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FEATURE ARTICLE |
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Eyes Wide Shut on the Iraq War
Ray McGovern Date: 0000-00-00 Subject: Communities
Ten years ago, as President George W. Bush and his administration
were putting the finishing touches on their unprovoked invasion of Iraq,
the mainstream U.S. news media had long since capitulated, accepting
the conventional wisdom that nothing could " or should " stop the march
to war. The neocon conquest of the major U.S. news outlets " the likes of the
New York Times, the Washington Post and the national TV news " was so
total that the Bush administration could reliably count on them as eager
co-conspirators in the Iraq adventure rather than diligent watchdogs
for the American people. The book cover for George Tenet’s “At the Center of the Storm,” co-written with former CIA spokesman Bill Harlow. By now a decade ago, the New York Times had published Judy Miller’s
infamous “mushroom cloud” article about Iraq’s aluminum tubes, the
Washington Post’s op-ed page had lined up in lock-step to hail Colin
Powell’s misleading United Nations speech, MSNBC had dumped Phil Donahue
after he allowed on a few anti-war voices, and CNN had assembled a
chorus of pro-war ex-military officers as “analysts.” Despite massive worldwide protests against the impending invasion,
the U.S. news media only grudgingly covered the spectacle of millions of
people in the streets in dozens of cities. The coverage mostly had a
tone of bemusement about how deluded such uninformed folks could be. The U.S. news media’s consensus was so overwhelming that it may have
freed up a few lesser outlets to publish some undeniable facts, which
then could be safely dismissed and ignored. Such was the case when Newsweek correspondent John Barry was allowed
to publish the leaked contents of an interrogation of a senior Iraqi
official who inconveniently disclosed that Iraq had destroyed its
stockpiles of chemical and biological weapons years earlier. Barry, usually a reliable voice for Washington’s conventional wisdom,
may have struggled over what to do with the leaked document, but he
ultimately wrote this truthful lede: “Hussein Kamel, the highest-ranking Iraqi official ever to defect
from Saddam Hussein’s inner circle, told CIA and British intelligence
officers and U.N. inspectors in the summer of 1995 that after the gulf
war, Iraq destroyed all its chemical and biological weapons stocks and
the missiles to deliver them. Kamel … had direct knowledge of what he
claimed: for 10 years he had run Iraq’s nuclear, chemical, biological
and missile programs.” In a classic understatement of about his own report " as the White
House was on the verge of unleashing the dogs of war in pursuit of
Iraq’s alleged WMD " Barry commented, “The defector’s tale raises
questions about whether the WMD stockpiles attributed to Iraq still
exist.” Barry explained that Kamel had been interrogated in separate sessions
by the CIA, British intelligence, and a trio from the U.N. inspection
team; that Newsweek had been able to verify the authenticity of the U.N.
