Ascend, Evolve, Expand.....: slaughter...pure and simple    
 slaughter...pure and simple8 comments
30 Apr 2004 @ 10:46, by Sandi Hunter

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


April 22, 2004

MEDIA ALERT: CRUSHING FALLUJA – PART 2


Target Rich Slums

Sniping specialists say of Falluja that there may not have been such a “target rich” battlefield for that kind of killing since the World War II battle for Stalingrad. The Los Angeles Times reports that US snipers have been killing hundreds of insurgents:

“Sometimes a guy will go down, and I'll let him scream a bit to destroy the morale of his buddies,” a Marine corporal said, “then I'll use a second shot.” (‘For Marine snipers, war is up close and personal’, Tony Perry, Los Angeles Times, April 19, 2004)

In nearly two weeks of conflict in Falluja, the unnamed corporal has emerged as the top sniper, with 24 confirmed kills. By comparison, the top Marine Corps sniper in Vietnam killed 103 people in 16 months. ”I couldn't have asked to be in a better place,” the corporal said. “I just got lucky: to be here at the right time and with the right training."

Others have been less fortunate. As ever, dissident Jo Wilding is all but alone in providing some of the missing detail:

“In the street there’s a man, face down, in a white dishdasha, a small red stain on his back. As we roll him on to the stretcher, my colleague Dave’s hand goes through his chest, through the cavity left by the bullet that entered so neatly through his back and blew his heart out. There’s no weapon in his hand. When we arrive, his sons come out, crying, shouting. ‘He was unarmed,’ they scream. ‘He just went out the gate and they shot him.’ None of them has dared come out since. Nobody had dared come to get his body, horrified, terrified, forced to violate the traditions of treating the body immediately... The people seem to pour out of the houses now in the hope we can escort them safely out of the line of fire, kids, women, men anxiously asking us whether they can all go, or only the women and children.” (Wilding, ‘Eyewitness in Fallujah’, Sunday Herald, April 18, 2004. See also :http://www.wildfirejo.blogspot.com")

The truth of this bloodbath has not been told by our media. The tone says it all: US “contracted civilians”, in fact mercenaries, were “horribly butchered” by insurgents in Falluja while Iraqi civilians were merely “killed” or “caught in crossfire” (ITN Lunchtime News, April 7-10). The taking of Western hostages was “horrific”, “one of the dirtiest tactics of war”, ITN reported – the US devastation of Falluja was “fierce fighting”. The media's heavy emphasis on the taking of hostages suggested that even the threat of Westerners dying was considered more important than the actual deaths of Iraqis.

David Aaronovitch, sometime "stand up kinda guy" for Iraqi human rights, was unmoved, writing blandly in the Observer of "the partial chaos of the last fortnight". Blair's refusal to condemn US actions in Falluja was only "disappointing". (‘It's diplomacy, actually’, The Observer, April 18, 2004)

The Independent’s Johann Hari had nothing to say himself on the atrocity, choosing instead to quote a young Iraqi living in London who described US actions as “wildly provocative and wrong". (Hari, ‘Suddenly, all those accumulated doubts hit me. Was I wrong about the war in Iraq?’, The Independent, April 14, 2004)

Hari again quotes polls, this time suggesting “56 per cent of Iraqis say their lives are better than before the war”. Still, no one has thought to ask Iraqis if their lives are better now than before the West began demolishing their country with sanctions in 1990 and war in 1991. Referring to the 1980s, a December 1999 report by the International Committee of the Red Cross noted:

"Iraq boasted one of the most modern infrastructures and highest standards of living in the Middle East", with a "modern, complex health care system" and "sophisticated water-treatment and pumping facilities." (ICRC, 'Iraq: A Decade of Sanctions', December 1999)

According to an Economist Intelligence Unit Country Report, prior to the imposition of sanctions the Iraqi welfare state was "among the most comprehensive and generous in the Arab world". (‘Iraq: Country Report 1995-96’)

Unbeknownst to pollsters, it seems, this was all changed by the 88,500 tons of bombs of Desert Storm, and more than a decade of vicious sanctions.


Some People Just Do Not Matter

It is easy to be fooled by the constant political and media invocations of the Nazi menace - official enemies like Saddam, Qadaffi, Milosevic and Castro are reflexively demonised as "New Hitlers" by Western propaganda. The most appalling feature of Nazi ideology, of course, was the notion of "Untermenschen" - racially or socially inferior groups who do not matter except insofar as they are an obstacle to the progress of the 'higher races'.

Ironically, it could not be clearer from political and media indifference to our Third World victims, that some similar idea - rooted in realpolitik rather than racism - remains deeply entrenched in the Western psyche.

