A
Free Press or a Ministry of Truth?
by
Paul Craig Roberts
by Paul Craig Roberts
DIGG THIS
In his novel
1984,
George Orwell portrayed a future time in which the explanations
of recent events and earlier history are continually changed to
meet Big Brother’s latest purpose. Previous explanations disappear
down "the memory hole."
Sound familiar?
Any American who pays attention can observe the identical phenomenon
occurring in the US today.
Think about
the Bush Regime’s changing explanations for the failed US occupation
of Iraq. Shortly after Bush’s May 2003 announcement of "mission
accomplished," the mission revealed itself to be very much
unaccomplished. Americans were told that the cause of the snafu
was a small Sunni insurgency of two or three thousand at the most
inspired by "die-hard Baath party remnants. Remember the propagandistic
deck of
cards identifying the most wanted down to the less wanted? Americans
were assured that once Saddam Hussein and his relatives and henchmen
were rounded up, our troops would be pelted with the promised flowers
instead of roadside bombs.
When the roundups,
trials, and executions failed to fix the problem, the "die-hard"
explanation disappeared. A new explanation, with no continuity to
the old, took its place.
The new explanation
was that Syria was
allowing foreigners to cross its border into Iraq to commit
jihad against the American troops. This explanation lasted until
it became all too clear, despite the propaganda, that the "foreign
fighters" were remarkably well accepted by, and concealed within,
the Iraqi communities that were suffering all the collateral damage
of the conflict.
When it came
time for the US to create an Iraqi government, it was evident that
it would be one dominated by Shi’ites. Then, for a limited time,
it was permissible to recognize that the insurgency was popularly
based in the Sunnis.
As the insurgency
evolved into what the Iraq
Study Group described as a Sunni-Shi’ite civil war with US troops
unclear on which side they stood, the Bush Regime and the captive
media began blaming Al Qaeda for the escalating violence. Americans
were assured by the Ministry of Truth that there wasn’t a civil
war, just outsiders stirring up conflict. This enabled Big Brother
to deny that there was a civil war and to revive fear of terrorist
attacks in the US and UK, the new Oceania.
The Al Qaeda
explanation was soon discarded into the memory hole. The explanation
implied that Oceania’s invasion of Iraq had greatly expanded the
ranks and strength of Al Qaeda, thus contradicting Big Brother’s
claim that his war in Iraq was making Oceanians safe by stamping
out terrorism. The Al Qaeda explanation had to depart for another
reason as well. Cheney, Israel, and the neocons, the rulers of the
new Oceania, plan
to attack Iran, and so the insurgency in Iraq is now being blamed
on Iran.
The Ministry
of Truth has accommodated the latest explanation, just as it did
all others before, without remarking on the funeral of the previous
explanation. All of a sudden, a new explanation appears and is repeated
until it, too, goes down the memory hole.
The American
and British media work the same way as the Ministry of Truth in
Oceania. A day arrives when the "truth" no longer serves
the empire or hegemonic power or center of moral purpose in the
world, or for short, the regime. When that day arrives, a new explanation
appears and is repeated until it, too, is discarded down the memory
hole.
In recent weeks
Americans have been fed a series of reports from official sources
that Iran is arming both Iraqi insurgents and the Taliban in Afghanistan.
Experts, both within the government and without, who have been made
more attentive by the Bush Regime’s false charges of Iraqi weapons
of mass destruction, have disputed the news reports.
But the reports
keep on coming. As I write, the
latest story is that the US military "discovered a field
of rocket launchers near a US army base south of Baghdad armed with
34 Iranian-made missiles." Can you imagine? The insurgents
went to the trouble of lugging powerful missiles within striking
distance of a US base and just left them there unfired to be discovered
by the Americans. To further serve Cheney’s plan to attack Iran,
the media report states: "Earlier this month, US commanders
stepped up the charges [against Iran], claiming that senior leaders
of Iran’s special forces and of the Lebanese Shiite Hezbollah militia
have trained Iraqi fighters and provided other support."
Notice that
none of the explanations fed to Americans over the years have ever
mentioned, even as a faint possibility, that the US invasion and
occupation of Iraq might be the cause of the violence in Iraq.
Allegedly,
the US is a free and open country with a free press and a government
accountable to the people. Yet, the information fed to the American
people is as thoroughly false as that fed to the citizens of Oceania
by Big Brother through the Ministry of Truth in Orwell’s famous
novel.
In
Orwell’s novel, despite the totalitarian power of the government,
nothing happens to people as long as they accept the government’s
intrusive monitoring of their lives and do not become interested
in truth or facts. In such a world, truth and individuality pass
out of human consciousness and become unimportant. Citizens survive
by accepting Big Brother’s ever-changing reality.
This
is what the mainstream media in the US and UK are enabling the new
Oceania to accomplish. It is pointless to complain about a few Judith
Millers here and there at the New York Times, or the obvious
warmongers at the Weekly Standard, Fox "News,"
and Wall Street Journal editorial page. The entire corporate
media is behaving as a Ministry of Truth.
July
18, 2007
Paul
Craig Roberts [send
him mail] wrote the Kemp-Roth bill and was Assistant Secretary
of the Treasury in the Reagan administration. He was Associate Editor
of the Wall
Street Journal
editorial page and Contributing Editor of National
Review. He
is author or coauthor of eight books, including The
Supply-Side Revolution
(Harvard University Press). He has held numerous academic appointments,
including the William E. Simon Chair in Political Economy, Center
for Strategic and International Studies, Georgetown University and
Senior Research Fellow, Hoover Institution, Stanford University.
He has contributed to numerous scholarly journals and testified
before Congress on 30 occasions. He has been awarded the U.S. Treasury's
Meritorious Service Award and the French Legion of Honor. He was
a reviewer for the Journal
of Political Economy
under editor Robert Mundell. He
is the co-author of The
Tyranny of Good Intentions.
He is also coauthor with Karen Araujo of Chile: Dos Visiones
– La Era Allende-Pinochet (Santiago: Universidad Andres Bello,
2000).
Copyright
© 2007 Creators Syndicate
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