Beware Our Leaders
Seymour Hersh: US Deceived Us On Syria
By Jonathan Cook
"...If Barack Obama had not been forced to scrap his plan to bomb Syria, we would now be reading about these deceptions after thousands, or more likely tens of thousands, of Syrian civilians had been killed in allied bombing runs..."
Seymour Hersh: US Deceived Us On Syria
By Jonathan Cook
"...If Barack Obama had not been forced to scrap his plan to bomb Syria, we would now be reading about these deceptions after thousands, or more likely tens of thousands, of Syrian civilians had been killed in allied bombing runs..."
Seymour
Hersh
publishes his latest,
illuminating essay
on the machinations of the US security state, this time in
regard to Syria.
Hersh makes a very convincing case that the US
had no credible intelligence that August’s chemical weapons
attack in Ghouta using sarin was carried out by Assad’s troops
but that it did know that jihadi groups there, especially the
al-Nusra Front, almost certainly had sarin and could use it.
While
reading this piece, I kept thinking one thing: If Barack Obama
had not been forced to scrap his plan to bomb Syria at the last
minute, we would now be reading about these deceptions after
thousands, or more likely tens of thousands, of Syrian civilians
had been killed in allied bombing runs.
We might
also be reading Hersh (or more likely not reading him, given the
likely war hysteria) after US forces had got sucked into a
ground invasion as the Assad regime collapsed. Hersh’s piece
suggests that the US military had a plan to invade if there was
any danger that Assad’s chemical weapons stockpile was in danger
of being taken over by the rebels, as would have been inevitable
had the regime fallen.
All of
this sounds very familiar indeed. It was a rerun of Iraq and the
bogus intelligence about its supposed WMD.
There are
two important conclusions to be drawn from this story, in
addition to the obvious one: that our governments keep lying to
us to further their (not our) geopolitical interests and they
invariably do so under the pretence of “humanitarianism”.
The first
is that, not only do our governments lie as a matter of course,
but our media lie entirely in sync with our governments.
Hersh
exposes a catalogue of journalistic failures in his piece, just
as occurred in Iraq. He even points out that at one vital White
House press conference, where the main, false narrative was set
out, officials refused to invite a critical national security
correspondent, presumably fearing that he might expose the
charade.
Note that
this piece by Hersh was rejected by the New Yorker, his usual
home, and by the Washington Post, which may not be surprising
given that the latter emerges from this article looking like a
major offender in this journalistic farce.
Instead
Hersh was forced to turn to the London Review of Books, a London
literary publication that has on occasion served as a sanctuary
for important articles spurned by the mainstream media. (The
same happened with Walt and Mearsheimer’s infamous long essay on
the Israel lobby, which later became a best-selling book called
The Lobby.)
The other
is that we as citizens (ruled over by our governments) and as
readers (of their media) have to start waking up to these serial
deceptions.
Too many otherwise clever people fall time and again
for the false narratives we are spun.
There is a simple lesson:
stop swallowing the so-called intelligence you are being told to
justify aggression, most especially when it clashes with the
precepts of common sense.
This should be our position on Iran
too.
Similarly,
not only must we become less gullible but we must inoculate
ourselves against those who are more susceptible to the virus.
Those of us who tried to warn that we must be wary of official
efforts to manipulate the intelligence and our understanding of
events were denounced, as always happens in these circumstances,
as Assad apologists.
Finally,
it should be noted that Hersh’s role in exposing these
deceptions, as in so many previous ones, should not lull us into
a false complacency. His work does not demonstrate that our
media is free and pluralistic. It shows something very
different.
There will
always be the odd investigative reporter like Hersh at the
margins of the mainstream media. And one can understand why by
reading Hersh closely.
His sources of information are those in
the security complex who lost the argument, or came close to
losing the argument, and want it on record that they opposed the
government line.
Hersh is useful to them because he allows them
to settle scores within the establishment or to act as a warning
bell against future efforts to manipulate intelligence in the
same manner.
He is useful to us as readers because he reveals
disputes that show us much more clearly what has taken place.
Unfortunately, Hersh’s role has been mainly one for the
historians. He tells them after the event what really took place
inside the corridors of power.
But he could be so much more important
if we listened to him properly. For he keeps repeating the same
truth: Beware our leaders.
Jonathan Cook is an award-winning British journalist based in
Nazareth, Israel, since 2001.He is the author of three books on
the Israeli-Palestinian conflict:
-
Blood and Religion: The Unmasking of the Jewish State (2006)
-
Israel and the Clash of Civilisations: Iraq, Iran and the Plan to Remake the Middle East (2008)
-
Disappearing Palestine: Israel’s Experiments in Human Despair (2008)
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