The Strain Behind The Smile
A Los Angeles Times
editorial observed last month that China had persuaded world leaders to
attend the Olympic Games "despite their misgivings about Beijing's
horrific human rights record both domestically and abroad". The horror,
the editors noted, could not be entirely suppressed:
"What
planners in Beijing miscalculated is that no matter how well you teach
performers to smile, the strain behind the lips is still detectable."
(http://www.latimes.com/news/
opinion/editorials/la-ed-olympics26-2008aug26,0,5033807.story)
Needless
to say, no mainstream British or American journalist referred to the
host nation's "horrific human rights record" at the time of the US
Games in Atlanta in 1996, or of the Los Angeles Games in 1984. And of
course no media outlet has discussed "misgivings" about the awarding of
the 2012 Games to Britain. But why on earth would they? Historian Mark
Curtis explains:
"Since 1945, rather than occasionally
deviating from the promotion of peace, democracy, human rights and
economic development in the Third World, British (and US) foreign
policy has been systematically opposed to them, whether the
Conservatives or Labour (or Republicans or Democrats) have been in
power. This has had grave consequences for those on the receiving end
of Western policies abroad." (Curtis, The Ambiguities of Power, Zed
Books, 1995, p.3)
A Guardian leader in July described how
"western leaders rightly remain uneasy about giving their imprimatur to
a [Chinese] regime which jails dissidents, persecutes religious groups,
backs Burma and bankrolls Darfur." (Leader, 'Beijing Olympics: Faster,
higher - but freer?,' The Guardian, July 12, 2008)
On the other
hand, the Guardian leader writers might have felt uneasy about giving
their imprimatur to "western leaders" who are the destroyers of
Baghdad, Fallujah and Mosul, and who have promoted chaos and terror in
Afghanistan, Haiti, Serbia and Somalia, among many other places.
An Independent leader naturally shared the Guardian's view:
"The
outside world will have a crucial role to play in the coming years.
Engagement will produce much better results than isolation. But at the
same time, the developed world must guard against soft-pedalling
sensitive issues such as the treatment of Tibet, or Beijing's
sponsorship of vile regimes in Africa." (Leader, 'China must not let
its brief democratic light go out,' The Independent, August 2, 2008)
It
is taken for granted that "the developed world" is the great hope for
human rights. Again, comparable Independent editorials did not appear
ahead of the Atlanta and Los Angeles Games condemning Washington's
"sponsorship of vile regimes".
Everything in the media starts
from the assumption that 'We mean well,' and from the unspoken, indeed
unthought, assumption that this claim need never be questioned. This
isn't just a matter of choice - career success depends on it. Senior
journalists like the BBC's Huw Edwards have to be willing to make the
Soviet-style claim that British troops are in Afghanistan "to try to
help in the country's rebuilding programme". (Edwards, BBC 1, News at
Ten, July 28, 2008)
Respecting Sovereignty
One
tragicomic consequence of this self-imposed simple-mindedness is the
inability of the mainstream media to make sense of last month's war in
Georgia. Journalists kept a straight face as they communicated George
Bush's demand that "Russia's government must respect Georgia's
territorial integrity and sovereignty." (http://afp.google.com/
article/ALeqM5i2LdnLHTyJgB2Ng8VSQyMQ3eMVrw)
Few felt inclined to mention the small matter of Bush's own invasion of
sovereign Iraq, or the US-driven separation of Kosovo from sovereign
Serbia.
Gordon Brown, proud 'liberator' of Iraq, or what remains
of it, somehow avoided choking on his own hypocrisy as he insisted:
"when Russia has a grievance over an issue such as South Ossetia, it
should act multilaterally by consent rather than unilaterally by
force."
(http://www.guardian.co.uk/
commentisfree/2008/aug/31/russia.georgia)
Occasional
mentions have been made of the fact that the largest pipeline between
the Black Sea and the Caspian oil fields and Europe is the 1.2 million
barrels a day BP Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan (BTC) line that passes through
Georgia and parts of Abkhazia, and which happens to be the only
pipeline not under Russian control. The Christian Science Monitor
recently described the politics of the pipeline:
"The $4 billion
BTC pipeline, managed by and 30 percent owned by British Petroleum, was
routed through Georgia to avoid sending Caspian oil through Iran,
Afghanistan and Pakistan, or Russia. A 10-mile pipeline could have
connected Caspian oil to the well-developed Iranian pipeline system."
