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Washington's Sudden Embrace of Al Jazeera Won't Erase Past US Crimes Against the Network
If it weren't for Al Jazeera, much of the unfolding Egyptian revolution would never have been televised. Its Arabic and English language channels have provided the most comprehensive coverage of any network in any language hands-down. Despite the Mubarak regime's attempts to shut it down, Al Jazeera's brave reporters and camera crews have persevered. Six Al Jazeera journalists were detained briefly on Monday, their equipment seized. The US responded swiftly to their detention with the State Department calling for their release. "We are concerned by the shutdown of Al Jazeera in Egypt and arrest of its correspondents," State Department spokesperson PJ Crowley tweeted. "Egypt must be open and the reporters released."
The Obama White House has been intently monitoring al Jazeera's coverage of the Egyptian revolt. The network, already famous worldwide, is now a household name in the US. Thousands of Americans—many of whom likely had never watched the network before—are livestreaming Al Jazeera on the internet and over their phones. With a handful of exceptions, most US cities and states have no channel that broadcasts Al Jazeera. That's because cowardly US cable providers refuse to grant the channel a distribution platform, largely for fear of being perceived as supporting or enabling a network that for years has been portrayed negatively by US officials.
For people who have followed Al Jazeera's history with the US, the fact that it is now perceived by the White House and the American public as a force for democracy and freedom is an ironic, some would say hypocritical, development. The contrast between Washington's posture toward Al Jazeera from the Bush era to the Obama presidency could not be more stark.
During the Bush administration, nothing contradicted the absurd claim that the US invaded Iraq to spread democracy throughout the Middle East more decisively than Washington's ceaseless attacks on Al Jazeera, the institution that did more than any other to break the stranglehold over information previously held by authoritarian forces, whether monarchs, military strongmen, occupiers or ayatollahs. Yet, far from calling for its journalists to be respected and freed from imprisonment and unlawful detention, the Bush administration waged war against Al Jazeera and its journalists.
The US bombed its offices in Afghanistan in 2001. In March 2003, two of its financial correspondents were kicked off the trading floor of NASDAQ and the NY Stock Exchange. "In light of Al-Jazeera's recent conduct during the war, in which they have broadcast footage of US POWs in alleged violation of the Geneva Convention, they are not welcome to broadcast from our facility at this time," said NASDAQ's spokesperson. Later NASDAQ backed off that claim and said the networks accreditation had been revoked for "security reasons."
In April 2003, US forces shelled the Basra hotel where Al Jazeera journalists were the only guests and killed Jazeera's Iraq correspondent Tareq Ayoub a few days later in Baghdad. The US also imprisoned several Al Jazeera reporters (including at Guantánamo), some of whom say they were tortured. Among these was Sami al-Haj, an Al Jazeera cameraman who spent seven years at Guantanamo and was repeatedly interrogated by US operatives attempting to falsely link Al Jazeera to al Qaeda. In addition to the military attacks, the US-backed Iraqi government periodically banned Al Jazeera from reporting in Iraq. Indeed Al Jazeera was shut down in Iraq under both Saddam Hussein and the US-backed government.
Then in late November 2005 Britain's Daily Mirror reported that during an April 2004 White House meeting with British Prime Minister Tony Blair, George W. Bush floated the idea of bombing Al Jazeera's international headquarters in Qatar. This allegation was based on leaked "Top Secret" minutes of the Bush-Blair summit. At the time of Bush's meeting with Blair, the Administration was in the throes of a very public, high-level temper tantrum directed against Al Jazeera. The meeting took place on April 16, at the peak of the first US siege of Falluja, and Al Jazeera was one of the few news outlets broadcasting from inside the city. Its exclusive footage was being broadcast by every network from CNN to the BBC.
The Falluja offensive, one of the bloodiest assaults of the US occupation, was a turning point. In two weeks that April, thirty marines were killed as local guerrillas resisted US attempts to capture the city. Some 600 Iraqis died, many of them women and children. Al Jazeera broadcast from inside the besieged city, beaming images to the world. On live TV the network gave graphic documentary evidence disproving US denials that it was killing civilians. It was a public relations disaster, and the United States responded by attacking the messenger.
