Sunday, March 05, 2006

The Death of the Opposition


Guardian Unlimited Politics | Special Reports | Campbell to give Lib Dems a US-style facelift:


The new Liberal Democrat leader Sir Menzies Campbell will today signal his determination to overhaul the party's economic and social policy and streamline its campaign machinery with the kind of US-style techniques imported by Labour and the Tories.



'Liberal Democrats are modernisers,' he will tell delegates to the party's spring conference in Harrogate, in his first major address since winning the leadership crown. He will pledge to 'play a key role' in producing updated policies on the economy, the environment, welfare reform, better government, education, crime and social issues' capable of withstanding 'new levels of aggressive scrutiny' by rival parties.



Setting the tone for an agenda in tune with the core of young economically liberal [emphasis added] MPs who backed him for the leadership, the 64-year-old Campbell yesterday secured an overwhelming conference endorsement for a plan to part-privatise the post office. The idea was thrown out at last autumn's Lib Dem conference by delegates who argued it was too right-wing.


So now the UK has three political parties, all espousing economic liberalism. Where are the dissenting voices? Who can represent my views in parliament? During the last election, we had one party--the Liberal Democrats--who championed society before the free market. Now there is none.


Tony Blair tells me that “God will judge whether he was right to send British troops to Iraq” but I say God did not elect him to office, the people of the United Kingdom did, and he needs to answer to that constituency.


We are witnessing the end of the democratic project. The Enlightenment is being rolled back by free marketeers who see everything as economic rationalism: people are excluded from their calculations. Listen to politicians in developed nations and they will talk about the security of property before the mention security of people.


There is nothing left to vote for. Time for a change

Guardian Unlimited Politics | Special Reports | Campbell to give Lib Dems a US-style facelift


Guardian Unlimited Politics | Special Reports | Campbell to give Lib Dems a US-style facelift:


The new Liberal Democrat leader Sir Menzies Campbell will today signal his determination to overhaul the party's economic and social policy and streamline its campaign machinery with the kind of US-style techniques imported by Labour and the Tories.



'Liberal Democrats are modernisers,' he will tell delegates to the party's spring conference in Harrogate, in his first major address since winning the leadership crown. He will pledge to 'play a key role' in producing updated policies on the economy, the environment, welfare reform, better government, education, crime and social issues' capable of withstanding 'new levels of aggressive scrutiny' by rival parties.



Setting the tone for an agenda in tune with the core of young economically liberal [emphasis added] MPs who backed him for the leadership, the 64-year-old Campbell yesterday secured an overwhelming conference endorsement for a plan to part-privatise the post office. The idea was thrown out at last autumn's Lib Dem conference by delegates who argued it was too right-wing.


So now the UK has three political parties, all espousing economic liberalism. Where are the dissenting voices? Who can represent my views in parliament? During the last election, we had one party--the Liberal Democrats--who championed society before the free market. Now there is none.


Tony Blair tells me that “God will judge whether he was right to send British troops to Iraq” but I say God did not elect him to office, the people of the United Kingdom did, and he needs to answer to that constituency.


We are witnessing the end of the democratic project. The Enlightenment is being rolled back by free marketeers who see everything as economic rationalism: people are excluded from their calculations. Listen to politicians in developed nations and they will talk about the security of property before the mention security of people.


There is nothing left to vote for. Time for a change

Sunday, January 29, 2006

Iran warns of missile strike


Guardian Unlimited | Special reports | Iran warns of missile strike:

Senior Iranian officials further raised tensions with the West yesterday, implicitly warning that Tehran would use missiles to strike Israel or Western forces stationed in the Gulf if attacked.The statements came as world leaders met at the annual World Economic Forum in Davos, with the Middle East high on the agenda. The hardline Iranian president, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, has pressed ahead with a controversial nuclear programme since his election last year.'The world knows Iran has a ballistic missile power with a range of 2,000km (1,300 miles),' General Yahya Rahim Safavi said on state-run television. 'We have no intention to invade any country [but] we will take effective defence measures if attacked.'

