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Fiction of Marja as City Was US Information War
WASHINGTON - For weeks, the U.S. public followed the biggest offensive of the Afghanistan War against what it was told was a "city of 80,000 people" as well as the logistical hub of the Taliban in that part of Helmand. That idea was a central element in the overall impression built up in February that Marja was a major strategic objective, more important than other district centers in Helmand.
During a medevac mission, a Black Hawk medical helicopter with the 82nd Airborne's Task Force Pegasus flies low and fast over Marjah to pick up a wounded U.S. Marine, as seen through the cockpit window of the security helicopter, or 'chase bird,' trailing behind, in Helmand province, Afghanistan, Saturday March 6, 2010.
(AP Photo/Brennan Linsley) It turns out, however, that the picture of Marja presented by military officials and obediently reported by major news media is one of the clearest and most dramatic pieces of misinformation of the entire war, apparently aimed at hyping the offensive as a historic turning point in the conflict.
Marja is not a city or even a real town, but either a few clusters of farmers' homes or a large agricultural area covering much of the southern Helmand River Valley.
"It's not urban at all," an official of the International Security Assistance Force (ISAF), who asked not to be identified, admitted to IPS Sunday. He called Marja a "rural community".
"It's a collection of village farms, with typical family compounds," said the official, adding that the homes are reasonably prosperous by Afghan standards.
Richard B. Scott, who worked in Marja as an adviser on irrigation for the U.S. Agency for International Development as recently as 2005, agrees that Marja has nothing that could be mistaken as being urban. It is an "agricultural district" with a "scattered series of farmers' markets," Scott told IPS in a telephone interview.
The ISAF official said the only population numbering tens of thousands associated with Marja is spread across many villages and almost 200 square kilometers, or about 125 square miles.
Marja has never even been incorporated, according to the official, but there are now plans to formalize its status as an actual "district" of Helmand Province.
The official admitted that the confusion about Marja's population was facilitated by the fact that the name has been used both for the relatively large agricultural area and for a specific location where farmers have gathered for markets.
However, the name Marja "was most closely associated" with the more specific location, where there are also a mosque and a few shops.
That very limited area was the apparent objective of "Operation Moshtarak", to which 7,500 U.S., NATO and Afghan troops were committed amid the most intense publicity given any battle since the beginning of the war.
So how did the fiction that Marja is a city of 80,000 people get started?
The idea was passed on to the news media by the U.S. Marines in southern Helmand. The earliest references in news stories to Marja as a city with a large population have a common origin in a briefing given Feb. 2 by officials at Camp Leatherneck, the U.S. Marine base there.
The Associated Press published an article the same day quoting "Marine commanders" as saying that they expected 400 to 1,000 insurgents to be "holed up" in the "southern Afghan town of 80,000 people." That language evoked an image of house to house urban street fighting.
The same story said Marja was "the biggest town under Taliban control" and called it the "linchpin of the militants' logistical and opium-smuggling network". It gave the figure of 125,000 for the population living in "the town and surrounding villages". ABC news followed with a story the next day referring to the "city of Marja" and claiming that the city and the surrounding area "are more heavily populated, urban and dense than other places the Marines have so far been able to clear and hold."
The rest of the news media fell into line with that image of the bustling, urbanized Marja in subsequent stories, often using "town" and "city" interchangeably. Time magazine wrote about the "town of 80,000" Feb. 9, and the Washington Post did the same Feb. 11.
As "Operation Moshtarak" began, U.S. military spokesmen were portraying Marja as an urbanized population center. On Feb. 14, on the second day of the offensive, Marine spokesman Lt. Josh Diddams said the Marines were "in the majority of the city at this point."
He also used language that conjured images of urban fighting, referring to the insurgents holding some "neighborhoods".
A few days into the offensive, some reporters began to refer to a "region", but only created confusion rather than clearing the matter up. CNN managed to refer to Marja twice as a "region" and once as "the city" in the same Feb. 15 article, without any explanation for the apparent contradiction.
The Associated Press further confused the issue in a Feb. 21 story, referring to "three markets in town - which covers 80 square miles...."