Just a few days before Bush allegedly proposed bombing the network, Al Jazeera's correspondent in Falluja, Ahmed Mansour, reported live on the air, "Last night we were targeted by some tanks, twice... but we escaped. The US wants us out of Falluja, but we will stay." On April 9 Washington demanded that Al Jazeera leave the city as a condition for a cease-fire. The network refused. Mansour wrote that the next day "American fighter jets fired around our new location, and they bombed the house where we had spent the night before, causing the death of the house owner Mr. Hussein Samir. Due to the serious threats we had to stop broadcasting for few days because every time we tried to broadcast the fighter jets spotted us we became under their fire."
On April 11 senior military spokesperson Mark Kimmitt declared, "The stations that are showing Americans intentionally killing women and children are not legitimate news sources. That is propaganda, and that is lies." On April 15 Donald Rumsfeld echoed those remarks in distinctly undiplomatic terms, calling Al Jazeera's reporting "vicious, inaccurate and inexcusable.... It's disgraceful what that station is doing." It was the very next day, according to the Daily Mirror, that Bush told Blair of his plan. "He made clear he wanted to bomb al-Jazeera in Qatar and elsewhere," a source told the Mirror. "There's no doubt what Bush wanted to do--and no doubt Blair didn't want him to do it."
Al Jazeera's real transgression during the "war on terror" was a simple one: being there. That is what Al Jazeera is doing today in Egypt and why it is so dangerous to the Mubarak regime. While critical of US policy, Al Jazeera is not anti-American—it is independent. In fact, it has angered almost every Arab government at one point or another and has been kicked out of or sanctioned by many Arab countries (the one country which Al Jazeera arguably does not cover independently is its host nation of Qatar). It was the first Arab station to broadcast interviews with Israeli officials and is hardly the Al Qaeda mouthpiece the Bush Administration wanted us to believe it was. Now that is abundantly clear to Americans who over the past week have come to depend on Al Jazeera for accurate news on the developments in Egypt.
The real threat Al Jazeera poses to authoritarian regimes is in its unembedded journalism. That is why the Bush Administration viewed Al Jazeera as a threat, it is why Mubarak's regime is trying to shut it down and that is why the network is so important to the unfolding revolutions in the Middle East. It is the same role the network plays in reporting on the disastrous US war in Afghanistan.
Part of why Al Jazeera has become acceptable is that, unlike throughout much of the Bush era, it now has a full 24-hour English language news channel filled with veteran reporters who came to the network from CNN, the BBC and other Western news outlets. When it was an Arabic language only network, it was a lot easier to demonize and malign because fact-checking US officials' fabrications and pronouncements required a real effort.
At the end of the day, the real test of whether there is a substantive change in Washington's stance toward independent, unembedded journalists and journalism will likely not involve Al Jazeera, but some other news outlet or journalist. And that test will be real only when that journalist or media outlets' rights are in direct conflict with Washington's agenda.
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109 Comments so far
Show Allt_g
I would've never thought that I'll ever write this, but watch Al Jazeera and Russia Today for news that's relevant and impartial. Also, try Press TV.
I watch RT alot. However their coverage of Russia itself is mostly fluff, things like Putin serenading Sharon Stone. Their reporting on the bank bailouts or the "War on Terror" is pretty much spot on.
Good catch, Jill. It re-awakens the sceptical part of the brain.
Joe
hang in there toad - i hear they are going to do run re-runs on katie kouric's polyps
now that's entertainment
Yea I saw that when it was first broad cast. I turned the TV on when they already had the camera up her butt, and I thought I was just seeing old Katie without her makeup on...
For those who speak Spanish, TeleSur from Venezuela is also very good. I don't know if it is on cable in USA.
Their formerly was CNN International broadcast in the USA. After Bush took office the domestic broadcasting was discontinued and Int'l is still broadcast worldwide.My point being that CNN international was discontinued, most likely, by pressure from the Bush gang to shut off foreign new programs so that their war crimes would not be made available to the American public. As for the USG/MIC,Mafia Industrial Complex, embracing Al Jazeera means that the USG/MIC will attempt to bribe its journalists as has been done to the propaganda reciters of the MSM.
