraph, September 19, 2009)

 Nothing new here. On the February 12, 2007 edition of the BBC's Newsnight 
 programme, the Telegraph's Con Coughlin declared that military action with 
 Iran was looming now that "diplomacy is almost at an end". A year earlier, 
 in 2006, Gerard Baker wrote in the Times:

 "The unimaginable but ultimately inescapable truth is that we are going to 
 have to get ready for war with Iran." (Baker, 'Prepare yourself for the 
 unthinkable: war against Iran may be a necessity,' The Times, January 27, 
 2006)

 The Telegraph added this week:

 "Sanctions are already hurting a country whose Achilles' heel is its 
 economy but they have not curbed its nuclear ambitions. That is why the 
 military option, the destruction of vital links in the production chain, 
 must remain on the table. The risks of a strike are considerable, but so 
 is the shattering of the non-proliferation regime through Iranian 
 defiance." (Leading article, 'Iran ups the ante,' The Daily Telegraph, 
 September 28, 2009)

 Again, not a word about Israel's "shattering of the non-proliferation 
 regime," or about its "defiance" 10 days earlier in flatly refusing to 
 cooperate with the IAEA resolution. On the same day that the Telegraph 
 discussed the "risks of a strike" - it meant risks to 'us' - a BBC news 
 report reminded of the risks to 'them'.

 "At least 13 people have been killed in a series of bomb attacks across 
 Iraq, local officials say. A lorry with explosives blew up at a police 
 station near the central city of Ramadi, killing seven policemen. In 
 southern Iraq, a bomb planted on a bus killed three people in the province 
 of Qadisiya. In Baghdad, a series of bombs killed at least three people." 
 (http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/middle_east/8279056.stm)

 It is indeed with a sense of wonder, verging on awe, that we witness the 
 same media performing the near-identical war dance on Iran that they 
 performed on Iraq just seven years ago. To us it seems like yesterday - 
 the sense of madness is fresh in our minds. When Obama acts the stern 
 father in demanding: "Iran must comply with United Nations resolutions," 
 he is repeating, with the alteration of but a single letter, the same 
 sentence in the same tone used by George Bush and Tony Blair on Iraq.

 In 2007, Paul Krugman wrote of Iran in the New York Times:

 "But let's have some perspective, please: we're talking about a country 
 with roughly the G.D.P. of Connecticut, and a government whose military 
 budget is roughly the same as Sweden's." (Krugman, 'Fearing Fear Itself,' 
 New York Times, October 29, 2007)

 The lunacy of the current propaganda campaign against Iran is bad enough. 
 The fact that it comes so soon after the lies on Iraq - every last one of 
 them now exposed for all to see - makes it far worse. But it is taken to 
 an altogether different level by the fact that the last set of concocted 
 threats has resulted in the devastation of an entire country, with over 
 one million killed and four million made refugees (they are still out 
 there, although not for the mainstream media). The icing on this 
 malevolent cake is that there is next to no reference to these horrors in 
 the latest media propaganda campaign. There is no sense that journalists 
 recognise the consequences of what they helped make happen in Iraq. There 
 is no sense that they feel even a tiny tug of horror at the prospect of 
 repeating the same catastrophe in Iran.

 As Noam Chomsky has observed, it is not that they want to cause harm; they 
 simply step on Third World people the way they might step on ants. It is 
 perhaps best described as a kind of speciesism, rather than racism.

 Journalists who rightly dismiss out of hand the idea that some cosmic 
 father figure is guiding the universe, or that some saviour (unaccountably 
 delayed for 2,000 years) is on his way, are reduced to childish 
 gullibility by the presence of a black man with a gift for public speaking 
 in the White House. What level of social insanity is it that persuades 
 people to imagine that a single individual has the power to undo what 
 centuries of entrenched, organised and determined vested interests (that 
 have not gone away) have put in place? A rare and admirable note of 
 realism was sounded by a group of academics on the Guardian's letter's 
 page:

 "Though Obama's leadership has enhanced America's image, as yet there has 
 been no major change from the policies and outcomes of the Bush years. Yet 
 the Obama presidency is still reported in the mainstream media as a happy 
 departure from the 'disastrous Dubya'...