Tuesday, January 24, 2006

Essay Question

Question

Jack Lule states:

We can recognise in news stories the siren song of myth. These news stories offer more than a retelling of common story forms. These news stories offer sacred, societal narratives with shared values and beliefs, with lessons and themes, and with exemplary models that instruct and inform. They are offering myths.
Discuss this proposition with regard to news reporting of the “War on Terror” since 2001.

Summary

The last four years have seen tumultuous changes in the global political landscape which have been reported upon, and in many cases shaped, by news and current affairs.

Post-9/11, the case for conflict in Iraq was manufactured by a meticulous public relations--“public diplomacy”--campaign in which elements of the news media were complicit. A large part of this public diplomacy campaign was the prorogation of certain myths and archetypes that exacerbated the public's fear and swung opinion in favor of an unnecessary war.

The “War on Terror” can be read as a myth to unify the citizens of Liberal Democracies around the world in a motivating cause that has no defined end, its purpose: to use the myth of security to re-establish the authority of politicians in a postmodern age of moral relativism.

My essay will cover the historical roots of the “War on Terror” myth and how public relations, with the aid of the news media, shaped certain mythological archetypes during and after the Iraq conflict in order to frame the conflict as an inevitable “good” versus “evil” battle for survival.

Working Bibliography

Daily News, Eternal Stories, J. Lule

This book explores Lule's argument that news stories can be distilled down to seven mythologic archetypes, which he supports with research of twenty years-worth of New York Times stories.

The Hero with A Thousand Faces, J. Campbell

The work cited by Lule that posits that all mythological narratives share a common master myth. Also draws on the work of GC Jung's unconscious and archetypes.

The Power of Nightmares, A. Curtis

A three part television documentary outlining the history of neoconservativism and islam fundamentalism in the latter half of the 20th Century. His argument that the “politics of fear” is part of a political “myth” of security, with which to bind the populations of liberal democracies with a sense of purpose.

Weapons of Mass Deception, Rampton & Stauber

Documents how public relations, through the media, manufactured the case for the second Iraq war.

Tell me lies: Propaganda and Media Distortion in the attack on Iraq, D. Miller

Written by leading journalists and commentators, it documents the role of mainstream media in legitimizing government action and undermining dissent.

The Security Approach and the Peace Approach, J. Galtung

A presentation given by Galtung in 2004 outlining the differences between the Security Approach and the Peace Approach to “building peace through harmonious diversity.” It highlights the issue of fear in the Security approach.

Frisk on War Reporting

The Independent has this article about Robert Fisk addressing a debate on war reporting. He argues that
The sanitised images of war broadcast on television are a “lethal weapon” masking atrocities which demonstrate that conflict can “never be justified.”

Tuesday, January 17, 2006

Reporting the Iran Nuclear Issue: Peace Journalism

As a follow up to my previous Iran entry, I discovered this excellent piece from Peace Journalism, in which Jake Lynch points out how conscious or unconscious selection of certain words and phrases reinforce the propaganda of the western political elites.
Consider the word ‘fears’ – is that justified in these cases, or misleading? Was the West really ‘afraid’ that Iraq was developing ‘weapons of mass destruction’? Or was this, as US Deputy Defense Secretary Paul Wolfowitz told an interviewer from Vanity Fair, merely a pretext – the ‘lowest common denominator’ among advocates of regime change? Are there really such fears vis-à-vis Iran or is that, too, a convenient stick with which to rally international support against another member of the ‘axis of evil’?
However, I was mistaken when I said there was “no obvious Goldstein-esque hate-figure” because, as Lynch highlights, it is very much Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. Lynch points out Ahmadinejad “was relentlessly demonised as a fanatical ‘hardliner’” for pointing out that “countries ‘which have used nuclear weapons against defenseless civilians and used depleted uranium in Iraq’, [are] taking it upon themselves to ‘be suspicious of Iran’s nuclear programme.’”

Without clear, unambiguous and rational reporting of this issue, the news media are doing nothing more than propagating political propaganda that is building “good”/'evil“ myths necessary to frame a future military intervention in Iran.

Coverage of the Air Attacks in Pakistan

Wpak15


So the war continues in the remote boarder regions of Pakistan.

