Hang Times: A Whitewash of White House Complicity
by Chris Floyd
by Chris Floyd
DIGG THIS
People often
write to Empire Burlesque in search of an answer to one of the great
conundrums of these modern times, namely: "Why are the American
people such suckers? How could they or, to be more exact,
how could a significant number of them ever have fallen for
the transparent bullshit of such third-rate goobers as Bush, Cheney,
Rumsfeld and all the rest? How could the American people be so ignorant
and misinformed about what goes on in the world? How can they be
so ignorant and misinformed of their own history, of the dirty deals
done in their names for years on end? How can this be?"
Good
folk, look no further, for we do indeed have the answer here. If
you want to know precisely how the American people are kept deliberately
ignorant, simply click on the link to this story in the nation's
"newspaper of record," the journal which sets the standard
for and largely determines the news agenda of the American press:
The
Defiant Despot Oppressed Iraq for More than 30 Years. There,
in the stately pages of the New York Times, you will find
some 5,200 words written by Neil MacFarquhar detailing the rise,
reign and fall of the Iraqi dictator. You will thrill to the usual
gory details of torture, murder and savagery; you will tut at the
violent barbarism of the rural riff-raff who got so far above his
raising; you will snarl with condemnation at the mad aggressor who
launched "continual wars" in the region, as the diligent
scribe informs us.
[The actual
total number of wars launched by Saddam Hussein was, er, two: the
same number launched by George W. Bush if, that is, you don't
count the never-ending, ever-expanding, great googily-moogily "Global
War on Terror and Extremists and Radicals," in which case,
Bush's "continual wars" far exceed the two conflicts instigated
by Saddam one of which was overtly approved by Reagan Administration,
the other tacitly approved by the Bush I administration.]
But what you
will not find is any detail or examination whatsoever of the
prominent, direct and continuing role the United States government
played
in bringing Saddam to power, maintaining him in office, underwriting
his tyranny, and rewarding his aggression. This decades-long history
beginning
with the CIA's assistance in not one but two coups that first
brought the Baath Party to power then cemented the hold of Saddam's
internal faction on the country through the journey to Baghdad by
the obsequious Donald Rumsfeld who came bearing words of support,
bags of cash and military high-tech for Saddam's chemical weapons
attacks on Iran down to the delivery of money, WMD technology and
other goods of war by
George Herbert Walker Bush up to the very day before Saddam's
long-threatened invasion of Kuwait, which Bush's personal representative
had told the dictator was of no concern to the United States
does not appear in McFarquhar's mountain of prose.

You'll find
damning reference to Saddam's gas attack on Iraqi Kurds during the
Reagan-Bush-supported war with Iran; but you will find not a single
word of how the Bush I administration, which included Powell and
Cheney, fought hard to kill off Congressional condemnation of the
gassing. Nor does McFarquhar see fit to inform the public how
Bush I signed a presidential directive mandating that U.S. government
agencies forge ever-stronger ties with Iraq, despite the caveats
of his own intelligence apparatus. And although McFarquhar finds
space to quote from Saddam's ludicrous novels, he cannot quite squeeze
in any reference to the Congressional investigations and other probes
that revealed how Bush I secretly financed Saddam and, with British
help, secretly supplied him with advanced weaponry through a series
of corporate cut-outs and funneling cash through the bowels of what
the U.S. Senate described as "one of the largest criminal enterprises
in history" (until Junior Bush's gang came along), the Bank
of Credit and Commerce International (BCCI).
But do let's
be fair. The New York Times is not Pravda; it does
not simply engage in the wholesale whitewashing of history in order
to comfort the comfortable and keep the rabble from knowing what
their betters really get up to behind the glowing video screen.
No, its whitewashing is often incomplete; little flecks of partial
truth will occasionally show through. [And to be genuinely fair,
the paper does employ some journalists of genuine courage and merit
on its staff, such as the estimable Carlotta Gall, whose reports
from Afghanistan have done much to reveal the ugly realities behind
that "good" and forgotten war.]
And so it is
with McFarquhar's piece. For it is not entirely accurate to say
that he does not mention U.S. support for Saddam anywhere in the
story. In a bold act of speaking truth to power, the fearless McFarquhar
devotes one whole sentence of 47 words to what he calls the American
"tipping" toward Saddam in his war with Iran. Of course,
the phrase comes some 2,278 words into the piece, by which time
it's likely that very few people would still be plowing through
his prose might be too strong a word; let's just call it
his cud-like assemblage of well-chewed conventional wisdom. Here
is the buried phrase entire:
The fear
that an Islamic revolution would spread to an oil producer with
estimated reserves second only to Saudi Arabia tipped the United
States and its allies toward Baghdad and they provided weapons,
technology and, most important, secret satellite images of Irans
military positions and intercepted communications.
[Because lord
knows, we wouldn't want Iraq and its oil reserves given over to
Islamic sectarians tied to Iran, now would we? Perish the thought!]
That's all
McFarquhar has to say on this embarrassing subject. But credit where
it's due: he did say something. Pravda never would have done that.
There is simply
no way to understand the reign of Saddam Hussein, nor the past few
decades of Iraq's history, without including the very real and important
role that the United States has played in shaping these realities.
The reason that tens of thousands of American soldiers have been
killed and maimed and that hundreds of thousands of innocent
Iraqis have been slaughtered, and millions more plunged into hellish
suffering is because this history has been buried, perverted,
ignored or forgotten. And one of the main engines of this deliberately
induced national amnesia is the New York Times and its fellow media
mandarins.
January
1, 2007
Chris
Floyd [send him mail]
is the author of Empire
Burlesque: The Secret History of the Bush Regime.
Copyright
© 2007 Chris Floyd
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