Their formerly was CNN International broadcast in the USA. After Bush took office the domestic broadcasting was discontinued and Int'l is still broadcast worldwide.My point being that CNN international was discontinued, most likely, by pressure from the Bush gang to shut off foreign new programs so that their war crimes would not be made available to the American public. As for the USG/MIC,Mafia Industrial Complex, embracing Al Jazeera means that the USG/MIC will attempt to bribe its journalists as has been done to the propaganda reciters of the MSM.
sorry for the duplicate
You can always delete the message, so long nobody reply. We all make the same mistake:-)
Free To Air! HELLO!!
I just watched a piece on Democracy Now on why AJ english is hardly shown in the US, and read this piece, and neither mentioned that you can watch Al Jazeera english anytime you want on a Free To Air satellite system. You can also watch Russia TV english (which is excellent!), Press TV english out of Iran, which does hard hitting reporting on the US, and China TV news english.
Along with those news shows there is Kuwait TV2 which broadcasts a wide variety of general entertainment shows in english, and EBRU and River Broadcasting which does general family friendly TV.
If you get a motorized system you can also get The History Channel, and Biography channel on their test feeds, Retro TV, and Tuff TV, and the Pentagon channel. There are also hundreds of other TV and radio channels on the various Satellites, and speaking of radio stations, Radio Netherlands english is also excellent, and available on FTA.
So for a for a few hundred bucks, get yourselves a good TV antenna, and a FTA motorized satellite system and tell your cable company or pay satellite provider to go pound sand. You'll get news that is actually worth watching, and save yourselves a LOT of money over the long term.
i will definitely check that out! thanks.
Also, don't forget the bombing of the Al Jazeera office in Belgrade in 1999.
Been watching the protests live on Al Jazeera's internet site this morning. Maybe this is another Berlin Wall moment. Meanwhile at 8am, I flipped the channels on my non-cable TV to see if M$M was covering it. All three major channels were covering weather in the Mid-West as their major story; however, Univision's main story was Egypt.
Agree with Toad, Press TV is another good news source.
Scahill's piece highlights the hypocrisy and duplicity of our vaunted notion of "freedom of the press."
Perhaps if Al Jazeera ran a few "Muhammed cartoons," they would be seen as the good guys embracing real freedom of the press--at least in our xenophobic opinion.
Don't forget that MSNBC fired Phil Donahue, its biggest audience draw, because he opposed our wars. Now they have fired Olbermann, another opponent of most of what our government does. Even the most "liberal" voices in the MSM, like Rachel Maddow, Ed Schultz, or Lawrence O'Donnell, speak "reasonably" about America's actions. Before the 2008 elections, Schultz repeatedly called Bush and McCain war mongers, but after Obama's election, he never has called him a war monger. I guess it depends on who does the baby killing.
Those of us who remember Viet Nam, also remember that TV brought the public to the point of calling our soldiers "baby killers," which all soldiers are. Serial chain saw baby killers and the women who love them.
I have had the unfortunate experience of seeing children die horrific violent deaths and can tell you that the memory never dies.
Until we recognize that war just means the mass murder of innocent people, we can never think of ourselves as decent human beings.
your sentiment is mine too.
Blah!
Olbermann, Rachel Maddog, Ed Schultz, and Lawrence O'Donnell. Speak reasonably? They will shove you under the buses! Blah!
MSNBC, COMCAST BLAH! BLAH!
"Al Jazeera's real transgression during the "war on terror" was a simple one: being there. "
No. Al Jazeera's real transgression was an even simpler one: having the courage to try to tell (at least some of) the truth, unlike every western media outlet.
curiousteve
One should never trust any MEDIA especially MSNBC. Be critical of Media including Aljazeera DN, NPR, PBS and CD. They change and make mistakes. You should control your emotion and don't be like Peggy Joseph on Youtube
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P36x8rTb3jI
So long they remain honest, even handed and more, I will continue to watch. I like Aljazeer and DN.
I think your way is the best. If the issue is in Iran, then probably Press TV becomes less than even handed. If the issue is in Russia, then RT becomes less than even handed. You cant really trust any one source.
The trouble with news from the USA or vassal countries of the USA such as Britain, Canadian and Australian outlets is that when the issue has ramifications for US interests they become less than even handed, and unfortunately because the USA is a global empire, there are not many international events that dont have ramifications for USA interests. Israeli, UK, Australian and Canadian foreign policy IS USA foreign policy. Coverage during the lead up to the Iraq war or about Venezuela, North Korea and Iran (lead up to other wars) from these countries is just plain STUPID and directly out of Orwell's or Goebbels's pay book. Australian newspapers where I live are either totally pathetic, or they are owned by Fox news. Outside of the Internet, there is absolutely not much to choose from.
