By Gregory Shupak
January 23, 2020 "Information
Clearing House" -
Even when critical of US
actions, media commentary on recent
US bombings and assassinations in the Middle
East is premised on the assumption that the US has
the right to use violence (or the threat of it) to
assert its will, anytime, anywhere. Conversely,
corporate media coverage suggests that any
countermeasure—such as resistance to the US presence
in Iraq—is inherently illegitimate, criminal and/or
terroristic.
Iranian puppeteers
One step in this dance is depicting US military
forces in Iraq as innocent bystanders under attack
by sadistic Iranian puppetmasters. Media analysis of
the US murder of Iranian Gen. Qassem Soleimani
consistently asserted that he was “an architect of
international terrorism responsible for the deaths
of hundreds of Americans” (New York Times,
1/3/20) or “a terrorist with the blood of
hundreds of Americans on his hands” (Washington
Post,
1/7/20). According to Leon Panetta (Washington
Post,
1/7/20), a former Defense secretary and CIA
director,
The death of Soleimani should not be mourned,
given his responsibility for the killing of
thousands of innocent people and hundreds of US
military personnel over the years.
There is little evidence for this contention that
Iran in general or Soleimani personally is
responsible for killing hundreds of Americans. When
the State Department
claimed last April that Iran was responsible for
the deaths of 608 American servicemembers in Iraq
between 2003 and 2011, investigative journalist
Gareth Porter (Truthout,
7/9/19) asked Navy Commander Sean Robertson for
evidence, and Robertson “acknowledged that the
Pentagon doesn’t have any study, documentation or
data to provide journalists that would support such
a figure.”
Porter showed that the US attribution of deaths
in Iraq to Iran is an unsubstantiated government
talking point from the Cheney era, one that was
exposed at the time when Lt. Gen. Ray Odierno
admitted that, though the US had attributed Iraqi
resistance fighters’ weapons to Iran, US troops
found many sites in Iraq at which such weapons were
being manufactured.
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Scholar Stephen Zunes (Progressive,
1/7/20) similarly demonstrated the lack of
evidence for the idea that Iran is behind the
killing of US forces in Iraq. Zunes noted that the
National Intelligence Estimate on Iraq, compiled
by America’s 16 intelligence agencies, downplayed
Iran’s role in Iraq’s violence at roughly the same
time that the Bush administration was saying that
Iran was culpable.
As Porter pointed out, there was a much simpler
explanation for American deaths in the period: The
US targeted Muqtada al-Sadr’s Mahdi Army and the
Mahdi Army fought back, imposing more casualties on
US troops.
That the pundits dusted off 13-year-old
propaganda to rationalize killing Soleimani is a
clear indication that they were desperately grasping
for any imperialist apologia within reach. If the
American public is led to believe that Soleimani
killed hundreds of Americans, large swathes of it
are likely to regard his assassination as justified,
necessary, or at worst a feature of the tit-for-tat
ugliness inherent to war.
The narrative also ideologically shores up the
US war on Iran in the American popular
consciousness by presenting Iranians as primordially
violent savages out to spill the blood of Americans,
notably those in the military who are in the Middle
East, presumably doing nothing but minding their own
business. Presenting Iran as the reason for attacks
on US forces in Iraq also implies that Iraqis had
little objection to the US invasion, legitimizing
the US’s ongoing military presence in the country.
The most obvious point about the deaths of US
soldiers in Iraq is that they wouldn’t happen if US
soldiers weren’t in Iraq.
When violence isn’t violence
Another media dance move is to condemn
anti-imperial violence while naturalizing
imperialist violence. An editorial in the New
York Times (1/3/20)
said that Soleimani
no doubt had a role in the campaign of
provocations by Shiite militias against American
forces in Iraq that recently led to the death of
an American defense contractor and a retaliatory
American airstrike against the militia
responsible for the attack.
Having US troops in Iraq, a country in which the
US is responsible for the
deaths of hundreds of thousands, is not a
“provocation,” in the Times’ perspective;
opposition to their presence is the provocation.