A "town" with an area of 80 square miles would be bigger than such U.S. cities as Washington, D.C., Pittsburgh and Cleveland. But AP failed to notice that something was seriously wrong with that reference.
Long after other media had stopped characterizing Marja as a city, the New York Times was still referring to Marja as "a city of 80,000", in a Feb. 26 dispatch with a Marja dateline.
The decision to hype up Marja as the objective of "Operation Moshtarak" by planting the false impression that it is a good-sized city would not have been made independently by the Marines at Camp Leatherneck.
A central task of "information operations" in counterinsurgency wars is "establishing the COIN [counterinsurgency] narrative", according to the Army Counterinsurgency Field Manual as revised under Gen. David Petraeus in 2006.
That task is usually done by "higher headquarters" rather than in the field, as the manual notes.
The COIN manual asserts that news media "directly influence the attitude of key audiences toward counterinsurgents, their operations and the opposing insurgency." The manual refers to "a war of perceptions...conducted continuously using the news media."
Gen. Stanley A. McChrystal, commander of ISAF, was clearly preparing to wage such a war in advance of the Marja operation. In remarks made just before the offensive began, McChrystal invoked the language of the counterinsurgency manual, saying, "This is all a war of perceptions."
The Washington Post reported Feb. 22 that the decision to launch the offensive against Marja was intended largely to impress U.S. public opinion with the effectiveness of the U.S. military in Afghanistan by showing that it could achieve a "large and loud victory."
The false impression that Marja was a significant city was an essential part of that message.
Gareth Porter is an investigative historian and journalist specializing in U.S. national security policy. The paperback edition of his latest book, "Perils of Dominance: Imbalance of Power and the Road to War in Vietnam", was published in 2006.
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49 Comments so far
Show AllThis may have been something on the order of "Wounded Knee".
Link to photos of Marja:
http://www.uslaboragainstwar.org/article.php?id=21608
Good article for exposing the propaganda. Look at the photos of Marja (including "downtown" Marja). Will MSM apologize for falling for the military propaganda? Doubtful. The military information propaganda against US citizens should be (and may be) illegal; but the politicians are supporting the war and are silent.
I tried to find "Marja" in Google Earth. No Luck. GE does recognize "Marjeh" in Helmland Province.
It certainly is an agricultural area, and I could not find ANY urban development except for a small development near 31.57N, 64.37E that covers about 4 sq. miles.
See photos of "downtown" Marja in my comment below.
I did; that's why I went to GE for confirmation that Marjeh is a large, vibrant, cosmopolitan, advanced and happening "city"!
The U.S. military is so bereft that it needs to inflate its targets before reducing them to dust. Naturally, the corrupt media oblige in this creation of military bubbles, thereby feeding the cult of the greatest nation on Earth and of its all-mighty military, both an earthly extension of God's Providence and omnipotence.
The self-deception of the elites and their willfull deception of the populace via the organs of disinformation come in many guises.
This is the 'city' where our govenment was going to establish a 'ready-made-government-in-a-box?' The 'War on Terror' gets flakier by the day.
The war on terror is a phoney war.
It is in fact a terrorist enterprise aiming at geopolitical mastery of a region of the world and of its various natural resources (oil, natural gas, minerals, and such).
It is a U.S. led war that seeks to discipline and punish by the fear and insecurity caused by massive and stealthy bombings, murder, arbitrary detention, torture, and the "disappearing" of individuals, while at the same time it quietly deploys the U.S. Geological Survey in the occupied territories to produce a map of the natural spoils of war (see the article "Afghan 'Geological Reserves Worth a Trillion Dollars'," published at CD on 1/1/10), constructs massive fortress embassies and military bases in the lands it has seized, and modifies their political and legal institutions to serve the interests of the occupying nations.
I note here that although a number of other countries have participated in the wars waged by the U.S. against Iraq and Afghanistan, only the U.S. has been building military bases and fortress embassies in the occupied lands.