One day after 271 people were massacred in a series of bomb attacks in the Iraqi cities of Kerbala and Baghdad on March 2, the BBC’s News at Six devoted less than 10 seconds to the atrocity. ITN’s 6:30 news did better spending 2 minutes on the attacks. In the same broadcast, more than twice as long, five minutes, was devoted to taped interviews with the late Diana Princess of Wales.

Two days later, the worst slaughter in Iraq since the toppling of Saddam had disappeared from both news channels.

By contrast, the killing of 200 people in Madrid received continuous, impassioned coverage for more than two weeks. On March 12, forgetting the even greater horrors in Iraq just days earlier, ITN’s Bill Neely described the Madrid attacks as “the worst terrorist atrocity since September 11”.

Two days after the Iraq attacks, a Guardian editorial was coolly pragmatic:

“The Shia cleric Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani has deflected popular outrage by blaming the American occupiers for the lack of security in Kerbala. But his real message was to cool it and remain united - and so far the Shias are doing just that.” (‘Protect and survive’, Leader, The Guardian, March 4, 2004)

Compare the tone with a leader in the same paper just eight days later:

“It was like a modern version of the gruesome wartime images painted by Goya. A Spanish commuter train torn apart. A headless body lying on its front. A three-year-old child burned from head to foot. Amputated legs and arms scattered on station platforms, pieces of human flesh on the road, mobile phones bleeping on the bodies carted off, the injured weeping helplessly on the pavement...” (‘To die in Madrid’, Leader, The Guardian, March 12, 2004)

There was nothing remotely as impassioned and empathetic as this in response to the even greater atrocities in Baghdad and Kerbala. The Independent’s responses were along similar lines.

In the early evening of March 28, 2003, reports flooded around the world of the killing of 55 (actually 62) civilians in the al-Shula district of Baghdad by a US bomb. Hours later, the BBC’s Newsnight's coverage of the atrocity consisted of a 45-second report by David Sells 16 minutes into the programme - an average of less than one second per death.

We asked Newsnight editor, George Entwistle, about the 45 seconds: "As a current affairs programme we lead on a news story where we think we can add analytical value; i.e., can we take it on? We didn't feel we could add anything", he said. (Interview with David Edwards, March 31, 2003)

Imagine if the 55 reported killed had been British or American civilians.

Other examples abound. The world fell apart when 3,000 people died on September 11, 2001. No one blinked an eye when aid agencies warned that even the threat of bombing imperilled 7.5 million starving Afghans as winter approached, and when US bombing subsequently claimed more than 3,000 civilian lives. In January 2002, the American media analyst, Edward Herman, reported that the first US combat casualty in Afghanistan had received more coverage in the US media than all Afghan casualties combined.

The German ambassador to the Sudan estimated that, deprived of life-saving medicines, "several tens of thousands" of Sudanese had died as a result of Clinton's cruise missile attack on the Al-Shifa pharmaceutical factory in August 1998. Our media knew little and cared less. (Quoted, Noam Chomsky, Hegemony or Survival, Routledge, 2003, p.206)

In 1979, when killing by the West's Indonesian allies in East Timor was reaching genocidal levels, there was not one mainstream press article in the New York Times or the Washington Post on the crisis. Amy Goodman reports:

"ABC, NBC and CBS 'Evening News' never mentioned the words East Timor and neither did 'Nightline' or 'MacNeil Lehrer' between 1975, the day of the invasion, except for one comment by Walter Cronkite the day after, saying Indonesia had invaded East Timor - it was a 40 second report - until November 12, 1991." (Amy Goodman, 'Exception to the Rulers, Part II', Z Magazine, December 1997)

Most recently, the democratically elected president of Haiti was forced out of the country by a combination of armed thugs and US agents. The media shrugged. They're shrugging still as Aristide's supporters are "brutalised, taken away in custody, disappeared, detained, and killed by illegal forces", while living "on the brink of starvation and in absolute poverty", according to the US National Lawyers Guild. [link]

Returning from Haiti, Attorney Tom Griffin reports (April 12) "hundreds of corpses" dumped by morgues, bodies coming in with "plastic bags over their heads and hands tied behind their backs, piles of corpses burning in fields and pigs eating their flesh". [link]

Who, in our morally crusading media, could give a damn?

On April 11, the Daily Telegraph reported great unease among senior British army commanders in Iraq at the "heavy-handed and disproportionate" military tactics used by US forces, who view Iraqis "as untermenschen. They are not concerned about the Iraqi loss of life... their attitude toward the Iraqis is tragic, it is awful." (‘US tactics condemned by British officers’, Sean Rayment, Defence Correspondent, Daily Telegraph, April 11, 2004)

But it is not exceptional. It is the truth, and has always been the truth, of the West's monstrous disregard for the people of Iraq.