Th UK Guardian, the UK independent and even Haraatz have one or two good journalists (Fisk, Joanna Hari, Pilger & Gideon Levy) even though the most other articles in these papers that concern USA foreign policy are just propaganda.
I think you mean Johann Hari.
America is supposed to be the beacon of Democracy, a shining light for the rest of the world to follow. We elected two shit heads, and now we are the Beacons of shit and still everyone follows us, including Australia and Canada. I like Australia, been there many times in the 70's and 80's. BTW you have two outstanding journalists, John Pilger and Julian Assanga. G'day:-
You should reread my post.
Note the part where I said "some of the truth"?
http://english.aljazeera.net/
it`s the ONLY news I read. All the rest is pure bullshit / propoganda
Aljazeera is arguably one of the best news sources in the world today. And they are worldwide unlike info news that america so loves.
America has so much to relearn when it comes to educating its public through the "news" services it touts.
Wake up America and view a real News source in Aljazera. It won't hurt. And it may turn on your lights and find that things are not as wonderful in America as you thought.
Will America think of change now? Don't wait for Obama to make those choices for YOU. He will probably be too late.
And Hillary has her own agenda.
very well said. Wake up people.
It is good to see Jeremy Scahill here today. He might be the last of the great investigative journalists in the US.
Thanks for all you do, Jeremy!
I'll second that, adding that he's also, umm, pretty easy on the eyes too. :-)
Those in charge here in the US understand that it is easier to rule by implied consent rather than by force. Government edicts, such as the one banning AlJazeera in Egypt, would cause many people here to bristle, on the left, in the center, and on the right. Psychologists have shown that when people believe they are making decisions through free choice, they tend to stick with those decisions and defend them (cognitive dissonance and confirmation bias). Same applies to our elections.
The media handlers are smooth at managing public relations. Information control here is still primarily corporate controlled and hidden, rather than by edict. Those reporters who buck the program risk being fired, and they know it. Of course the true reasons behind a firing are often disguised.
Thus the script and actor control are the primary instruments of reining in the media. Some of the scripts seem to be centrally generated. (See the repeated use of key phrases as shown on the Jon Stewart show). Deeply analytic or critical commentary is mostly ignored, consigned to marginal positions, or buried in the mainstream media. Factual information is not considered newsworthy.
BTW, even Israel broadcasts AlJazeera.
Joe
Jill,
I was thinking the same thing.
Thank you.
It would be nice if Jeremy Scahill acknowledgewd that Al Jazeera itself has changed a bit. Comparing the bias of reporting at Al Jazeera now to the past time period he mentions is a bit of a reach.
As to touting Al Jazeera as the true source of news and everyone else is a toad, its to infantile a suggestion to contemplate.
There are bad news sources and good ones, bad reporters and good ones, but they are must assuredly not all gathered under one banner.
It's also amusing to see the continuing effort to suggest that our govermennt's stance toward independent, unembedded journalists and journalism is much different that most government's when they are being critiqed by that source.
The main point Jeremy makes about Al Jazeera English is valid.
Moughty? Who's the moron?
After evidence that candid photos from Vietnam contributed to opposition to that invasion, the embedding of reporters and control of reporting from Iraq and Afghanistan have been effective. Images of US troop and civilian deaths and injuries have been suppressed, sometimes officially, as with returning caskets. Add that to the amount of reporting dedicated to Iraq and Afghanistan as compared with sports, gossip and entertainment news, and there you have it. The justification is that that's what the people want to see. Nobody asked me.
Joe
better yet, how can i tell what i want to see or not if i don't know what i've been missing?
Here is a lyric from "Colors of the Wind" from the movie Pocohantas that says what you are saying.
"You'll learn things you never knew you never knew".
Despite being Disney, it is a beautiful song.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TkV-of_eN2w
Joe
"It would be nice if Jeremy Scahill acknowledgewd that Al Jazeera itself has changed a bit. Comparing the bias of reporting at Al Jazeera now to the past time period he mentions is a bit of a reach."