document containing the text of Kamel’s debriefing; and that Kamel had
“told the same story to the CIA and the British.” Barry added that “The
CIA did not respond to a request for comment.” Barry’s story was, of course, completely accurate. According to page
13 of the transcript of the debriefing by U.S. and U.N. officials,
Hussein Kamel, one of Saddam Hussein’s sons-in-law, said bluntly: “All
weapons " biological, chemical, missile, nuclear, were destroyed.” The story of Kamel’s admission was published in the March 3, 2003, issue of Newsweek after appearing on the magazine’s Web site on Feb. 24. No WMD in Iraq? By then, of course, the Newsweek story really didn’t matter. The
media “hot shots” had already shifted from covering the excuses for war
to preparing for the exciting duty as embedded “war correspondents.” No one wanted to risk being left out of those career-building moments
of racing across the Iraqi desert in a Humvee, with your cameraman
filming you in green-tinted night-vision video, your body bulked up by
body armor, your camouflage outfit matching what the real troops were
wearing, and perhaps your hair blowing in the wind. Back at corporate headquarters, CNN’s Wolf Blitzer and other
cable-news anchors couldn’t wait for the start of “shock and awe.” The
pyrotechnics would surely mean a big bump in ratings. Over at Fox News
and MSNBC, which was then trying to out-Fox Fox from the Right,
producers were planning for video montages honoring “the Troops” as
super-hero liberators of Iraq. So there was not much buzz about the Newsweek scoop. The rest of the
mainstream media only went through the motions of checking out this
strange information about Iraq having no WMD. Reporters called the CIA
for clarification. CIA spokesman Bill Harlow responded by fishing out half of the
descriptors from his “Debunking Adjectives File” at CIA’s Office of
Public Affairs. He warned that the report was “incorrect, bogus, wrong,
untrue.” Would the CIA ever tell a lie? Puleeze! And so the mainstream media
said, in effect, “Gosh. Thanks for letting us know. Otherwise, we might
have run a story on it.” Nor were mainstream media outlets at all interested in coming back to
the story two days later, when the complete copy of the Kamel
transcript, in the form of an internal U.N. International Atomic Energy
Agency document stamped “sensitive,” was made public by Cambridge University analyst Glen Rangwala. Rangwala had already revealed that British Prime Minister Tony
Blair’s pre-war “intelligence dossier” on Iraq was largely plagiarized
from a student thesis. The conventional wisdom in Official Washington was: Why should anyone
place his or her precious career between the innocents who would die in
war and the war juggernaut of Bush and his neocon advisers? After all,
what good would it do? The war was going to happen anyway and you would
just get run over. And what would happen if the U.S. military did discover some cache of
WMD somewhere in Iraq? You’d be forever known as that Saddam Hussein
apologist who questioned the wisdom of the Great War President. So the war juggernaut rolled on. Wolf Blitzer expressed some
disappointment that the “shock and awe” bombing of Baghdad wasn’t more
spectacular. NBC’s Tom Brokaw sat among a panel of ex-military officers
and blurted out that “in a few days, we’re going to own that country.”
MSNBC and Fox News rushed out Madison Avenue-style tributes to “the
Troops” complete with stirring sound tracks and images of thankful
Iraqis. Disturbing stories and images of overflowing hospitals and
innocent Iraqis being dismembered and incinerated by U.S. bombs were
played down. However, the Bush administration found none of the promised
stockpiles of chemical and biological weapons, nor any evidence of an
active nuclear program. After eight years of a bloody war and
occupation, the big losers were the hundreds of thousands of dead and
maimed Iraqis; the nearly 4,500 dead U.S. soldiers and more than 30,000
wounded; and the U.S. taxpayers who got stuck with a bill of around $1
trillion. More Harlowtry Things worked out a lot better for people like CIA spokesman Bill
Harlow. He found out that working for CIA Director George Tenet could be
quite lucrative, even after they both left the CIA. Harlow convinced
Tenet, who resigned in 2004, that an exculpatory memoir could polish up
Tenet’s tarnished reputation and make money. Harlow also volunteered to help, since he sensed the boss would need a scribe and since the advance was sizable. Tenet’s At the Center of the Storm: My Years at the CIA,
co-written with Harlow, was released in April 2007. By then, however,
even some in the mainstream media were able to see the two for the
charlatans they were. Not even Harlow’s hired pen could disguise this lame attempt at
self-justification. Pro that he is, Harlow simply could not manage to
make a silk purse out of the sow’s ear of Tenet’s career. [See
