Whitewash and Cover-Up, UK-style
by
Richard Wall
by Richard Wall
Anyone
who values the search for truth and defends liberty should rightly
be incensed, as I am, by the crafty manipulation, the abject amoralism
and the cynical disregard for human decency which government office-holders
and officials have put into fine-tuning the recently-published conclusions
of the Hutton inquiry, culminating in the last-minute leak of the
report to a newspaper sympathetic to the government.
Perhaps
it is a waste of energy to get worked up about what is in the end
a dance to the music of the spinmeisters in the corridors of power,
but there are moments when righteous indignation needs to be expressed,
and this is one of them.
Lord
Hutton’s ostensible brief was to examine, as an impartial and hitherto
respected judge, the circumstances surrounding the death, in July
2003, of chemical weapons expert and microbiologist Dr. David Kelly
– a suspicious
and premature death which the government and the press had swiftly
labelled a suicide.
His
report in fact does nothing of the sort. Most fundamentally,
it begins by accepting the government version of events, namely
that Kelly committed suicide. From that dubious starting-point,
which is at least as unproven as any plausible alternative explanation
(such as murder), the rest is a combination of careful, selective
omission of evidence submitted to the inquiry and a liberal application
of whitewash. Office-holders and servants of the British government
who are still alive are exonerated in their handling of the affair,
but not the dead public servant David Kelly himself, who was employed
by the UK Ministry of Defence (i.e., War), nor his messenger, reporter
Andrew Gilligan, nor Gilligan’s bosses at the BBC, who are censured
for effectively failing to meet, as Peter Oborne writes, "impossibly
high thresholds for checking information."
Top
bosses at the BBC, including popular director-general
Greg
Dyke, have done the honourable thing and
resigned, prompting media hyperbole to the effect that the BBC faces
its "biggest ever crisis" and talk of a mortal threat
to "the last great open platform for hard
investigative reporting."
Even
if it does have some excellent programming and indeed, on occasion,
some excellent hard investigative reporting, the BBC is not an open,
independent platform. It is a state broadcasting company which has
carefully cultivated an image of impartiality and objective reporting,
but in fact it is owned and controlled by the government and funded
by taxpayers’ money. This means that it has generally always been
submissive to the government of the day, and broadly speaking has
tended to pursue a liberal-managerial and politically correct line.
A great deal of effective reporting can be accomplished within this
framework, and a great deal of propaganda may also be put across
as impartial and objective reporting, but it is quite clear, on
either of these counts, that showing up the machinations of the
government spinmeisters for the despicable expedients that they
are is not included in the list of permitted activities.
In
June last year BBC radio reporter Gilligan caused particular upset
to the then government press secretary, Alastair Campbell, by coming
very close to the substantive truth of how intelligence reports
of Iraqi weapons of mass destruction had been doctored by government
to convey a more threatening message to the public than the intelligence
information actually warranted. As so often happens with the discovery
of truth, Gilligan had stumbled almost accidentally on a highly
sensitive vessel for conveyance of that truth, in the shape of Kelly.
For Campbell, I surmise that the situation would in all likelihood
have been perceived not only as threatening, but also as irritating
in the extreme: none of the minions involved were behaving as they
should. So, in Campbell's none too sweet-smelling phraseology, this
meant that "Gilligan had to be f***ed." Having been decreed
this ominous fate Gilligan, as far as I know, is still alive. What,
I wonder, was the verbal prescription concocted in these nether
regions for the way-out-of-line David Kelly?
In
earlier times such attitudes as Campbell’s would have been regarded
as inadmissible in a public servant, and an outcome to a judicial
inquiry such as we have seen with the publication of the Hutton
report would have been considered a public scandal. Oborne labels
it, accurately, a disaster for British public life. That it is generally
not so regarded, or that there is possibly not even any general
awareness of all its implications, and that there is now a chorus
of official voices (including, most prominently, Blair and Campbell)
saying "it’s time to move on," is a reflection of the
manipulative skill of the government information managers, the dumb
and disinterested acquiescence of much of the mass of the populace,
and the smug self-satisfaction of the power-holders. More interesting
still, Oborne's article implies that the prime motive in the very
selection of Lord Hutton was presentational calculation: a public
appearance of impartiality and gravitas was secured in his person;
at the same time, the "astonishing extent to which the Northern
Irish judge has followed the Downing Street line" ensured that
no boat would, finally, be rocked. Or, to do some real mixing of
metaphors, a ‘safe pair of hands’ dealt satisfactorily with a hot
potato.
The
whole government information machine is dependent on this calculationist
ethic and is built on the manipulation of such appearances. The
media circus ensures that what is discussed is not the substance
of the matters in hand, but only, as in some form of gladiatorial
competition, the winners and losers in what is seen as a political
game of tactical manipulation. Thus an electoral decision turns
on tactical errors or tactical successes something as superficial
as a man's (or woman's) hairstyle and "grooming," or a misjudged
on-screen temper tantrum. The masters of spin (in the US it is presidential
adviser Karl Rove) manipulate such "electoral factors" in the background.