The December 27
attack that killed the US contractor did not
occur in a vacuum. In 2018, the US was suspected of
bombing affiliates of Kataib Hezbollah, the
group the US blames for killing the contractor.
Israel is suspected of carrying out a string of
deadly bombings of the Iraqi Popular Mobilization
Forces, of which Kataib Hezbollah is a key
component, between July and September, a scenario at
which Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu
hinted.
The US
reportedly confirmed that Israel was behind at
least one of the bombings, and said it supports
Israel’s actions while denying direct participation.
In any case, the US’s
lavish military support for Israel means that
the former is effectively a party to the latter’s
bombing. Thus, the Kataib Hezbollah attack that
killed the contractor can be seen as “retaliatory,”
which complicates the notion that the subsequent US
attack was as well.
Another Times editorial (1/4/20)
describes Soleimani as “one of the region’s most
powerful and, yes, blood-soaked military
commanders.” At no point is Trump or any other US
leader described as “blood-soaked” or anything
comparable—here, or in any of the mainstream media
coverage I can find—even as he and his predecessors
are sopping with that of
Afghans,
Iraqis,
Libyans and
Syrians, to cite only a few recent cases.
Evidently imperial violence is so righteous it
leaves no trace behind.
Stephen Hadley, national security adviser in the
George W Bush administration, wrote in the
Washington Post (1/5/20):
What is clear is that one of the PMFs, Kataib
Hezbollah, has been behind the
escalating violence over the past
several months as part of a campaign
(assuredly with Iranian approval) to force out
US troops. The campaign culminated in the
December 31 attack on the
US Embassy in Baghdad. (The head of Kataib
Hezbollah, Abu Mahdi al-Muhandis, was
killed with Soleimani.)
By expelling US forces, the Iraqi government
would be falling into Kataib Hezbollah’s trap:
rewarding the militia’s violent campaign,
strengthening the Iranian-backed PMFs, weakening the
Iraqi government and state sovereignty, and
jeopardizing the fight against the Islamic State.
Kataib Hezbollah’s actions are called “violence”
twice in these three sentences, with their apex
apparently being “the December 31 attack on the
US Embassy in Baghdad.” Remarkably, the author
makes no mention of the December 29 US airstrikes on
five sites in Iraq and Syria that the US says belong
to Kataib Hezbollah, bombings that reportedly
killed 25 and injured 55. Those, it would seem,
do not constitute “violence.” Iraqis damaging the
embassy of the country whose economic sanctions
killed half a million Iraqi children is
“violence,” but the US’s lethal air raids are not.
And expelling foreign armies weakens state
sovereignty!
Thomas Friedman’s Times article (1/3/20)
on Soleimani’s murder was bad even by Thomas
Friedman standards. He dismissed the protests at the
US embassy:
The whole “protest” against the United States
Embassy compound in Baghdad last week was almost
certainly a Soleimani-staged operation to make
it look as if Iraqis wanted America out when in
fact it was the other way around. The protesters
were paid pro-Iranian militiamen. No one in
Baghdad was fooled by this.
In a way, it’s what got Soleimani killed. He
so wanted to cover his failures in Iraq he
decided to start provoking the Americans there
by shelling their forces, hoping they would
overreact, kill Iraqis and turn them against the
United States. Trump, rather than taking the
bait, killed Soleimani instead.
That there were thousands of protesters at the US
embassy and that the Iraqi security forces
stood aside to allow them to demonstrate
suggests that what happened at the embassy cannot be
reduced to a hoax stage-managed and paid for by
Iran. Furthermore, the US did kill Iraqis two days
before the protests, and that’s what ignited them
(to say nothing of the longer term record of the US
devastating Iraq). Like Hadley, however,
Friedman pretends that the US’s December 27 bombings
didn’t happen.
In the imperial imagination, the US has the right
to violently pursue its objectives wherever it
wants, and any resistance is illegitimate.
Gregory Shupak teaches media studies at the
University of Guelph-Humber in Toronto. His book,
The Wrong Story: Palestine, Israel and the Media,
is published by OR Books.
This article was
originally published by "FAIR"
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