A
Dissenting Voice in Middle-East News Coverage?
Joshua
Frank talks with Press TV correspondent Afshin Rattansi
Joshua Frank talks with Press TV
correspondent Afshin Rattansi
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Afshin Rattansi
has for more than a decade worked in broadcast and print media around
the world. In the UK, he has worked at the Guardian, the
New Statesman, for every regional and national outlet of
the BBC. In 1999, he helped to launch the developing world's first
global financial news and current affairs channel. He is currently
a news anchor for Press TV. Rattansi has written six novels including
The
Dream of the Decade – The London Novels. He recently spoke
with Joshua Frank about Press TV.
Joshua Frank:
Afshin, can you tell us a little about Press TV? How long has the
station been on the air?
Afshin Rattansi:
Certainly more than a year. It's an initiative by the Iranian government
to counter some of the more crazy assumptions that other international
channels make about the Middle East. Of course, given the crippling
siege of Gaza at the moment, international media can't even get
into the place so that makes Press TV uniquely able to cover something
that the rest of the world's media seems to have forgotten. The
"narrative," as the fashionable post po-mo word goes, seems
to be that the U.S. made a mistake by invading Iraq rather than
the whole operation being an international war crime.
If Press TV
can redress the balance a bit, it would be good. Also, wars in Africa
are covered on other stations as if they are purely about "black
people fighting each other" just as famines are somehow natural
phenomena. Little is told about the corporate background to conflicts
in a continent in which the positive stories seem to be about animals
and "entrepreneurs" somehow battling, atomistically, against the
tide.
Frank: You
aren't a native of Iran, so how did you get involved with Press
TV?
Rattansi: There
may be some Iranian in me! Afshin is an Iranian name and I think
there is a possibility my roots are from a magician's castle in
Alamut but that's a long story and goes back a thousand years or
so,
But seriously,
I had been at Bloomberg News, hired to revamp things, after my time
at CNN International and Al Jazeera Arabic and, most enlightening
of all, the Today programme at the BBC. The mainstream coverage
in the run-up to the invasion of Iraq was very poor even if Today
and its source, the late David Kelly, tried its best to allow listeners
another view of what the British government was spouting about WMD
in Iraq. It was odd as twenty years ago I was accused of being against
an ally, Saddam Hussein. I had helped make a documentary for Channel
4 in the UK about how Western companies, in particular architectural
firms akin to Albert Speer acolytes, were aiding Saddam.
The
British government didn't like it at all and yet, once I was working
at Today, my colleagues and I were being accused of being apologists
for Saddam because we could tell that the government was lying about
WMD. Blair's people unleashed an onslaught that led to the resignations
of all the most senior staff at the BBC. I left for the Jazeera
Arabic program, Top Secret, which identified the 911 attackers when
Osama bin Laden himself contacted the programme to name the perpetrators.
They would be caught even as we ran the trailers.
Well, after
that story the Qatari Al Jazeera Arabic was chastened as we prepared
for the launch of the English-language channel. As for my attempt
at trying to get Bloomberg to avoid bluster and actually cover what
was well known – the impending financial catastrophe – it ended
in failure. In between, at CNN, coverage of the financial world
was laughable. I remember talking to financial editor, Todd Benjamin
who was nonchalantly cheerleading multinationals without a care
in the world for the house of cards.
It
was in this context, that I was getting worried that the same mistakes
were going to be made all over again, vis-à-vis Iran. For me, the
deaths of more than a million people in Iraq let alone the disastrous
interventions in Afghanistan were axiomatic. Reading Seymour Hersh
had me worried and I still don't know if he was being used. But
Iran was the story. Thankfully, that's died down a little. But going
to Tehran seemed a responsible thing to do.
Frank: Do
you think the mood has changed because of the forthcoming change
in administrations here in the United States? What's the perception
among Iranians about Barack Obama?
Rattansi:
I think the mood hasn't changed at all. Certainly, Hillary Clinton's
appointment as Secretary of State and the possibility of Dennis
Ross and Richard Holbrooke hardly inspires much confidence. Nevertheless,
there was a certain amount of heat generated by the electoral victory
of Barrack Obama.
Frank: How
can people in the US tune in to Press TV, and why do you think it's
important that they should?
Rattansi: Press
TV is available in the U.S. through special servers via the internet
at presstv.com. I think the audience will certainly get a very different
perspective to that on other channels of world events and they may
be surprised to see that many of the people interviewed on the channel
– from Noam Chomsky to Gore Vidal to Amy Goodman – are all American.
Press TV is
available in Europe on Sky Channel 515.
December
10, 2008
Joshua
Frank [send him mail]
is co-editor of Dissident Voice and author of Left
Out! How Liberals Helped Reelect George W. Bush (Common Courage
Press, 2005), and along with Jeffrey St. Clair, the editor of the
new book Red
State Rebels: Tales of Grassroots Resistance in the Heartland,
published by AK Press in June 2008. Check out the new Red
State Rebels.
Copyright
© 2008 LewRockwell.com
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