These are grey people, with a touch of the sinister about them,
rarely in public view.
Although
such techniques are by no means the monopoly of any single political
party, they first came to prominence in Britain in 1997 with the
election of Tony Blair’s "New Labour," guided by his then eminence
grise, Peter
Mandelson: a party judged previously
to be unelectable was turned around (and obtained a landslide victory)
because the smart brains in it focused entirely on the methods of
getting elected (i.e., they consciously said "forget the issues,
focus on the mechanism"). Since then, by the way, the
resulting government has presided over a huge increase in taxation,
"created" all sorts of "facilitator"-type jobs in the public
sector, and put British troops into war zones on
at least 4 if not 5 occasions (Kosovo/Serbia, Sierra Leone, Afghanistan,
Iraq) in the name of "liberal imperialism." That's before
we even consider the rise in violent crime.
New
Labour thus greatly reinforced an already existing tendency for
the UK to become a managerial state, in the Gottfriedian
sense of the term. That is to say, it is a country where a group
of governmental managers have appropriated the vocabulary and outward
appearance of liberal welfarism and the protection of rights to
perfect a form of government in which substantive content (real
life issues) at all times takes second place to securing and keeping
hold of power. Their hubris is unbounded, for they do it, they say,
for our benefit. They know what is best for us (and, so it seems,
for a good deal of the rest of humanity as well).
The
problem with this is that the rulers of such states and their servants,
the bureaucrats, are indeed concerned not so much with ends, purposes
and substance, nor with a search for what is best, but rather with
perfecting the mechanisms and forms required in order for them,
as managers, to be able to continue to manage and to stay in control.
In such a context the successful manipulation of information by
government is a key bureaucratic function, rewarded by power and
position when it is "successful" on its own terms. Peter
Oborne cites apparent reports that Mr. Blair is anxious for John
Scarlett, the intelligence bureaucrat who in his ‘eagerness to ingratiate
himself’ with the government, cooperated perhaps too closely with
the spinmeisters, to become the new head of the Secret Intelligence
Service.
Oborne
rightly warns that we should not get too solemn about all this.
So, as an antidote to the sickening sycophancy of most of the predictably
superficial media coverage of the Hutton report’s publication, I
strongly recommend the Telegraph article
on this question by Boris Johnson, the editor of the Spectator.
True to form, he has a rightful and at the same time entertaining
blast at the creepy "Prime Minister, beaming his chipmunk grin,"
who "asked everyone to believe in what turned out to be a fraud."
On
a more serious note, and in a key passage, Johnson pinpoints the
nature of the liberal-managerial philosophy of governance: presentation,
‘textual negotiation’ and ‘grip on language’ is all. Substance is
truly secondary:
"The
intelligence chiefs principally John Scarlett were
in constant textual negotiation with Downing Street, and the protests
of their juniors were ignored. On September 20, an unnamed MoD
official felt obliged to write a further letter of complaint.
‘The draft still includes a number of statements which are not
supported by the evidence available to me … what I wish to record
is that it has NOT been established beyond doubt that Saddam has
continued to produce chemical and biological weapons.’
His
words were unheeded. It is extraordinary, reading the Hutton inquiry
evidence, to see the grip that Downing Street exercised on the
language of what purported to be an intelligence document."
Johnson
concludes:
"Public
and Parliament were presented with justifications for war that
(a) did not reflect the opinions of those who knew most about
Iraqi weapons; and (b) had been in key ways embellished by Alastair
Campbell. Neither of these staggering facts would have come to
light, had it not been for Andrew Gilligan."
Small
wonder that those smugly celebrating a tactical victory display
unseemly haste to bury the real issues. But questions which are
awkward for the government remain
unanswered, and in the sound and fury of
the barrage of UK media coverage of this propaganda circus, there
are significant details which will not go away.
First,
while Lord Hutton has carefully avoided criticizing the mechanics
of government spin by that time-honoured cop-out of all bureaucrats,
"it's not in my job description" or "it's beyond my remit," little
reported amongst the general condemnation of the BBC and the ensuing
round of resignations at the top is the fact that he has now been
called before a select committee of members of parliament to be
grilled on the whole question of how these judicial enquiries are
conducted.
Secondly,
serious questions need to be asked, and may well re-emerge, if the
coroner presiding over the inquest into the death of David Kelly
reopens it (or is permitted to do so). US-based freelance writer
Jim Rarey, who has investigated the Kelly affair at great length
and whose articles are online,
wrote earlier this month (on January 19th, before publication of
the Hutton report):
"If,
as expected, Lord Hutton’s report on the ‘circumstances’ surrounding
the death of microbiologist David Kelly claims he bled to death
from a self-inflicted wound to his wrist, it will rank as one
of the clumsiest cover-ups in recent memory.
