There are only two weapons in the imperial tool chest: force
and deception. The brutal colonial occupation of Iraq has provided us with a
lavish example of the former, but the twin-axel of deception is more abstruse
and difficult to pin down. Sure, there's the flagrant propaganda that floods
right-wing radio and political talk shows, but that tells us little about the
state-sponsored disinformation-programs that permeate every area of American
life.
We now know that the Bush administration authorized massive
illegal spying operations and is actively engaged in planting pro-American
stories in the foreign press. These suggest that the administration's overall
theory of information management is much more extensive then originally
imagined. In fact, news and information manipulation is at the forefront of
Bush's war on terror, a comprehensive strategy to control of every bit of
information a citizen hears, sees or reads from cradle to grave. It is
information warfare on a scale that would make George Orwell cringe.
It is only in this context that we can see that the threats
made by George Bush to bomb Al Jazeera are completely consistent with the
administration's overall approach. Controlling information is seen as a
military necessity and those who fashion an alternate narrative are Washington's
sworn enemies. In this respect, we can understand how Al Jazeera would have to
be destroyed to pave the way for greater democracy.
When we observe the isolated incidents of the Bush
information strategy it seems disjointed and incoherent. How does the killing
of journalists in Iraq connect to the "Swift-boating" of Dan Rather
or Richard Clarke in the American press?
How does Condi Rice's new Edward R. Murrow Journalism
Program for aspiring American propagandists relate to blowing up of Al Jazeera
facilities in Kabul and Baghdad?
How does the dissemination of false stories in the foreign
press connect to the massive surveillance operations being carried out home and
abroad?
Until we are able to combine the many disparate parts of the
Bush information strategy, we are at risk of seeing these illegal activities as
mere aberrations and not as vital cogs in the machinery of the police state.
There is nothing arbitrary about the massive cloud of
secrecy that has settled on the Bush administration. The government has built
an impervious wall around itself that conceals the venality of the principle
characters and avoids the transparency required for a healthy democracy.
Conversely, the administration has defended its use of the
various investigative agencies; including the CIA, the Defense Dept., the NSA,
and the FBI, to probe every area of American life. In fact, the USAPATRIOT Act's
new provisions (National Security Letters and "lone wolf" clause)
completely dispose of the 4th Amendment's right to privacy (or "probable
cause"), allowing the government to spy on anyone it sees fit. The recent
revelations that government organizations have been spying on antiwar
activists, Quakers and environmentalists, strongly suggests that Bush is now
vacuuming up every bit of available information on political enemies real or
imagined.
Is anyone really surprised?
The surveillance state is the police state. It manifests
itself in the predictable forms of National ID cards, (which will be mandatory
in less than two years) increased repression, (USAPATRIOT Act, Homeland
Security Act) deployment of the military within the US, (Northern Command and
threats to activate the military in the event of a terrorist attack, flu
epidemic or natural disaster) and the formation of a secret police. (Earlier
this year Bush formed the NSS; the National Security Service, his own private
police force which operates outside of congressional oversight)
The levers of the fascist state have been carefully
assembled behind a smokescreen of demagoguery provided by fellow-travelers in
the corporate media. And, even though support for the war in Iraq has steadily
declined, the extent of the media's success in confounding the public cannot be
overstated. A vast number of American's still believe that Saddam was either
working with Al Qaida, had WMD, or contributed to the attacks on 9-11. This is,
perhaps, the most shocking example of media manipulation.
The corporate model of media is antithetical to personal
freedom. When the marketplace of ideas is reduced to the solitary task of
plying soapsuds and tennis shoes for big business, democracy is bound to
suffer. Ultimately, commercial media cannot help but become an annex of the
political establishment, developing collusive ties with the very people it is
supposed to scrutinize. Media as "watchdog of power" is a romantic
notion with no real basis in fact. Rather, in its present manifestation, media
serves as a junior partner in the "weaponizing" of information;
transforming the events of the day into a repetitious mantra extolling the
objectives of society's overlords.
But the role of the media in the fascist paradigm is not limited
to simply mobilizing public support for unpopular causes. It is a multi-headed
hydra designed to promote the interests of the corporate and financial sectors
while obfuscating the economic and political facts that are necessary for a
strong democracy. This explains why the critical stories of the day rarely
appear on America's network or cable TV news programs. The Downing Street Memo,
Iran's compliance with the IAEA, the fraudulent Ohio presidential election
results, and the firebombing of Falluja are just a few of the important stories
which have been ignored or drastically underplayed in the mainstream. The point
is, that "omission" of real news is used more frequently than its
soul mate, propaganda. By excluding the stories that are essential to shape
public consciousness, the media makes warmongering and economic exploitation
inevitable.
The recent Iraqi elections are a stunning example of this.
Every TV news program covered the elections in Iraq the very same way; implying
that they were a historic milestone on the road to democracy. None of the major
media provided an alternate view that might reflect the 62 percent of Americans
who now believe that the war was "a mistake." Those views were
scrupulously avoided in the coverage. If the media chieftains wanted balance,
they could have simply inserted the widespread view that the conflict has
nothing to do with either democracy or sovereignty, but is a savage colonial
war facilitated by fanatics to control Iraq's prodigious oil reserves. Despite
the media's impressive efforts to change that conclusion, the vast majority of
people now accept it as fact.
The media are just one part of a culture of deception that
permeates every part of the Bush administration. The recent revelations that
the Pentagon was planting "good news" stories in foreign newspapers,
shows us how tenacious the administration can be in its defense of
disinformation. Rather than admit its guilt and apologize, right-wing pundits
defended the action as "justifiable during wartime."
This demonstrates the level of ideological commitment to
lying among members of the political establishment. It is the best example of
the "end justifies the means" mentality that animates the current
regime.
The French philosopher Jean-Paul Sartre said, "The
essence of the lie implies, in fact, that the liar is actually in complete
possession of the truth which he is hiding."
Sartre's comment points to the inherent narcissism of lying.
This is especially true of an administration that believes that the facts
should be limited to a particular class of people who are destined to rule
society. Their efforts are an attempt to "privatize" the truth and
limit the circulation of real news to an uber-class of global plutocrats; Bush
and his cadres. Everyone else is expected to lap up the muddled fables that
fill the airwaves or flash from the headlines of America's leading newspapers.
The newly minted "Department of Strategic Information"
is an attempt to institutionalize lying as a basic function of government. It
conflates perfectly with administration theories on propaganda, deception and
perception-management. The department is allegedly involved in penetrating
every area of public interaction including web pages, chat rooms, radio talk
shows, e-mail, foreign newspapers, etc. Wherever the free expression of ideas
takes place is a potential battleground in the information war, a war that is
directed against the American people as much as it is against any foreign
power. This new division of the Pentagon, which performs many of the duties of
the former TIA, (Total Information Awareness) is designed to insinuate itself
into every area of American life looking for better ways to control the
citizenry. It is another giant step towards a rapidly approaching tyranny.
We should never mistake the administration's obfuscations,
omissions, and propaganda as unintentional. Lying is policy and accepting that
fact precedes any meaningful understanding of the Bush administration.
Mike
Whitney lives in Washington state. He can be reached at: fergiewhitney@msn.com.