SUGGESTED ACTION

The goal of Media Lens is to promote rationality, compassion and respect for others. In writing letters to journalists, we strongly urge readers to maintain a polite, non-aggressive and non-abusive tone.

Write to:

David Aaronovitch:
Email: David.Aaronovitch@guardian.co.uk

Johann Hari
Email: j.hari@independent.co.uk

Richard Sambrook, the BBC's director of news:
Email: richard.sambrook@bbc.co.uk

Simon Kelner, editor of the Independent:
Email: s.kelner@independent.co.uk

Roger Alton, editor of the Observer:
Email: roger.alton@observer.co.uk

Alan Rusbridger, editor of the Guardian:
Email: alan.rusbridger@guardian.co.uk

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Email: ian.mayes@guardian.co.uk

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8 comments

30 Apr 2004 @ 16:51 by sharie : Falluja
What was so important in Falluja that boys with guns should be there killing defenseless human beings?  


1 May 2004 @ 20:45 by istvan : US the degenerate cowboy country.
Shock new details of torture by US troops
· Report tells how prisoners were threatened with rape
· Six British soldiers may be arrested over abuse claims

Peter Beaumont, Kamal Ahmed and Chris Stephens
"Sunday May 2, 2004
The Observer

Chilling new evidence of the torture and sexual abuse of Iraqi prisoners by American soldiers emerged last night in a secret report accusing the US army leadership of failings at the highest levels.

Detainees were subjected to 'sadistic, blatant and wanton criminal abuses', according to a military investigation suggesting that last week's photographs of US soldiers humiliating their naked captives may only have been the tip of the iceberg.

It comes amid reports that six British soldiers may shortly be arrested over claims that they too mistreated detainees. Soldiers from the Queen's Lancashire Regiment are understood to have been questioned in Cyprus after the publication yesterday of shocking photographs purporting to show a prisoner being beaten, kicked and urinated on while in the regiment's custody.

Legal experts warned last night that British soldiers could face war crimes trials if the allegations are proven, or if they are not exhaustively investigated.

The revelations can only increase already widespread anger at coalition forces' handling of the volatile situation in Iraq, where yesterday a foreign security guard was killed and three others wounded by a roadside bomb in the northern city of Mosul.

According to the American report, written for army chiefs by Major General Antonio Taguba, detainees at the Abu Ghraib prison near Baghdad were threatened with rape, beaten with a broom handle and a chair, and had the phosphoric liquid from chemical lights poured over them. One detainee is said to have been sodomised with an object, while military working dogs were used to intimidate detainees.

The 53-page report, obtained by New Yorker reporter Seymour Hersh, details how the US army abdicated responsibility for prisoners to military intelligence units and civilian contractors.

Whitehall sources had privately hoped that British forces, with fewer relatively untrained reservists than the Americans, would prove more disciplined. But the publication of photographs in yesterday's Daily Mirror, apparently showing the violent humiliation of an Iraqi arrested for theft in the British-administered sector, have dealt an appalling blow both to the battle for hearts and minds in Iraq and to army morale.

Yesterday Tony Blair condemned abuse by coalition forces as completely unacceptable, adding: 'I think anyone would be sickened by any thought that coalition troops had abused Iraqi prisoners.'

General Sir Michael Jackson, the army's highest-ranking officer, called the alleged incidents 'shameful'. They are still being investigated by the Royal Military Police - which must first ascertain that the photographs are genuine, not carefully staged fakes. Last night the Ministry of Defence described as 'speculation' claims of imminent arrests.

If true, the allegations could mean serious criminal consequences for Britain, which, unlike the United States, has signed up to the new International Criminal Court. It has the power to launch war crimes charges of its own against authorities including the commander-in-chief - the Prime Minister - if necessary.

'If they don't investigate it properly, it will go up the chain of command. Everyone is going to be watching this case very closely,' said John Jones, co-author of International Criminal Practice.

Last week's torture allegations have drawn international condemnation, with members of the Iraqi Governing Council (IGC) - widely considered 'stooges' for the coalition by Iraqis - joining the chorus of criticism.

Dara Nor al-Din, a former judge, said the alleged acts contradicted basic human rights: 'We used to criticise Saddam's regime regarding the beating of detained peo ple, so why should we accept to repeat the same tragedy?'