According to the BBC :
The raid took place in the village of Damadola in the Bajaur tribal area, about 7km (4.5 miles) from the Afghan border. Jets - or in some accounts a Predator drone - reportedly fired missiles at a particular housing compound in the village. Tribesmen there are convinced the strike was the work of the Americans and are very angry at the attack. Reporters who reached Damadola spoke of three houses hundreds of metres apart that had been destroyed.
The Associated Press of Pakistan, the official press agency makes no mention on their website, while talking up a visit by former US President George Bush senior. This is not surprising, considering that the Pakistan government is giving regional assistance to the US in exchange for military aid. However, just because they're not reporting doesn't mean their not furious at the violation of their sovereignty. according to the UK Telegraph “Pakistan is preparing to lodge a formal diplomatic protest over the attack” over the alleged airspace incursion by remote pilotless vehicles. Some of the opposition papers are more forthcoming, the Daily Times giving the situation front page coverage.

Fox News, on the other hand, says that US Senators defended the bombings: “We have to do what we think is necessary to take out Al Qaeda, particularly the top operatives. This guy has been more visible than Usama bin Laden lately.” The piece quotes unverifiable sources “who spoke on condition of anonymity because of the information's sensitivity.”

In short, this exercise in state-sponsored terrorism is another exercise in news myth. According to the US, all is justified in the pursuit of “evil” and the Fox reporting especially, plays the clear-cut good/evil context for something which is patently against international law.

But that doesn't bring back the dead of Damadola.

Iran: Building a Myth For War - Iraq Part II?

Iran-Next

There is a striking similarity between what has been happening over Iran's push for nuclear technology and the lead up to the last Iraq war, with calls for Iran to be UN Security Council.

This time there is no obvious Goldstein-esque hate-figure for the pro-action faction to direct our fear toward. but that does not stop the relentless march towards Security Council sanction.

And unlike Iraq, not all the permanent members are on-side. Russian and China have economic ties with Iran. Russia's president Putin is quoted as saying “The Iranian nuclear problem requires a very accurate approach without rash or erroneous moves”
But in a good example of framing, CNN has been banned from working in Iran because they have “violated 'professional ethics', the Iran news agency quoted the [culture] ministry as saying.” During a live broadcast of President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's press conference on Saturday, CNN translated the farsi word for “technology” as “weapon”, thus:
“We believe all nations are allowed to have nuclear weapons”, and that the West should not “deprive us to have nuclear weapons”
Nice one CNN, that's how wars start.

But perhaps, we are seeing the new “Gold this is part of the unconscious building of an Evil/”Satan“ myth around the Iranian President. We don't get to hear much about Mahmoud Ahmadinejad here in the west, unless its controversial. When we came to power, the first thing we heard about was his taking part in the US Embassy siege. Since then there has been the slow bubbling nuclear stand-off. More recently, and in language guaranteed to interest the press and stir up the masses, Ahmadinejad has been quoted as saying that Israel should either be ”wiped off the map,“ or less drastically, relocated to somewhere in Germany or Austria.

Language is a barrier here, with the English-speaking media acting as Gate-Keeper to news emanating from the non-english speaking world. A form of negotiating power between the source and the journalist. At least the internet gives the source more direct right-of-reply.

So, what we are seeing here is a confluence of many theories of news production: Myth, rival narratives, negotiating control between journalist and source and a great deal of public relations.

The war of words has already begun. Who will win, remains to be seen.

Thursday, January 12, 2006

Peer Review

BBC NEWS | Middle East | UK officer slams US Iraq tactics:
Something about a man with a hammer seeing nothing but nails springs to mind...

Apparently, “A senior British Army officer has sparked indignation in the US with a scathing article criticising the US Army's performance in Iraq”:
In [the article] Brig Aylwin-Foster says American officers displayed such cultural insensitivities that it “arguably amounted to institutional racism” and may have helped spur the insurgency.

While the army is “indisputably the master of conventional war fighting, it is notably less proficient in... what the US defence community often calls Operations Other Than War,” the officer wrote.

Operations to win the peace in Iraq were “weighed down by bureaucracy, a stiflingly hierarchical outlook, predisposition to offensive operations and a sense that duty required all issues to be confronted head on”, he added.
Ouch. It's always hardest when it comes from the ones we love.