The above remark is stunning and breathtaking in its idiocy, and hypocracy. So, when they report on the US invading other nations and comitting atrocities, Al Jazeera is "biased". Then, when a US invasion is not the subject of the Al Jazeera's reporting, they have turned over a new leaf.
I can scarecely believe such poeple as mightymite exist. How can a person be so dishonest with themselves?
I'll bet he is well "educated." [/smarm off]
I agree.
"cowardly US cable providers refuse to grant the channel a distribution platform, largely for fear of being perceived as supporting or enabling a network that for years has been portrayed negatively by US officials."
Who said that if there is money to be made, corporations would follow?
On the other hand, if there was an Al Jazeera cable channel, it would be coopted by our rotten MSM.
Hi ezflyer: I do not know how AlJazeera would/could be coopted by our rotten MSM. An AlJazeera program is what it is. I do not think they would agree to be broadcast and then partially censored or adulterated by the cable networks.
Joe
I'm thinking they could be coopted by American corporate sponsors, like they did with PBS, NPR and much of our MSM
I think you are essentially correct, but do remember that money influences. Advertising carries more money than you might imagine, and it is a powerful lever to pull on media outlets.
"The stations that are showing Americans intentionally killing women and children are not legitimate news sources. That is propaganda, and that is lies."
- US military spokesperson Mark Kimmitt
Who are we supposed to believe, the US military or our own two eyes?
As long as Al Jazeera broadcasts the truth it will remain the enemy of the US govt, the same as Wikileaks. If the over indulged Americans ever stood up to tyranny, Al Jazeera would be met at the airport and disappeared.
Comcast won't even carry BBC World (24 hour news) that is available in dozens and dozens of countries around the world. They don't carry RT either. If they start carrying AJE 24 I will be very very surprised.
The USA is the most censored and propagandized nation in the entire "developed" world and one of the most in the entire world. When one travels abroad, this becomes crystal clear.
IMO TV is not a good place to get information, however there are some good outlets for live coverage and have much much better coverage than usual CNN/Fox/MSNBC crap. France 24, RT (Russia Today) Al Jazeera. BBC World is not much better than CNN (international version). It is interesting that a different CNN is broadcast overseas, than the one for domestic consumption. That alone is very telling.
Maybe someday, Blair, Bush, Cheney, Obama, and the Clintons et al. will be on the dock for their crimes. I aint holding my breath however.
"It is interesting that a different CNN is broadcast overseas, than the one for domestic consumption..."
Bit off-topic, bit I see the same thing with cars too. For decsades now, the cars that GM and Ford make for European and Japanese consumption are far higher quality, better performance, and deliver vastly better fuel economy than the ones for US consumption.
that's almost always the case in an export-driven capitalist economy, in which the local government is in the industry's pocket. abroad, the corporates, however, have the disadvantage of competing with local corporates that have their govt in their pocket.
well, the neo-liberal new world order has tried to do away with that competition, but not entirely successfully so far.
That's right Sabo,
and partly due to different demands from consumers, and different regulations in the EU and Japan, different models must be made available (in addition to right-hand drive for Japan and UK, Ireland). Most people in the EU, for example, demand a stick shift (better fuel efficiency and less cost than automatic).
On a related note; since the EU, Japan, Australia and NZ do not allow plastics made with BPA (bisphenols) China dumps all this toxic crap on the USA. The US has become a dumping ground for toxic goods laden with lead, cadmium etc. since there is almost no monitoring by US authorities. Another example of how the US govt. does not give a toss about its own people. Just like Hosni Mubarak, their puppet boy.
Just to be clear, consumer demand only rarely arises organically from consumer clamor, it is almost always indoctrinated into the consumer by the manufacturer. For example, the rise of the SUV in the USA came about because SUV's are classified as trucks, and were not subject to as many safety, and fuel economy standards as cars, therefore manufacturers can make more money per-unit off an SUV than a car, Therefore, starting in the early 1990's, they set to work, with billions of dollars worth of the advertising and product-placement tools of Bernays, to convince USAn that if they didn't have an SUV, they were an unsophisticated nobody, and even an irresponsible parent!
The way in which the big, cumbersome, SUV - basically a truck - replaced the sleek, fast, nimble, finely engineered sports car or upscale sedan as the status symbol among so many USAns who never get near an unpaved road was the crowning vindication of Bernays theories of mass mind-control.
In the US for sure, in the EU and other places perhaps not as much.