As one who used to work for the domestic side of the USGS, I did a little searching and was surprised to see how deep and long the USGS has been in Afghanistan. Here's a link to all their activities in Afghanistan. It's quite amazing.
http://afghanistan.cr.usgs.gov/documents.php?cat=2
This is not war and never was it is an occupation with a the MIC in control to sell military toys that kill and maim and a military that does their bidding and a PR that lies always. If anybody in the chain of command or Congress cared they would all get fired.Truman was an asshole for using the a-bomb and other things but took no shit from McArther.Tony
Great, now Obama can declare victory and leave!
I won't tell.
So this latest round of psychological operations against Americans began at Camp Redneck. One article I read supposedly quoted an Afghan soldier saying his childhood dream was to raise the Afghan flag over Marja. I read it as propaganda at the time, remembering similar bullcrap attributed to Iraqis who supposedly were loving fighting with their American comrades "for freedom" in Iraq.
>>>>> and almost 200 square kilometers, or about 125 square miles.
200 square kilometers is 77 square miles.
"Ready-made-government-in-a-box" coming to a county near you!
Ever get the sense that this is training for operations on home turf?
Porter is great. One point is that the area is on the TAPI route, the purpose of the offensive.
The AP is pure propaganda.
Part of the installed government is the Helmand governor, Mangal, who has been reported on CD to be a mass raper of little boys.
Heck of a Job Barry!
No surprise here. I could tell at the beginning the operation was just for propaganda purposes. The MSM is utterly moronic.
Reading the commentary that accompanies the photo with today's article, I have to ask: What the hell is a "chase bird"? Is this like the ubiquitous pick-up truck that always follows Harley Davidson motorcycles?
LOL. Then there are the Harleys that never make it out of the pick up truck, and the obese dudes & dudettes lining up at the Harley Boutique to buy Harley crap from the garp catalog which is now the size of the Manhattan phone directory.There's a reason Harley Davidson is such an iconic American "brand": they're a real triumph of bullshit over substance, just like the rest of the country.
Ha-Ha - Now I understand why I couldn't find a city of Marjah (Marjeh) on Google Earth... (Only the regular Afghan walled family-compunds and square plots of cultivated land - "each family their own fortress", being the way Afghans do it.)
Now the anti-terrorist police headquarters in Lahore was suicide-bomber attacked, 13 dead. Sure good they have those anti-terrorists there... But the Taliban is suspected of "doing" it (the suicide bomber doesn't count, apparently). "The ammunition and weapons are coming from Afghanistan." Pakistan's interior minister is quoted by AFP as saying.
- Oh, alright then. Nothing serious, just the regular Taliban-thing. Nothing to worry about. Just those guys who lost the "Battle of Marjah" sulking, it seems. They're all fanatics. That's why they do it. No legitimate complaints, thank god. Just USA-envy (soon to be a psychiatric condition listed in the DSM-5, treatable with bombs - or Tasers in superficial cases). They don't have any real reasons to fight the good, US allied, US sponsored Pakistan, luckily. Just the ordinary muslim evil. No cause for alarm. Our boys are there, or at least nearby, a country or two away. So those Taliban-Queda-brownies won't get to here. And that's the whole point.
Smoke and mirrors. Doesn't matter if "the enemy" is a heap of rocks, as long as the "defence" (sic.) budget keeps landing in the good hands. - Let's bomb the hell out of those rocks, and declare victory. Then we can point to the pebble-rubble and say: "See - nothing left of the headquarters". Everyone wins. Ha-ha.
As others have noted, the transliteration of the name shows some variations and "Marjah" is not found on Google Maps.
"Marjeh, Helmand, Afghanistan" however is and fits the description.
Try it and see. It looks like a good honest poppy growing agricultural area. No city that I can see, just barren land where the map arrow points to.
The public are so easy to fool. It's enough to make you weep.
GE shows a small urban development near 31.57N, 64.37E that covers about 4 sq. miles and I estimate to have no more than 500 buildings.
Google Earth shows me a small town at 'Marjeh, Afghanistan' with straight road grid and multiple small and medium-sized buildings - adding up to something hard to estimate a population for based on American standards.
