November 24, 2005
The
British Daily Mirror newspaper reported
today that, in April 2004, President Bush planned to bomb the
independent Al-Jazeera television network headquarters in US
ally Qatar. Tony Blair reportedly talked him out of it. In case one
doubts this report, the fact that the British government has already
indicted a civil servant for leaking this document confirms its
validity. In typical fashion, the White House press spokesman
Scott McClellan issued one of his typical nondenials in an
e-mail to the Associated Press, writing: "We are not interested in
dignifying something so outlandish and inconceivable with a
response."
In evaluating this report, we
should remember that on April 8, 2003, Al-Jazeera 's office
in Baghdad was bombed by US forces, killing a journalist, Tarek
Ayoub, an event movingly described in the movie Control Room.
This attack was despite the coordinates of the office being given to
US forces, and despite huge markings being placed on the roof. [On
the same day, a US tank slowly aimed and fired in broad daylight on
the Palestine Hotel, killing two journalists.]
The April 8th attack was not the
first or the only time the US attacked Al-Jazeera. In
November 2002 the US destroyed Al-Jazeera ’s office in Kabul,
Afghanistan, with a missile. Fortunately, no one was killed. As
always, the US claimed the attack was an "accident." As the US
launched its "shock and awe" Iraq invasion, it also launched a
propaganda attack on Al-Jazeera. In July 2003, US Deputy
Secretary of Defense Paul Wolfowitz
accused Al-Jazeera of "endangering the lives of American
troops" in Iraq, while in November 2003, US Defense Secretary Donald
Rumsfeld
accused Al-Jazeera of cooperating with Iraqi insurgents.
[When the American press do this, it’s called "embedding."] In
September 2003, the US-appointed Iraqi Governing Council
banned Al-Jazeera [and the Al-Arabiyah station] for two
weeks, and in February 2004 they were banned for a month. Later in
2004, the US/UN appointed Iyad Allawi banned Al-Jazeera from
working in Iraq.
The claim that Al-Jazeera
was pro-Saddam was patently absurd, as was attested to by the fact
that, during the war, the Iraqi Information ministry
banned two Al-Jazeera correspondents, leading the
station to suspend reports from Iraq. The station reiterated their
independent position. As their spokesperson told the
BBC: "We faced lots of things like that before from the
Iraqi Government and from other governments in the Arab region,
because this is a way they think. They think they can impose some
conditions on Al-Jazeera or they think they can change the
reporters, they can put their own criteria on our work."
Given the number of reporters
killed by US fire in Iraq (eight
as of May, 2005), and the systematic refusal of the US to hold
anyone accountable, many have been suspicious that these deaths were
not all accidents. The new report that Bush planned an attack on
Al-Jazeera shows how central the destruction of independent
reporting on the Iraq war was to the American administration. This
new report strengthens suspicions that at least some of the attacks
on media headquarters and deaths of journalists and other media
personnel in Iraq were not accidents. Thus, there is an urgent need
for an independent international investigation into those
journalists killed by US forces in Iraq.
Also needed is an investigation
into other American efforts to avoid independent reporting from
Iraq, such as the
seizure of the main hospital in Fallujah before the US attack in
November 2004, so that doctors there could not report on civilian
deaths. Now that reports on US use of
White Phosphorous as weapons in the attack on that city have
been verified, after a year of US denials, and it has been revealed
that the US also used
thermobaric weapons in that attack -- weapons which have been
compared in their impact by some to tactical nuclear weapons -- we
can understand why the US was so anxious to avoid independent
reporting from that city. Given the extent of attacks on civilians
that have characterized the US invasion and occupation in general,
it is understandable that the US would want to make independent
reporting from Iraq so dangerous that few will attempt it.
We cannot, of course, ignore the
fact that many, perhaps a majority, of deaths of journalists in Iraq
are due to the insurgents. The combined deaths from all sides make
the Iraq the most
deadly for media workers since Vietnam. Unfortunately, neither
side respects the press and its vital functions of shining a
spotlight upon the evils that inevitably accompany war. However,
this fact in no way justifies barbaric or illegal acts committed by
the US government, a government, after all, which claims to have
liberated Iraq from despotism and to be fighting for the creation of
a democratic Iraq. The evidence that suppression of a free press was
a major strategy in this war is yet another nail in the coffin of
the claims that liberating Iraqis had anything to do with US war
aims. A country that enshrines press freedom into its constitution
should not be allowed to suppress the press in other countries with
impunity.
There is another aspect of Bush’s
plan to attack Al-Jazeera that bears commenting upon.
According to
Amnesty International, as they stated after the US bombed an
Iraqi television station during its original attack, "the bombing of
a television station, simply because it is being used for the
purposes of propaganda, cannot be condoned. It is a civilian object,
and thus protected under international humanitarian law." If an
Iraqi station is protected, surely an independent and respected
television network located in a nonbelligerent country could in no
sense be construed as a legitimate war target. Thus, an attack on
the Al-Jazeera headquarters in Qatar would inevitably be a
criminal activity. If the US was seriously considering committing
such a criminal action in a friendly country, there is no reason to
believe that illegality of an activity plays much of a consideration
for US war planners.
If concern for legality is a
minor consideration for US officials, so too is concern for the
truth. Just in the past couple of weeks, the US was revealed to have
lied about its denial of use of White Phosphorous (WP) against
people in Fallujah. It was further found that the US lied when it
said classification of WP as a chemical weapon was ridiculous as the
US had itself so
classified WP when it was Saddam who used it. Also, the last
couple of weeks saw the silly spectacle of the US shedding
crocodile tears for victims of torture in
Iraqi Interior Ministry dungeons while fighting to preserve the
right to itself torture those incarcerated in its various secret
dungeons around the world. We, of course, have the dozens and dozens
of reports of torture throughout Iraq by US forces, all denied until
they cannot any longer be denied, only to be blamed on the
innumerable "few bad apples" that seem to plague unit after unit of
the US occupation forces. Given this systematic pattern of denial,
deceit, and outright lying, we can assume that the US response to
this new report will continue in the same vein as Scott McClellan’s
initial comments.
Wars are always dirty. Those
engaged in war seldom admit the truth about the brutal means they
are using. Those conducting an unpopular occupation are tempted to
use all possible means to suppress those who resist occupation. The
press, to the degree that it functions as an independent force,
serves as one factor providing disincentives to the use of the most
barbarous techniques available. Given the extent to which the
American corporate press has often echoed obviously false US claims
long after their absurdity became apparent, the international press
like Al-Jazeera plays a critical role in limiting US
brutality. By suppressing the press in Iraq, the US has increased
its ability to kill with impunity. Evidence that many tens of
thousands of Iraqi civilians have died at US hands suggest that the
US has actively seized the opportunity.
Stephen Soldz (mailto:ssoldz@bgsp.edu)
is psychoanalyst, public health researcher, and faculty member at
the Institute for the Study of Violence of the
Boston Graduate School of Psychoanalysis. He is a member of
Roslindale Neighbors for Peace and Justice and founder of
Psychoanalysts for Peace and Justice. He maintains the
Iraq Occupation and Resistance Report web page and the
Psyche, Science and Society blog.