David Barstow of the New York Times has written the first
installment in what is already a stunning exposé of
the Bush Administration's most powerful propaganda weapon
used to sell and manage the war on Iraq: the embedding of
military propagandists directly into the TV networks as on-air
commentators. We and others have long criticized the widespread
TV network practice of hiring former military officials to
serve as analysts, but even in our most cynical moments we
did not anticipate how bad it was. Barstow has painstakingly
documented how these analysts, most of them military industry
consultants and lobbyists, were directly chosen, managed,
coordinated and given their talking points by the Pentagon's
ministers of propaganda.
Thanks to the two-year investigation by the New York Times,
we today know that Victoria Clarke, then the Assistant Secretary
of Defense for Public Affairs, launched the Pentagon military
analyst program in early 2002. These supposedly independent
military analysts were in fact a coordinated team of pro-war
propagandists, personally recruited by Secretary of Defense
Donald Rumsfeld, and acting under Clarke's tutelage and development.
One former participant, NBC military analyst Kenneth Allard,
has called the effort "psyops on steroids." As Barstow
reports, "Internal Pentagon documents repeatedly refer
to the military analysts as 'message force multipliers' or
'surrogates' who could be counted on to deliver administration
'themes and messages' to millions of Americans 'in the form
of their own opinions.' ... Don Meyer, an aide to Ms. Clarke,
said a strategic decision was made in 2002 to make the analysts
the main focus of the public relations push to construct a
case for war."
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Clarke and her senior aide, Brent T. Krueger, eventually
signed up more than 75 retired military officers who penned
newspaper op/ed columns and appeared on television and radio
news shows as military analysts. The Pentagon held weekly
meetings with the military analysts, which continued as of
April 20, 2008, when the New York Times ran Barstow's story.
The program proved so successful that it was expanded to issues
besides the Iraq War. "Other branches of the administration
also began to make use of the analysts. Mr. Gonzales, then
the attorney general, met with them soon after news leaked
that the government was wiretapping terrorism suspects in
the United States without warrants, Pentagon records show.
When David H. Petraeus was appointed the commanding general
in Iraq in January 2007, one of his early acts was to meet
with the analysts."
Barstow spent two years digging, using the Freedom of Information
Act and attorneys to force the Bush Administration to release
some 8,000 pages of documents now under lock and key at the
New York Times. This treasure trove should result in additional
stories, giving them a sort of "Pentagon Papers"
of Iraq war propaganda.
In 1971, when the Times printed excerpts of the Pentagon
Papers on its front page, it precipitated a constitutional
showdown with the Nixon Administration over the deception
and lies that sold the war in Vietnam. The Pentagon Papers
issue dominated the news media back then. Today, however,
Barstow's stunning report is being ignored by the most important
news media in America -- TV news -- the source where most
Americans, unfortunately, get most of their information.
Joseph Goebbels, eat your heart out. Goebbels is history's
most notorious war propagandist, but even he could not have
invented a smoother PR vehicle for selling and maintaining
media and public support for a war: embed trusted "independent"
military experts into the TV newsroom. As with most propaganda,
the key to the success of this effort was the element of concealment,
as these analysts and the Bush administration hid the fact
that their talking points and marching orders were coming
directly from the Pentagon.
The use of these analysts was a glaring violation of journalistic
standards. As the code of ethics of the Society of Professional
Journalists explains, journalists are supposed to
* Avoid conflicts of interest, real or perceived.
* Remain free of associations and activities that may compromise
integrity or damage credibility.
* Refuse gifts, favors, fees, free travel and special treatment,
and shun secondary employment, political involvement, public
office and service in community organizations if they compromise
journalistic integrity.
* Disclose unavoidable conflicts.
* Be vigilant and courageous about holding those with power
accountable.
* Deny favored treatment to advertisers and special interests
and resist their pressure to influence news coverage.
* Be wary of sources offering information for favors or money.
The networks using these analysts as journalists shamelessly
failed to vet their experts and ignored the obvious conflicts
of hiring a person with financial relationships to companies
profiting from war to be an on-air analyst of war. They acted
as if war was a football game and their military commentators
were former coaches and players familiar with the rules and
strategies. The TV networks even paid these "analysts"
for their propaganda, enabling them to present themselves
as "third party experts" while parroting White House
talking points to sell the war.
Now that Barstow has blown their cover, the TV networks have
generally refused to comment about this matter. Further compounding
their violations of the public trust, they are blacking out
coverage of the New York Times exposé, no doubt on
advice of their own PR and crisis management advisors.
Since the 1920s there have been laws passed to stop the government
from doing what Barstow has exposed. It is actually illegal
in the United States for the government to propagandize its
own citizens. As Barstow's report demonstrates, these laws
have been repeatedly violated, are not enforced and are clearly
inadequate. The U.S. Congress therefore needs to investigate
this and the rest of the Bush propaganda campaign that sold
the war in Iraq.
The attack and occupation of Iraq continues, with no end
in sight. Estimates of the number of Iraqi dead range from
the hundreds of thousands to more than a million. The cost
to American taxpayers will eventually be in the trillions
of dollars. More than 4,000 US soldiers have lost their lives,
and this is just a part of the horrific toll of mental and
physical disability that the war is taking on hundreds of
thousands of troops and their families.
This war would never have been possible had the mainstream
news media done its job. Instead, it has repeated the Big
Lies that sold the war. This war would never have been possible
without the millions of dollars spent by the Bush Administration
on sophisticated and deceptive public relations techniques
such as the Pentagon military analyst program that David Barstow
has exposed. It should come as no surprise to anyone that
Victoria Clarke, who designed and oversaw this Pentagon propaganda
machine, now works as a commentator for TV network news. She
may have changed jobs and employers since leaving the Pentagon,
but her work remains the same.