Wikipedia places the population somewhere between 80,000 and 125,000 when the surrounding area is included.
Who do you believe? This is likely what passes for a town of medium size in Afghanistan - perhaps a city by local but not world standards.
I would not accuse military news of lying for effect in this regard. They are there to build trust, not lay themselves open to charges of crude propaganda, easily exposed by local knowledge.
I'm beginning to wonder if any news about anything that comes from MSM is believable. If they don't check facts on what was supposed to be the largest US/NATO offensive since the beginning of the Afghan War, the first 'government in a box' exercise, and the return of a large 'city' to the Afghans, what are we to believe from the media?
Heck, what about that rocket that went astray shot from 10 miles away that killed 13, half of which were children. The media made it sound like the 'mistake' was forgivable since it was in a metro area. This is all a scam. I think I'm going to believe Ahmadinijad when he said the 9/11 attack was a lie based on intel spinning.
I even checked factcheck.org, truthdig, DemocracyNow and a few others and there was nothing there either about this slight of hand.
Well, at least baseball season is starting up. The lies there only deal with steroids, which seems soooooo insignificant in the greater world of lies and deceptions spun by MSM.
Patience, patience!
The US Embassy-in-a-Box comes with Plug 'n Play Pizza Huts, Starbucks, and even nail salons that will make this Afghan Brigadoon's skyline virtually indistinguishable from-- oh, say, Flint, Michigan-- in no time!
I'm sure the folks at the State Department's "Sister City" program are already on top of it.
Obama was a fine choice for the ruling elite. He has gutted so much opposition to the wars without a peep from his supporters.
----- Jill, you've nailed it exactly --
Good one, 'Jill' - I'm with you too on that.
For your news-searches, check out www.therealnews.com and www.globalresearch.ca - assuming you already use www.counterpunch.org and alternet.org. For war & media analyses, try consortiumnews.org. For MUCH wider perspectives, try www.realitysandwich.com.
Enjoy.
www.realitysandwich.com: Authorization Required
Gary
“Nobody can hurt me without my permission.”
-- Mahatma Gandhi
Well stated, Jill.
I have a close relative who was bedazzled by Obama, but is now pretty well de-dazzled. Or should that be disdazzled? ;)
And yet he still has a hard time thinking of Obama as essentially a "cold" person, and not merely refreshingly "cool" like menthol. He still believes that Obama must have been bullied, coerced, and intimidated into trying to out-hawk his predecessor, and isn't "really" a warmonger at heart.
CodePink ended up spinning its wheels in the Obama slick too.
I'm not making excuses for them, but perhaps it's like one of those horrific moments of Twilight Zone truth in sci-fi or espionage thrillers, where the protagonist suddenly realizes that a crucial ally is actually One of Them.
It's as if they're stuck in a deer-in-the-headlights loop, unable to adjust to the grim and appalling truth.
Jill: I, too, have friends who just can't seem to let go of the illusion. They are still waiting for Obama to do what they thought they heard him say when he was campaigning. Just recently, one of my friends e-mailed me that Obama needs to be strong, blah, blah, blah. Finally, I sort of lost it with her and told her that she needs to come to terms with the fact that Obama is NOT on our side, and NEVER was on OUR side. So far, I haven't heard back from her. Like you, I have lost my patience -- it's not one thing, it's everything, every issue that is critical to our lives.
"These largely poor and uneducated kids are being sent to die for horrible lies. Of course we must not forget all the civilian casualties. No ones' desire to "believe" in Obama should take precedence over human suffering and the destruction of our Constitution." -- Jill
I completely agree!
Thanks for your post!