 "Obama presents himself as the 'un-Bush'. But when you look at substance, 
 rather than style and rhetoric, and the structural constraints on 
 presidential power, you can legitimately question the extent of his 
 ability to change US policies. We call for a richer and better informed 
 debate on US policy abroad. We need to end this unhealthy obsession with 
 personalities and look properly at the issues - an admittedly difficult 
 task given the supremely gifted and charismatic president now in office.

 "Journalists must be more forthright about the multibillion-dollar 
 Pentagon budget, the massive numbers of US military bases around the 
 world, the sheer scale of the US national security state." (Professor 
 Inderjeet Parmar University of Manchester, Dr Mark Ledwidge University of 
 Manchester, Professor Rob Singh Birkbeck College, Dr Tim Lynch Institute 
 for the Study of the Americas, Letters, The Guardian, September 18, 2009;
 
http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2009/sep/18/us-foreign-policy-obama-afghanis
tan)

 Grow up, in other words, and wake up! But the media cannot do either 
 because it is closer to a corporate machine than a human being. It is a 
 product of power and reflects the needs of power. Because the needs of 
 power remain essentially the same over long periods of time, media 
 performance follows the same themes with eerie consistency. A key focus, 
 unchanging for the past 60 years, is that there must be a threatening 
 enemy to fear, hate, and if necessary destroy.


 SUGGESTED ACTION

 The goal of Media Lens is to promote rationality, compassion and respect 
 for others. If you do write to journalists, we strongly urge you to 
 maintain a polite, non-aggressive and non-abusive tone.

 Write to Simon Tisdall
 Email: [email protected]

 Alan Rusbridger, Guardian editor
 Email: [email protected]

 Siobhain Butterworth, Guardian readers' editor
 Email: [email protected]

 Please also send a copy of your emails to us
 Email: [email protected]

 Please do NOT reply to the email address from which this media alert 
 originated. Please instead email us:

 Email: [email protected]

 This media alert will shortly be archived here:
 http://www.medialens.org/alerts/09/091001_iran_the_war.php

 A new Media Lens book, 'NEWSPEAK in the 21st Century,' by David Edwards 
 and David Cromwell has just been published by Pluto Press. John Pilger 
 writes of the book:

 "Not since Orwell and Chomsky has perceived reality been so skilfully 
 revealed in the cause of truth."

 Please consider supporting our work at Media Lens: 
 http://www.medialens.org/donate

 Please visit the Media Lens website: http://www.medialens.org

 We have a lively and informative message board:
 http://www.medialens.org/board

 If you wish to unsubscribe please click on the link below:
 
http://www.medialens.org/cgi-bin/cgiwrap/medialens/mailproc/register.cgi?un=
7li0e5gEOXMq

 If you forward the alert, please remove this link; otherwise someone may 
 unsubscribe you.



 
*** exposing the hidden truth for further educational research only ***
CAVEAT LECTOR *** In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, this
material is distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior
interest in receiving the included information for research and educational
purposes. NOTE: Some links may require cut and paste into your Internet
Browser. Please check for daily real news posts and support the truth!
(sorry but don't have time to email all posts) at http://tinyurl.com/33c9yr
or  http://groups.google.com/group/total_truth_sciences/topics?gvc=2  ; You
can also subscribe to the multiple daily emails by sending  an email to
[email protected] ; free book download:
http://www.lulu.com/content/165077  *** Revealing the hidden Truth For
Educational & Further Research Purposes only. ***  NOTICE: Due to
Presidential Executive Orders, the National Security Agency (NSA) may have
read emails without warning, warrant, or notice. They may do this without
any judicial or legislative oversight. You have no recourse, nor
protection.......... IF anyone other than the addressee of this e-mail is
reading it, you are in violation of the 1st & 4th Amendments to the
Constitution of the United States. Patriot Act 5 & H.R. 1955 Disclaimer
Notice: This post & all my past & future posts represent parody & satire &
are all intended for entertainment and amusement only. To be removed from
the weekly list, please reply with the subject line "REMOVE"




 




--~--~---------~--~----~------------~-------~--~----~
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"total_truth_sciences" group.
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to 
[email protected]
For more options, visit this group at 
http://groups.google.com/group/total_truth_sciences
-~----------~----~----~----~------~----~------~--~---

Reply via email to