WITHOUT THE MEDIA'S COLLABORATION, MOST OF ALL THE
PEOPLE SUFFERING AT PRESENT WOULD NOT HAVE BEEN
OCCUPIED, CHASED, JAILED, TORTURED, WOUNDED, MAIMED,
KILLED AND MADE INTO KILLERS.
Henk Ruyssenaars
FPF- Oct. 31st - 2005 - It's not difficult to agree with
Pilger: "Since the invasion of Iraq, I have spoken to a
number of principled journalists working in the pro-war
media, including the BBC, who say that they, and many
others, “lie awake at night” and want to speak out and
resume being real journalists. I suggest now is the
time."
The problem Pilger is describing, is the harsh fact that
all too many so called 'journalists' sold themselves and
now never will be able to return to 'real journalism',
the investigative and honest way of working which has to
be rebuild.
These Quislings themselves have destroyed it, they have
been the grave diggers of the honest part of the
profession, and it is definite that without their
collaboration most of all those people suffering at
present, would not have been occupied, chased, jailed,
tortured, wounded, maimed, killed and made into killers.
The more humane form of journalism as it was still known
twenty years ago is dead: it has been killed by the
"Banking Establishment" - [
http://tinyurl.com/d3ntq
] - via it's commerce bying all major media and the most
of these 'Quislings' now working for them, with as one
of the worst examples Judas Miller who should be in jail
for life.
Judith Miller is a war criminal
Through her fakes disguised as stories thousands of
people have died and are going to die: she helped making
the war in Iraq possible. She is an ex-journalist now
war crimnal and should definitely not only be fired from
her job at that neocon NYTimes-rag, which took and takes
a fomenting and profitable part in the warmongering, as
a medium being one of the main parts of the problem.
In the new form of journalism which is developing - very
much thanks to Internet - there should be no place
whatsoever for any of those journalist/criminals which
are guilty by association' of the present genocides.
Their place is in jail, and most of them for life,
because their work represents a crime against us,
against humanity, and this kind of criminal behavior
resulting in the deaths of hundreds of thousands of
people can absolutely not be tolerated.
Pilger explains what I've been saying all my life too:
journalists are killers when they do not work for the
people who read, hear and see them and often pay for it,
but slave for the shareholders and/or other owners of
the medium they work for.
They start helping the killers when they for one or
other lousy reason 'give up' and sell out everything
which this profession was about: like integrity and
accountability. [March 25th - 2002 - Url.:
http://tinyurl.com/4gwdv]
From Suharto to Iraq: Nothing has changed
by John Pilger
“The propagandist’s purpose”, wrote Aldous Huxley, “is
to make one set of people forget that certain other sets
of people are human”. The British, who invented modern
war propaganda and inspired Joseph Goebbels, were
specialists in the field. At the height of the slaughter
known as the First World War, the prime minister, David
Lloyd George, confided to C. P. Scott, editor of the
Manchester Guardian: “If people really knew [the truth],
the war would be stopped tomorrow. But of course they
don’t know, and can’t know.”
What has changed? “If we had all known then what we know
now”, said the New York Times on August 24, “the
invasion [of Iraq] would have been stopped by a popular
outcry”. The admission was saying, in effect, that
powerful newspapers, like powerful broadcasting
organisations, had betrayed their readers and viewers
and listeners by not finding out — by amplifying the
lies of US President George Bush and British Prime
Minister Tony Blair, instead of challenging and exposing
them. The direct consequences were a criminal invasion
called “Shock and Awe” and the dehumanising of a whole
nation.
This remains largely an unspoken shame in Britain,
especially at the BBC, which continues to boast about
its rigour and objectivity while echoing a corrupt and
lying government, as it did before the invasion. For
evidence of this, there are two academic studies
available — though the capitulation of broadcast
journalism ought to be obvious to any discerning viewer.
Night after night, “embedded” reporting justifies
murderous attacks on Iraqi towns and villages as
“rooting out insurgents” and swallows British army
propaganda designed to distract from its disaster, while
preparing us for attacks on Iran and Syria. Like the NYT
and most of the US media, had the BBC done its job, many
thousands of innocent people almost certainly would be
alive today.
When will important journalists cease to be
establishment managers and analyse and confront the
critical part they play in the violence of rapacious
governments? An anniversary provides an opportunity.
Forty years ago this month, Major General Suharto began
a seizure of power in Indonesia by unleashing a wave of
killings that the CIA described as “the worst mass
murders of the second half of the 20th century”. Much of
this episode was never reported and remains secret. None
of the reports of recent terror attacks against tourists
in Bali mentioned the fact that near the major hotels
were the mass graves of some of an estimated 80,000
people killed by mobs orchestrated by Suharto and backed
by the US and British governments.
Indeed, the collaboration of Western governments,
together with the role of Western business, laid the
pattern for subsequent Anglo-American violence across
the world: such as Chile in 1973, when Augusto
Pinochet’s bloody coup was backed in Washington and
London; the arming of the shah of Iran and the creation
of his secret police; and the lavish and meticulous
backing of Saddam Hussein in Iraq, including black
propaganda by the British Foreign Office, which sought
to discredit press reports that Hussein had used nerve
gas against the Kurdish village of Halabja.