Consortiumnews.com’s “How George Tenet Lied.”] At the Center of the Storm amounted to an unintentional
self-indictment of Tenet for the crimes with which Socrates was
charged: making the worse cause appear the better, and corrupting the
youth. At the time, I found myself thinking that Tenet wished he had
opted to just fade away, as old soldiers and spies used to do. And I would have been right, I suppose " except for the money. A $4
million advance was nothing at which to sniff, even if Tenet had to
share it with Harlow. Despite what should have been a negative credibility rating, Harlow
remained a trusted figure for many old news media friends. He was sent
into the breach once more in August 2011 to help Tenet fend off
explosive charges from former White House counter-terrorism czar Richard
Clarke that Tenet had withheld information from him that could have
thwarted the attacks of 9/11. [See Consortiumnews.com’s “Did Tenet Hide Key 9/11 Information?”] In an interview aired on a local PBS affiliate in Colorado, Clarke
directly accused Tenet and two other senior CIA officials, Cofer Black
and Richard Blee, of sitting on information about two of the hijackers
of American Airlines Flight 77 " al-Hazmi and al-Mihdhar. The two had entered the United States more than a year before the
9/11 attacks, and CIA knew it. After 9/11, the agency covered up its
failure by keeping relevant information away from Congress and the 9/11
Commission, Clarke said. Withholding intelligence on two of the 9/11 hijackers would have been
particularly unconscionable " the epitome of malfeasance, not just
misfeasance. That’s why Richard Clarke’s conclusion that he should have
received information from CIA about al-Hazmi and al-Mihdhar “unless
somebody intervened to stop the normal automatic distribution” amounts,
in my view, to a criminal charge, given the eventual role of the two in
hijacking of AA-77, the plane that struck the Pentagon. Tenet has denied that the information on the two hijackers was
“intentionally withheld” from Clarke, and he enlisted the other two
former CIA operatives, Cofer Black (more recently a senior official of
Blackwater) and Richard Blee (an even more shadowy figure), to concur in
saying, Not us; we didn’t withhold. Whom to believe? To me, it’s a no-brainer. One would have to have
been born yesterday to regard the “George is right” testimony from Black
and Blee as corroborative. Harlow to the Rescue To dirty up Clarke a bit more, Bill Harlow emerged to empty the
remaining half of the descriptors from his old “Debunking Adjectives
File.” According to Harlow, Clarke’s charges were “reckless and
profoundly wrong … baseless … belied by the record … unworthy of serious
consideration.” And so, naturally, the mainstream media dropped this extraordinary
story involving the former White House counterterrorism chief, Richard
Clarke, accusing the former CIA head, George Tenet, with suppressing
information that could well have prevented 9/11. Plus, by all indications, Harlow is still able to work his fraudulent
magic on the Fawning Corporate Media. If Harlow says it’s not true …
and hurls a bunch of pejorative adjectives to discredit a very serious
charge … well, I guess we’ll have to leave it there, as the mainstream
media is so fond of saying. No matter Clarke’s well-deserved reputation for honesty and
professionalism " and Tenet’s and Harlow’s reputations for the opposite. The versatile Bill Harlow came back again this past January to help
Jose Rodriguez, the CIA operations chief who oversaw waterboarding and
other torture and then destroyed the videotaped evidence, argue his case
in the ever-hospitable, neocon-dominated Washington Post. Their argument this time was that “enhanced interrogation” " or what
the rest of us would call “torture” " helped locate al-Qaeda leader
Osama bin Laden. Even the Senate Intelligence Committee has refuted that
claim. Never mind. The Washington Post Sunday Outlook section on Jan. 6, 2013, ran a long article titled, “Sorry, Hollywood. What we did wasn’t torture.” The
Post noted that the Rodriguez piece was “written with former CIA
spokesman Bill Harlow,” but offered readers no help in gauging Harlow’s
checkered credibility. [See Consortiumnews.com’s “Excusing Torture Again.”] Rodriguez and Harlow disdained the word “torture,” but argued, in the
context of the “hunt-for-bin-Laden” movie “Zero Dark Thirty,” that the
rough-them-up tactics really helped. The two resorted to the George W.
Bush-era word game that waterboarding, stress positions, sleep
deprivation and other calculated pain inflicted on detainees in the
CIA’s custody weren’t really “torture.” Ray McGovern works with Tell the Word, a publishing arm of
the ecumenical Church of the Saviour in inner-city Washington. He served
for 27 years as a CIA analyst, and is a co-founder of Veteran
Intelligence Professionals for Sanity (VIPS). |