The British Army has had a long and bloody history of dealing with insurgency/terrorism/“winning the peace” and this reported article reflects that. Seen through the lens of the politics of terror, this highlights the neoconservative need to exercise force in support of their grand-unifying myth. A pity that the civilian population of Iraq have to pay for this myth with their lives.

Tuesday, January 10, 2006

In a plain, brown envelope...

If you live in the US, be careful about what you order over the net from abroad. That plain brown envelope might not be so private after all...

CNN.com - U.S. opening some private mail in terror fight - Jan 9, 2006:
U.S. officials are opening personal mail that arrives from abroad when they deem it necessary to protect the country from terrorism, a Customs and Border Protection spokeswoman said Monday.

News of the little-known practice follows revelations that the government approved eavesdropping on U.S. citizens without judicial oversight after the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001, which sparked concern from civil liberties advocates and some lawmakers, who called for congressional hearings.

Sunday, January 08, 2006

Singapore stages large-scale mock terror attacks

International News Article | Reuters.com:
Singapore mounted its biggest civil emergency exercise on Sunday, staging a series of mock bombings on its public transport system to test the readiness of the public and emergency agencies for a terrorist attack.

Starting before dawn, the drill involved four subway stations along the city-state's famous shopping belt and in the central business district, and a bus terminal in a residential area.

The exercise follows bloody attacks on mass transit systems in Madrid and London, and fears that the same thing could happen here.

“We hope that through exercises like these, we will be able to educate the public because such a thing can happen in Singapore and when it does happen, we have to know what to do,” Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong told state broadcaster Channel NewsAsia.
This is an interesting example of the politics of fear. Singapore is major regional economic commercial hub in SE Asia, but is it really a high profile target?

How much of this exercise is about preparedness and how much about instilling fear in the population, that can only be mitigated by the State?

Myth and the Politics of Fear

Thanks to the new Google Video service, I have been able to watch a BBC documentary from January 2005 called “The Power of Nightmares -The Rise of the Politics of Fear.”

This documentary cuts to the heart of the WoT and highlights the crucial part Myth has played in the inception, growth and subsequent power of neo-conservativism in the Globalised world, and how it has cast Islamism as the new mythical “evil” that the United States must vanquish to make the world safe.

Unlike myth, with its clear distinction between black and white, good and evil, right and wrong, this story is more “lifelike” -- a little complicated and open to interpretation -- and therefore the reason why a myth is needed to frame it for the “average person”.

The Power of Nightmares begins in the US back in the late 1940s when the Democrats where in ascendency. Two different people observed the new consumerism, Liberalism and moral relativism and saw it as sign of societal stagnation, even as a prelude to eventual disintegration.

One was a visiting Egyptian scholar Sayid Qutb who thought the liberal democratic emphasis on the individual bred selfishness that would ultimately destroy society. Upon returning to Egypt, he saw evidence of American influence spreading across the arab world and felt these values would destroy Islam.

The other was philosopher Leo Strauss.
Strauss taught that Liberalism, strictly speaking, contained within it an intrinsic tendency towards relativism, which in turn led to a sort of nihilism--a kind of decadence, value-free aimlessness, and hedonism which he believed he saw permeating through the very fabric of contemporary American society [4].
Both Qutb and Strauss wanted to reverse what they saw as the rot of Liberalism, but they had different ways of going about it.

Qutb, appalled by the spread of Jahiliyya within islamic society, became an activist within the “Muslim Brotherhood”. Qutb is seen by many as the philosophical root of contemporary Islamism, and much of the rhetoric used by individuals or groups purporting connection with al-Qaeda.

Strauss on the other hand, took a more secular approach. To counter the liberal tendency to relativism, and for the betterment of society, the political/philosophical elites needed to recreate moral certainty for the populace in order to counteract the spreading nihilism. “He believed that liberal societies needed simple, powerful myths to inspire the people”[1], to give meaning to their lives.

Many of the names we associate with neo-conservatism were students of, or influenced by, Straussian philosophy: Donald Rumsfled, Paul Wolfowitz, Francis Fukuyama, Richard Perle among them and by the 1980s, the neo-conservatives in the Ford and Reagan administrations had “set out to re-assert the myth of America as a unique country whose destiny was to struggle against evil throughout the world”[2].