(http://www.csmonitor.com/2008/0816/p14s01-cogn.html)
In 2000,
Bill Clinton described the pipeline as "the most important achievement
at the end of the twentieth century."
(http://www.wsws.org/articles/2000/may2000/geor-m02.shtml)
Securing
this "achievement" has involved intense US efforts to manipulate
Georgian political and military elites. The US and France are the main
suppliers of Georgia's military, but the prime US ally, Israel, has
also supplied some $200 million worth of equipment since 2000. This has
included remotely piloted drones, rockets, night-vision equipment,
electronic systems, and training by former senior Israeli officers.
To
be sure, media hints that oil might help explain American and Israeli
involvement have far exceeded mentions of the even more embarrassing
reasons behind the British and American attack on Iraq in 2003, when
the subject of oil was completely off the news agenda. Patrick
Collinson wrote in the Guardian of the Georgian crisis:
"It's a
superpower confrontation in a region criss-crossed with oil pipelines
vital to the west." (Collinson, 'Money: Sell oil, buy banks?: Crude
prices are falling and commodities are plummeting,' The Guardian,
August 16, 2008)
An article in the Observer last month was
titled: "Europe's energy source lies in the shadow of Russia's anger:
Behind the tanks in Ossetia are key oil and gas pipelines." (Alex
Brett, The Observer, August 17, 2008)
In the Times, Richard
Beeston wrote a piece headed: "Oil supplies and Kremlin's relations
with the West at stake." (Beeston, The Times, August 9, 2008)
The
media have presented the West as innocently seeking to protect its
energy supplies from an erratic Russian predator - we just want to keep
our economies running. Perhaps the insatiably greedy Western interests
that have wrecked havoc across the world in the post-1945 period are
busy elsewhere.
In the Guardian, Jeremy Leggett wrote:
"The
Kremlin has a strategy to control a vast slab of the world economy via
oil and gas. Dmitry Medvedev, lest we forget, used to run Gazprom. The
Georgia crisis, if not a planned piece in the strategy, certainly
fits." (Leggett 'Beware the bear trap: Britain, like most of Europe, is
at risk of being the target of Russia's energy export weaponry,' The
Guardian, August 30, 2008)
Recall, by contrast, the almost
complete media taboo on identifying oil as a factor in the US-UK
invasion of Iraq. We can imagine a companion piece by Leggett from,
say, 2002:
"The White House has a strategy to control a vast
slab of the world economy via oil and gas. George W. Bush, lest we
forget, was the founder of Arbusto Oil, and chairman and CEO of energy
company Spectrum 7. The Iraq crisis, if not a planned piece in the
strategy, certainly fits."
In the real world, Johann Hari wrote of Iraq in the Independent in 2003:
"Blair
went into this with the best of intentions. It is just silly to claim
that Blair cooked up all these arguments to justify a grab for oil, or
a straight-forward imperialist project." (Hari, 'What Monica Lewinsky
Was For Clinton The Hutton Inquiry Is For Tony Blair,' The Independent,
August 27, 2003)
A year earlier, David Aaronovitch manufactured the required sneer:
"Over
in the New Statesman, John Pilger cranks out, as though Xeroxing on an
old machine, piece after repetitive piece telling us that it's all
about oil and money and greed and imperialism." (Aaronovitch, 'You
couldn't be sure what anyone would end up saying,' The Independent,
September 10, 2002)
"The UK, meanwhile," Leggett added sagely in
his actual article, "has no energy strategy". Certainly not in Iraq,
where, in late June, Iraqi oil minister Mohamad Sharastani announced
that contracts had been drawn up between the Maliki government and five
major Western oil companies to develop some of the largest fields in
Iraq. Edward Herman takes up the wretched tale:
"No competitive
bidding was allowed, and the terms announced were very poor by existing
international contract standards. The contracts were written with the
help of 'a group of American advisers led by a small State department
team.' This was all in conformity with the Declaration of Principles of
November 26, 2007, whereby the 'sovereign country' of Iraq would use
'especially American investments' in its attempt to recover from the
effects of the American aggression. The contracts have not yet been
signed, and the internal protests are loud, but clearly the fig leaf of
WMD and democracy has been stripped away as an 'enduring' occupation
and a systematic looting of Iraq's oil are arranged under a
non-democratic tool of the occupation." (Herman, 'Further Nuggets From
the Nuthouse: The Law of Conservation of the Level of Violence,' Z
Magazine, September 2008)
The BBC's World Affairs Correspondent,
Paul Reynolds, found no difficulty this week in recognising the
realpolitik in Russian policy:
"In some ways, we are going
back to the century before last, with a nationalistic Russia very much
looking out for its own interests, but open to co-operation with the
outside world on issues where it is willing to be flexible." (Reynolds,
'New Russian world order: the five principles,' September 1, 2008;
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/7591610.stm)
By contrast, Reynolds wrote in 2006:
"The
third anniversary of the invasion of Iraq prompts some melancholy
thoughts about how it was supposed to be - and how it has turned out.