While Washington has tried to portray the scandal as an isolated incident, The Observer has also heard of complaints that torture was carried out at other US facilities including Camp Cropper, a holding area for detainees close to Baghdad's airport.

Last night there were growing signs that Britain is preparing to send more troops to Iraq to help replace the 1,300 withdrawn Spanish soldiers. Defence officials suggested a new deployment was likely, while the defence Minister Adam Ingram told the BBC's Radio that reinforcements 'clearly had to be considered given the fact that there is a changed situation'.

Senior military sources have told The Observer there has to be a concerted push to get a new UN resolution on Iraq's future.


Guardian Unlimited © Guardian Newspapers Limited 2004"

Notice! how people seem to be more upset about degenerate deviates than those pathogenic soldiers who join the military for the license to kill and have great fun doing it.
Also interesting to note, thre may now be two Michael Jacksons in trouble:(paragraph 10)
"General Sir Michael Jackson, the army's highest-ranking officer, called the alleged incidents 'shameful'. They are still being investigated by the Royal Military Police - which must first ascertain that the photographs are genuine, not carefully staged fakes. Last night the Ministry of Defence described as 'speculation' claims of imminent arrests."  



1 May 2004 @ 23:31 by spells : Thanks Sharie and Istvan.....
Thanks Istvan, great article...it doesn't surprise me though. You did make me laugh with your statement about Michael Jackson.

I just helped my daughter with a paper in which she answers how society has changed over the last few decades. She wanted to compare the holocaust to now. And the final conclusion? Nothing has changed....The treatments and/or attitudes the Nazi's used on Jewish people during WW2 can also be witnessed today by British and American soldiers in Iraq and Israeli's to Palestinians. So much info of this sort was easily found and with the comparisons made to Nazi Germany included in articles.

So again I ask....when do we take responsibility and learn something?  



2 May 2004 @ 07:31 by spiritseek : Hiding the truth..
the reason I believe our government hides the truth about whats going on in Iraq is to keep morale high and the families here in the dark as to not cause panic and detest for the war but we need to rise up and say no more. I'm ashamed of my government which is only for the rich to get richer, but I am more disgusted at the idea that a life means nothing to these evil doers. They are nothing but murderers given free reign to do their killings and feed their addictions. WAKE UP WORLD!  


2 May 2004 @ 08:12 by istvan : Keep on asking Spells!
Someday it might dawn upon us that there really is more to life than chatting,enlollment and self imrovement. Syncronisation of the finer qualities of the Human spirit will win for those who will be around.  


4 May 2004 @ 14:06 by sharie : They're not *my* government.
They disgust me. Bush and Cheney were *not* elected to the White House. It's called treason, it's called mass murder, it's called robbery, there's lots of names for it... "government" is not one of them.  


5 May 2004 @ 06:55 by spells : Not my government either...
I agree Sharie and may I add that lately I have sadly thought, "it is not my species", the human species that is. The species I belong to would look seriously at the world situation and take responsiblity. Humans are the highest form of intellegence on this planet, but they abuse it and only do harm (in the big picture).

I was watching seals on rocks the other day and thought they are more intellegent and advanced than humans. Why? They live and know how to "be". They don't follow arbitrary belief systems or take sides or destroy nature. Human have abused their place on earth, and now they say well that is "your truth". No, it is not "my truth", it is The Truth that can be backed up by volumes of information and is shown daily by our actions and the unprogressiveness of the human race. But, humans will keep going as they are, and when there are no natural resources left, or wars destroy everything, or there is no clean water, or no monetary system to succeed in etc etc etc, then we will see "whose truth" will matter. Sadly, the earth consciousness will be relieved and grateful when there are fewer humans around to destroy it and treat it as their "possession", to be used up and thrown away.

We could have been glorious, we have/had such high potential, but as long as only symptoms are addressed (and not seriously), we will only keep going in the direction we are....towards de-evolution and destruction.  



5 May 2004 @ 16:59 by vaxen : yeah,,,
not my government sums it up. thanks all for the enlightening discourse.  


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Other entries in
16 Nov 2007 @ 22:50: Finally someone speaks out......
23 Jun 2007 @ 20:33: The lies that kill and wound.....
26 Oct 2006 @ 19:34: Support Our Troops!!!
18 Aug 2006 @ 18:27: free of suffering
3 Aug 2006 @ 18:54: more positive reasons
28 Jul 2006 @ 00:39: Declassified archives....
21 Jul 2006 @ 19:26: The real aims.....
18 May 2005 @ 15:38: The Reality Beyond Your Denial....
16 May 2005 @ 21:36: They Said It Couldn’t Happen Here
15 Apr 2005 @ 00:52: Leaving the World Behind


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