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by Chris Floyd

The ever persipacious Angry Arab, As'ad AbuKhalil, plucks out the hidden (or not-so-hidden) propaganda in a passing phrase in an otherwise unremarkable Washington Post story about Syria. Let the good doctor tell it in his own words:
[From the WP]: "Horror at the bloodshed accompanying the U.S. effort to bring democracy to Iraq
has accomplished what human rights activists, analysts and others say
Syrian President Bashar al-Assad had been unable to do by himself:
silence public demands for democratic reforms here." (Notice the casual
language of the Washington Post. Notice how they insert propaganda
lines into articles. "US effort to bring democracy in Iraq"? Are you
kidding me? Does the writer of the article really believe that this was
what it was about?)
Here we see the falsity of the
supposed "objectivity" fetish of the mainstream media laid bare. The
fetish is entirely focused on the word "objectivity,"
never on its practice. There is nothing remotely objective about using
"the U.S. effort to bring democracy to Iraq" as a standard descriptor
of the war and occupation. It is not an any way a neutral reflection of
reality. It simply parrots a Bush Administration propaganda point
without question, without nuance.
You can see what the reporter,
Ellen Knickmeyer, is trying to do here, I suppose. The article deals
with the collapse of reform movements in Syria because "advocates of
democracy are equated now with supporters of America, even 'traitors,'
said Maan Abdul Salam, 36, a Damascus publisher who has coordinated
conferences on women's rights and similar topics...'The people are not
believing these thoughts anymore. When the U.S. came to Iraq, it came
in the name of democracy and freedom. But all we see are bodies,
bodies, bodies.'"
So Knickmeyer wants to set up an
ironic contrast: the Americans say they're in Iraq to bring democracy
to the Middle East, but the bloody quagmire they've created is having
the opposite effect, which is a demonstrable, undeniable reality. She
could have done this easily, while remaining well within the dogma of
the "objectivity" word cult, simply by attributing the war motive of
"bringing democracy" to the Bush Administration, rather than embracing
it as an unquestioned fact.
But to do that would mean breaking
with the iron-clad conventional wisdom of Beltway journalism: the war
in Iraq is yet another noble cause gone FUBAR because it "wasn't done
right." (This is also the prevailing wisdom of much of the Democratic
Party as well.). You can see the gang gathering around the water cooler
with David Broder, shaking their heads and clucking, "Dang, we'll never
get democracy in Iraq now, not after the way Bush and Rumsfeld have
screwed this thing up." They might even spend long sleepless hours in
the dead of night, fretting that "if only Jerry Bremer hadn't done X,
if only we'd gone in with a half a million troops, if only those bad
apples hadn't gone sour at Abu Ghraib...." finally trailing off, with a
heavy sigh, into troubled dreams.
There is scarcely an
acknowledgement anywhere in the Media Establishment that the Iraq War
was an evil and misbegotten enterprise from the very beginning:
conceived in greed and arrogance, sold by deceit, a criminal action by
every legal and moral reckoning. As Hamlet said: "It cannot and it will
not come to good." And it has not. Wars of aggression are evil things
-- the "supreme international crime," as the Nuremberg Tribunal
recognized -- and they will breed nothing but evil. When Bush sat
before the television cameras to announce the invasion of Iraq that
night in March 2003, he might as well have pulled out the shredded
corpse of a child and began gnawing on the red, corrupted flesh, for he
was at that moment consigning thousands upon thousands, tens of
thousands, hundreds of thousands of innocent people to death.
Now, none of us expect the
Washington Post to ever indulge in such tasteless apprehensions of the
actual reality of our time, or to ever describe George W. Bush and his
handlers and minions as what they really are: murderers. But would it
really be so difficult merely to refrain from adopting the murderers'
propaganda directly into "news" stories? Would it really be so
difficult to practice a little -- what's that word again? --
objectivity?
Reckon so.
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