"By
now, according to the plan, Iraq should have emerged into a peaceful,
stable representative democracy, an example to dictatorships and
authoritarian regimes across the Middle East." (Reynolds, 'Iraq three
years on: A bleak tale,' March 17, 2006;
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/middle_east/4812460.stm)
Russia's
plan is to look out for 'number one'; the US-UK plan was to spread
peace, love and understanding to Iraq and the region. Not a trace of
recognition was allowed that the Iraq invasion was fundamentally about
American profit and power, and certainly not the welfare of the Iraqi
people, about whom, traditionally, US policymakers have not given a
damn.
Mostly the level of analysis of last month's conflict has
been pitifully thin, as in this comment from Bronwen Maddox in the
Times:
"Why now? The main reason is Georgia's desire to throw in
its lot with Nato, the US's enthusiastic support for that, and Russia's
passionate opposition." (Maddox, 'Simmering dispute could turn Russia
against the West,' The Times, August 6, 2008)
It simply isn't
done for corporate journalism to expose the true goals of Western
corporate titans and their militant state allies. The preferred realm
of discourse is restricted to nonsense about "security", "democracy"
and other "humanitarian" goals.
Favouring Georgia
Britain
isn't afflicted with a state-controlled media system, although one
would hardly know it from press performance. Typically, a country
identified as 'nice' by the British government is also 'nice' for our
'free press'. The same is true of governments labelled 'nasty'. The
media have therefore presented the Georgia/South Ossetia conflict as
the result of irrational Russian bullying. Max Hastings emphasised in
the Guardian that, "The Russians yearn for respect, in the same fashion
as any inner-city street kid with a knife." (http://www.guardian.co.uk/
commentisfree/2008/aug/18/russia.georgia)
In a rare example of independent thought in the Guardian, Peter Wilby noted the consistent bias:
"Russia's
behaviour, newspapers implied, was in a quite different category from
Georgia's. In the Sunday Times, Russian tanks went 'rampaging' in South
Ossetia, while Georgian tanks merely 'moved'. If Georgian forces had
bombarded civilians, it was 'reprehensible', the Telegraph allowed.
Russia, however, was 'offending every canon of international
behaviour'." (Wilby, 'Georgia has won the PR war,' The Guardian, August
18, 2008; http://www.guardian.co.uk/
media/2008/aug/18/pressandpublishing.georgia)
Wilby added:
"Georgia's
actions in South Ossetia went largely unexamined, and it was hard to
find, from press accounts, what refugees from the province were fleeing
from."
Indeed, an August 19 ITV News report explained the
tragic results of the fighting for the people of Georgia. But as in so
much reporting, no mention was made of the initial Georgian attack or
the consequences for the people of South Ossetia. In fact Georgian
forces had bombed the South Ossetian capital, Tskhinvali, for 72 hours.
An August 20 article in the Times reported how a "makeshift operating
table lay under a weak lightbulb in the corridor of a dank basement
that smelt strongly of excrement." Dina Zhakarova, a doctor in South
Ossetia, commented:
"This is where we had to try to save
people's lives. The whole place was a sea of blood while the Georgians
were bombing our hospital." (http://www.timesonline.co.uk/
tol/news/world/europe/article4568945.ece)
Dr Zhakarova described how staff had treated more than 250 people underground after the Georgian Army's assault, adding:
"All
the staff gave blood for the patients because there were so many
wounded. The Georgians knew very well that this was a hospital, so how
could they say that we are their fellow citizens when they were firing
rockets at us? It's nonsense."
Such commentary has been vanishingly rare.
The
bias is clear, but the deeper point is far more interesting - the
entrenched propaganda function of the mainstream media renders it
incapable of making sense of events in Georgia and South Ossetia.
References to Russian self-interest are allowed, and to Western
concerns about energy security. But on the real reasons why people were
killing and dying, on how Western state violence consistently supports
Western corporate greed, journalists have had next to nothing to say.
In a world where rational understanding conflicts with the 'ideals' of
propaganda, "news" is often little more than noise.
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