If
that is Hutton’s finding, Oxfordshire coroner Nicholas Gardiner
almost certainly will be forced to reopen the inquest that was
cut short by appointment of the Hutton inquiry. […]
The
major thrust of the Hutton inquiry, and the media coverage, has
been who or what drove Kelly to ‘suicide.’ That is likely to be
the thrust of Hutton’s report as well.
The
evidence that it was more likely murder than suicide is contained
in the transcripts on the website of the Hutton inquiry. The media
has no excuse for ignoring it and if Nicholas Gardiner does not
reopen the inquest you can color him part of the cover-up."
Finally,
there are signs that many ordinary people are very angry, and will
not take the government's "tactics" lying down. A spontaneous demonstration
outside the BBC following Greg Dyke's resignation brought together
at least 800 employees with the message "Cut the crap bring
back Greg" and a statement by BBC4 interactive editor Kate Bradshaw:
"Everyone is outraged and sad. The government has successfully manipulated
the BBC and damaged it in the process."
Conclusions
Much
has been said and
written of late about popular skepticism
and mistrust in relation to "the official version of events," and
belief in conspiracies. I believe it is not because it is official
per se that we mistrust the official version of events.
We mistrust the majority of individuals who are in official positions
because as persons they have demonstrated by their consistent amoral
(and sometimes immoral) behaviour over time that they are not to
be trusted.
The
main reason for this is that we in the Western ‘liberal democracies’
have a culture of social interaction which is focussed on the means
and not the ends: for example, as I have mentioned above, the architects
of New Labour in 1997 studied the mechanics of gaining power and
focussed primarily on the effective manipulation of those mechanisms,
in the process devaluing discussion of issues and policies
perfectly rational behaviour in the light of Labour's earlier "unelectability," but
the problem with it is that the baby (the moral consequences and
effects of decisions or non-decisions regarding those issues)
goes out with the bathwater. The result is that we have no
gurus, only managers: once in power, the mission just becomes
self-perpetuating. There is no ulterior goal other than management
of one's strategic position or, as recent UK news has shown, devising
ever more sophisticated ways of increasing the taxes which those
managers will administer and out of which their salaries and index-linked
pensions will be paid.
And
so it continues: functionaries of the managerial state study when
to release bad news or adverse statistics so that they will be "buried"
by another, more dramatic story. The substance of the
bad news or adverse statistics is of no significance to them other
than for its value in promoting or hindering their immediate objective
of holding on to power, or winning a turf or budget allocation war.
Occasionally, like Jo Moore, the minor UK government official who
described September 11, 2001, as a "good day to bury bad news,"
they get caught out, and there are howls of self-righteous protest,
as if this were the exception and not the default modus operandi
of those who make it their business to run the political machines
and keep them lubricated (I mean here the 'civil servants'
as well as the politicians).
I
think the problem with official versions of events is not so much
with absolute truth (if there ever can be such a thing). More likely,
we are being told partial, selective, shaded truths because it is
partial, selective, shaded truths which suit the motivations and
purposes of those individuals (the version managers) who design
and deliver them. Those purposes, contrary to most theorizing about
conspiracy, are not disguised or hidden: more often they are out
in the open for those who care to read (of course I accept that
many don't bother, or can’t). Equally often they are not interesting
in substance, merely technical or mechanistic.
Finally,
I do not think there is a general "culture of mistrust." This is
a handy device to use to explain away truths which may be unpalatable
to power. Yes, some individuals do not trust others, and too much
trust can lead people to be tricked and deceived, but for most of
those engaged in day-to-day social interaction there is a culture
of friendliness and being well-disposed to others, which is
reflected in plain dealing and voluntary exchange. What we
have could better be described as a culture of cynically paternalistic
exploitation and opportunism by the political and bureaucratic managerial
classes: most of the time, people are either too lazy or too disorganized
to do anything about this. But when the bureaucratic managers and
whitewashers go too far, is it surprising that the people turn and
say to them "We know your sort. And this time, you cried wolf once
too often."
Lord
Hutton may well rue the day he came out of unblemished obscurity.
Links
- The Hutton
Report – online
version
- Boris Johnson,
The
BBC was doing its job – bring back Gilligan
– Daily Telegraph, January 29, 2004
- Ewen MacAskill
and Richard Norton-Taylor, Awkward
questions still not answered by inquiry
– The Guardian, January 29, 2004
- Peter Oborne,
A
Disaster for British Public Life – The
Spectator, January 31, 2004
- Greg Palast,
Waging
War on the BBC – Alternet, January 29,
2004
- Jim Rarey,
The Murder of David Kelly – Part
1, Part
2, Part
3 (David Kelly and Victoria’s Secret),
Part
4 (David Kelly, The Baha’i, and Masons)
– October-December 2003
January
30, 2004
Richard
Wall (send him mail) has a Master's
degree in International Relations from the London School of Economics
& Political Science, and lives in Estoril, Portugal, where he currently
works as a freelance writer and translator.
Copyright ©
2004 LewRockwell.com
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