In those days, the big “evil” was Communist Russia and when its political infrastructure collapsed in 1989, both the neo-conservatives in the Reagan government and the radical Islamists in Afghanistan, who had fought against the Soviet occupation there, believed they alone were responsible for the demise of Communism.

But with Russia now “on-side” the neo-conservatives needed a new agent of myth. First they sought out Saddam Hussein during the first Gulf War. But when George Bush senior refused to follow their urgings to push on to Baghdad and “finish him off”, the neo-conservatives needed someone else to cast in the mould of “evil.”

So during the mid-to-late 90s, when the neo-conservatives were out of government, they turned to Bill Clinton, casting him in the role, the embodiment of everything immoral, intent on destroying the American way of life. Monica Lewinsky notwithstanding, the allegations brought against Bill Clinton by the neo-conservative press turned out to be false: Whitewater, drug smuggling even conspiracy to murder[2].

Meanwhile, in the Islamic world, the precepts of Qutb were finding new adherents in the guise of Ayman al-Zawahiri, a former member of the Muslim Brotherhood and Osama bin Laden, who was fighting with the Mujahadeen in Afghanistan.

They too knew the power of myth and in 1998 al-Zawahiri and bin Laden issued a joint fatwa placing the United States squarely in the role of their own “evil” myth.

So the stage was set, and in the aftermath of 11 September 2001, the neo-conservatives had a name--al-Qaeda--and a new evil with which to inspire the American people:
the neo-conservative myth that still inspires them today: that through the aggressive use of American power they could transform the world and spread democracy.[2]
And it is this myth and its associated “War on Terror” that is driving the discourse of early 21st century politics, news and current affairs.

In the 20th century, politicians inspired people with ideologies that promised a better tomorrow. But as these ideologies worn thin--the fall of communism, the triumph of the free market--people stopped believing their politicians, who they now saw as mere “managers of public life”[3]. But post 11 September, politicians have discovered a new and powerful way to manage the public: fear. Now, politicians can frighten us into consent with bogeymen they do not have to prove exist, merely that they have “intelligence” of “probable” events. The new myth: that only politicians cam keep us secure in a world full of invisible threats.

And the media do their part too. Propelled by the credo that they are supplying what their consumers demand, the less ethical press feed on our fear, uncertainty and doubt. Even the denizens of Liberal press--New York Times, BBC, Guardian--are not beyond building their own counter-myths of political conspiracy that generate more fear and distrust.

Liberalism has done much for society, and to renounce it out of hand as either “selfish” or “nihilistic” is to throw the hard-fought baby out with the bath water. William Kristol, a neo-conservative lobbyist, says that Leo Strauss's philosophies offer society a way of “Creating admirable human beings”[2]. But these admirable people tend to be overwhelmingly, powerful males.

So perhaps the problem here is “man.” Both Qutb and Strauss are right as far as they go. Individual freedom without individual responsibility is dangerous. And maybe we do need myths to inspire us, though the State or elites cannot create visions that bring meaning to people lives. Only individuals can do that for themselves. Perhaps its time to lose the “man” out of “mankind”. Qutb and Strauss are both hobbled by a masculine mindset engendered by strict interpretations of Abrahamic beliefs, and all the patriarchal authority that entails. Perhaps a new myth is needed, a secular synthesis of Qutb and Strauss' critiques checked by feminist inclusivity:

A myth that excludes artificial divisions and includes everyone, fosters individual freedom meshed with a duty to all and will harness the creative aspect of the masculine competitive drive, while restraining its excesses.

A myth for all of us.




References




[1] The Power of Nightmares - The Rise of the Politics of Fear, Part 1
[2] The Power of Nightmares - The Rise of the Politics of Fear, Part 2
[3] The Power of Nightmares - The Rise of the Politics of Fear, Part 3
[4] Wikipedia: Leo Strauss

Friday, January 06, 2006

Bush consults elder statesmen over war

America, United States, Times Online, The Times, Sunday Times:
“As part of a vigorous public relations offensive on Iraq Mr Bush spent more than an hour with former defence secretaries including Robert McNamara, the Vietnam-era Pentagon chief under Presidents Kennedy and Johnson, Harold Brown, who oversaw the disastrous Iranian hostage rescue attempt under Jimmy Carter, and William Perry, Bill Clinton's Defence Secretary, who advised John Kerry during the 2004 election campaign.