In 1965, in Indonesia, the US embassy furnished General
Suharto with roughly 5000 names. These were people for
assassination, and a senior US diplomat checked off the
names as they were killed or captured. Most were members
of the Indonesian Communist Party (PKI). Having already
armed and equipped Suharto’s army, Washington secretly
flew in state-of-the-art communication equipment, the
high frequencies of which were known to the CIA and the
National Security Council advising the president, Lyndon
B. Johnson. Not only did this allow Suharto’s generals
to coordinate the massacres, it meant that the highest
echelons of the US administration were listening in.
The US worked closely with the British. The British
ambassador in Jakarta, Sir Andrew Gilchrist, cabled the
Foreign Office: “I have never concealed from you my
belief that a little shooting in Indonesia would be an
essential preliminary to effective change.” The “little
shooting” saw off between half a million and a million
people.
However, it was in the field of propaganda, of
“managing” the media and eradicating the victims from
people’s memory in the West, that the British shone.
British intelligence officers outlined how the British
press and the BBC could be manipulated. “Treatment will
need to be subtle”, they wrote, “eg, a) all activities
should be strictly unattributable, b) British
[government] participation or co-operation should be
carefully concealed”. To achieve this, the Foreign
Office opened a branch of its Information Research
Department (IRD) in Singapore.
The IRD was a top-secret Cold War propaganda unit headed
by Norman Reddaway, one of Her Majesty’s most
experienced liars. Reddaway and his colleagues
manipulated the “embedded” press and the BBC so expertly
that he boasted to Gilchrist in a secret message that
the fake story he had promoted — that a communist
takeover was imminent in Indonesia — “went all over the
world and back again”. He described how an experienced
Sunday newspaper journalist agreed “to give exactly your
angle on events in his article ... i.e., that this was a
kid-glove coup without butchery”.
These lies, bragged Reddaway, could be “put almost
instantly back to Indonesia via the BBC”. Prevented from
entering Indonesia, Roland Challis, the BBC’s South-East
Asia correspondent, was unaware of the slaughter. “My
British sources purported not to know what was going
on”, Challis told me, “but they knew what the American
plan was. There were bodies being washed up on the lawns
of the British consulate in Surabaya, and British
warships escorted a ship full of Indonesian troops down
the Malacca Straits so that they could take part in this
terrible holocaust. It was only later that we learned
that the American embassy was supplying names and
ticking them off as they were killed. There was a deal,
you see. In establishing the Suharto regime, the
involvement of the IMF and the World Bank was part of it
... Suharto would bring them back. That was the deal.”
The bloodbath was ignored almost entirely by the BBC and
the rest of the Western media. The headline news was
that “communism” had been overthrown in Indonesia,
which, Time reported, “is the west’s best news in Asia”.
In November 1967, at a conference in Geneva overseen by
the billionaire banker David Rockefeller, the booty was
handed out. All the corporate giants were represented,
from General Motors, Chase Manhattan Bank and US Steel
to ICI and British American Tobacco. With Suharto’s
connivance, the natural riches of his country were
carved up.
Suharto’s cut was considerable. When he was finally
overthrown in 1998, it was estimated that he had up to
US$10 billion in foreign banks, or more than 10% of
Indonesia’s foreign debt. When I was last in Jakarta, I
walked to the end of his leafy street and caught sight
of the mansion where the mass murderer now lives in
luxury. As Saddam Hussein heads for his own show trial
on October 19, he must ask himself where he went wrong.
Compared with Suharto’s crimes, Saddam’s seem second
division.
With British-supplied Hawk jets and machine-guns,
Suharto’s army went on to crush the life out of a
quarter of the population of East Timor: 200,000 people.
Using the same Hawk jets and machine-guns, the same
genocidal army is now attempting to crush the life out
of the resistance movement in West Papua and protect the
Freeport company, which is mining a mountain of copper
in the province (Henry Kissinger is “director
emeritus”). Some 100,000 Papuans, 18% of the population,
have been killed; yet this British-backed “project”, as
New Labour likes to say, is almost never reported.
What happened in Indonesia, and continues to happen, is
almost a mirror image of the attack on Iraq. Both
countries have riches coveted by the West; both had
dictators installed by the West to facilitate the
passage of their resources; and in both countries,
blood-drenched Anglo-American actions have been
disguised by propaganda willingly provided by
journalists prepared to draw the necessary distinctions
between Saddam’s regime (“monstrous”) and Suharto’s
(“moderate” and “stable”).
Since the invasion of Iraq, I have spoken to a number of
principled journalists working in the pro-war media,
including the BBC, who say that they, and many others,
“lie awake at night” and want to speak out and resume
being real journalists. I suggest now is the time.
John Pilger
[enditem] - Article on Pilger's very informative web
site - Url.:
http://pilger.carlton.com/print/133512
FWD. BY:
FOREIGN PRESS FOUNDATION
Editor : Henk Ruyssenaars
http://tinyurl.com/66dmo
The Netherlands
FPF@Chello.nl
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