'Jill':
You're right and you're tough and you're clear, and I hope you remain around, unsilenced and yet unbanned. With Neil Young: "Don't be denied". But a crucial phenomenon in the human tribe these days, with all communication-forms except face to face, is that the communication channels are biased and hijacked. Obama's wire-tap condoning is simply a clear case of it. So is netsite censoring. Perhaps we should understand without accepting, that CD is fighting on two fronts, both up and down, and sometimes a compromised fight is better than none. (Though other times I'd adamantly refuse that, to say: "It's better to die standing up than live on our knees"). Yet these days beggars can't be choosers, and the ideal of full factuality may be currently unrealistic here. No absolutes seem workable - the issue in general ties me up in knots ("NOTs") of hard choices: how to communicate perceived truth among many without the channel's biases undermining and negating the messages? Is it better to be bland than bold, instead of banned? - It remains unanswered. I used to be someone else, until I got "smarter"...
Operation Moshtarak? Does Moshtarak translate as "Mockingbird"?
'WE'LL KNOW OUR DISINFORMATION PROGRAM IS COMPLETE WHEN EVERYTHING THE AMERICAN PUBLIC BELIEVES IS FALSE': William Casey, Director of Central Intelligence: An observation by the late Director at his first staff meeting in 1981.
To spread the word and rebut the violence purveying mainstream media that romanticizes and glorifies the War Against Terror, I put a bumper sticker on my car that proclaims:
War is Terrorism
with a bigger budget
Excellent!
I have two bumper stickers: The first just says "War is Terrorism", and the second says "Killing for peace is like screwing for virginity".
War is terrorism with a uniform and a flag.
Marja probably refused to join the CIA heroin cartel.
Americans are funny. Obama told you that there was a domestic progaganda section in his government that was hiring people to plant stories and blog online.
The military leader of the occupation in Afghanistan told you that the mission was primarily focused on swaying the domestic US audience.
The Democrats aren't even trying to hide what they are doing, relying on the apathy of the US voter, instead.
Maybe you progressives aren't pressuring them enough, you think???
Can't be helped, 'Jill' - they do that at will. See Wikipedia. (Lightfooted, lightfooted here...:-)
Gonna pass this one on to NPR. They have been saturating my mornings with stories about Marja for at LEAST a week.
We'll see if they send a mea culpa in response. I won't hold my breath.
for the first 2 weeks or so I was getting daily reports in our local, paper- mostly AP but they sent someone to cover the action too- "marines meet stiff resistance...fierce fire fight...the battle raged for 6 hours..." and so on. I was fascinated with these reports, and completely puzzled about where all these flying bullets were landing, because no one seemed to be getting killed. I sent an email to Marc Herold, explaining my problem, and he answered at some length about how much military reports are made up- in this case it now appears a total fairy tale.
I have heard of "fierce fire fights" in Afghanistan before,
sometimes reporting 100 dead Talibans and one dead u.s. troop. reading further down it turns out that once the u.s. started "taking fire"- I'm sure by now we all know what that means- an air strike
was called in. so that explains the lopsided casualties.
Amazin!
Shows how involved they are with local populations, and how remote they are from the hearts and minds they wish to win.
It shows that propaganda is being used by the USA military and the government to control the citizens of the USA.
As far as I know this is specifically against the law of the USA.
Put the Pentagon in prison.
Cool! Screwing for virginity is just a bit ironic.
I also have a bumper sticker that has a pretty white dove with an olive branch and the words proclaiming Peace on Earth.
McChrystal…(what kind of a name is that?) Shamed immigrant parents is my guess.
In the possible shame of the name; he has become a murderous thug, at the top of your military pyramid.
Killer, liar, and thug…. possibly your next POTUS.
Your future’s so “bright” I got to wear gloves& a mask.
You're kidding? Another president screwed a girl scout in the oval office? Again?
But seriously... I mean, I think it's safe to assume that WE are the 'key audience' being referred to in the COIN manual. I'd be interested to know the details behind wanting us to see this as some kind of actual battle or offensive. Is it purely to make us think we're actually accomplishing something by this illegal and unjust war?
Cicero: "Freedom is participation in power."
Big Media wants us not only to care about its slow demise, it also wants us to PAY for the privilege of being lied to via online access to formerly free online versions of old school newspapers. Their FU mercenary attitude as liars hopefully will accelerate their demise, although the plutocrats will run some of them at a loss because of their lock on the brain stems of so many upper-middle-class tools.