Others briefed by Mr Bush and General George Casey, the US commander in Iraq, included Madeleine Albright, Lawrence Eagleburger, Alexander Haig and Colin Powell.

Scott McClellan, Mr Bush's spokesman, said that the purpose of the gathering was a hope by the White House that the prominent figures would be persuaded that there was 'a clear plan in place for victory in Iraq' and would spread the word.

After the meeting Mr Bush preferred to persuade people that it was he who had done the listening.
'Not everybody around this table agreed with my decision to go into Iraq. I fully understand that,' Mr Bush said.”

Thursday, January 05, 2006

Anon blogger unmasked as GOP political operative

Anon blogger unmasked as GOP political operative | News.blog | CNET News.com:
“An anonymous Minnesota blogger, who took pains to poke fun at Democrats and question their qualifications for elected office, has been unmasked as a -- gasp! -- Republican political operative.”

New Year squabbles

BBC NEWS | Americas | Washington diary: New Year squabbles:
The administration is blaming the messenger for undermining an essential tool of surprise in the war on terror. Capitol Hill is huffing and puffing that it was never consulted by the White House. The New York Times is trying to work out whether to be victim or hero.

Cheney Says Eavesdropping Program Might Have Prevented 9/11

Cheney Says Eavesdropping Program Might Have Prevented 9/11:

“Cheney referred to a report by the U.S. commission that investigated the Sept. 11 attacks. In criticizing federal agencies' inability to detect the plot, the commission cited the phone calls of two hijackers, Nawaf Alhazmi and Khalid al-Mihdhar, to other al Qaeda members overseas.'The authorization the president made after September 11th helped address that problem in a manner that is fully consistent with the Constitutional responsibilities and legal authority of the president and with the civil liberties of the American people,' Cheney said.”

Wednesday, January 04, 2006

Time to Go

Bush Says U.S. May Reduce Troop Levels This Year:

President Bush today raised the prospect of further reducing U.S. troop levels in Iraq later this year because of what he said was growing progress by the Iraqi army. But he said Iraqi police units need more American help in view of “troubling” reports of abuses.
Timing is everything. With approval ratings still flagging and Republicans uneasy, the Bush Administration needs to bolster support. Tuesday saw the disclosure that the Iraq reconstruction budget is to be cut by $18.4 billion:

“The decision is a tacit admission of the failure of the US rebuilding effort in the face of a relentless insurgency. Nearly half the funds earmarked for reconstruction were diverted towards fighting the insurgency and preparations to put Saddam Hussein on trial.”
The administration has November 2006 foremost in it's mind, with mid-term election that could see a resurgence of Democrat power, if the polls can be believed.

BBC NEWS | Americas | Washington diary: New Year squabbles:
The administration is blaming the messenger for undermining an essential tool of surprise in the war on terror. Capitol Hill is huffing and puffing that it was never consulted by the White House. The New York Times is trying to work out whether to be victim or hero.
Bush, Cheney defend Iraq War, Spying.
Cheney said the domestic surveillance is ``totally appropriate and within the president's authority under the Constitution and laws of the country.''

``This wartime measure is limited in scope to surveillance associated with terrorists,'' he said at the Heritage Foundation. ``It is carefully conducted and the information obtained is used strictly for national security purposes. ... The civil liberties of the American people are unimpeded by these actions.''

Parts of the Patriot Act are set to expire on Feb. 3. Whether to renew them will dominate debate on Capitol Hill this month.

``We look forward to a renewal of the Patriot Act in 2006 because that law has done exactly what it was intended to do, and this country cannot afford to be without its protections,'' Cheney said.

Tuesday, January 03, 2006

Terror on the Cheap

BBC NEWS | UK | London bombs cost just hundreds

This is a very telling piece regarding the cost of mounting the July 2005 London Bombings. If such an attack can be mounted for "several hundred pounds", then monitoring back accounts and large money transfers means little.