The Emperor Lies
By Sheldon Richman
May 16, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" - Four years ago the late great
journalist Alexander Cockburn
wrote, "Alas, the actual story of 'our history' is an unrelenting ability to
lie about everything, while simultaneously claiming America’s superior moral
worth."
It so happens he wrote that sentence in closing
a column on President Obama’s elaborate story about the Navy SEALs’ May 2, 2011,
assassination of Osama bin Laden. Cockburn wrote,
There was scarcely a sentence in the President’s Sunday
night address, or in the subsequent briefing by John Brennan, his chief
counter-terrorism coordinator, that has not been subsequently retracted by
CIA director Leon Panetta or the White House press spokesman, Jay Carney, or
by various documentary records.
The official "back story" released Sunday night by Obama is
that US intelligence learned of the Abbottabad compound only last August and
spent the following months watching the place, following Osama’s trusted
couriers and concluding that it was highly likely, though not certain, that
Osama was there.Cockburn’s column was based on reporting that undermined key
details of the official narrative. For example:
This is bunk. The three-storey house has been a well-known
feature of Abbottabad. Shaukat Qadir, a well-connected Pakistan Army
officer, reported
to CounterPunch from Pakistan: "For the record, this house has been under
ISI [Pakistani intelligence] surveillance while it was under construction."
Now renowned investigative reporter Seymour Hersh has
published a long article in the London Review of Books,
"The Killing of Osama bin Laden," that appears further to demolish Obama's
politically motivated tale. Hersh, whose major scoops include the My Lai
massacre in Vietnam and the torture at the Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq, opens his
piece:
Hersh says that his "major source … is a retired senior
intelligence official who was knowledgeable about the initial intelligence about
bin Laden’s presence in Abbottabad.” Use of an unnamed source has provoked
criticism of Hersh, but one detects a double standard. Many good scoops have
depended on unnamed sources, and Hersh says he confirmed what his major source
told him. Often that’s the only way to get sensitive information about what the
government is up to.
The article also has set off a firestorm about its
particulars, with the administration, other members of the war party, and media
cheerleaders dismissing Hersh’s "conspiracy theory." But others defend Hersh.
The New York Times’ Carlotta Gall, author of The Wrong Enemy:
America in Afghanistan 2001-2004, while not accepting every detail,
writes:
Among other things, Hersh contends that the Inter-Services
Intelligence directorate, Pakistan’s military-intelligence agency, held Bin
Laden prisoner in the Abbottabad compound since 2006, and that “the C.I.A.
did not learn of Bin Laden’s whereabouts by tracking his couriers, as the
White House has claimed since May 2011, but from a former senior Pakistani
intelligence officer who betrayed the secret in return for much of the $25
million reward offered by the U.S."
On this count, my own reporting tracks with Hersh’s.
Gall points out that the existence of the informant has been
confirmed by NBC and a newspaper in Pakistan: "This development is hugely
important—it is the strongest indication to date that the Pakistani military
knew of Bin Laden’s whereabouts...."
Hersh’s investigation is also important regarding
Saudi
Arabia and its connection with bin Laden, who was a Saudi. Is this why bin
Laden couldn’t be taken alive?
If Hersh is right, the SEALs murdered an unarmed and powerless
invalid, held by Pakistan, under orders from Obama when they could have brought
him to trial.
What’s most important is this: if one understands the danger
inherent in government secrecy, one must oppose the empire. Politicians can lie
about domestic matters, but foreign intervention offers irresistible
opportunities for really big lies—the kind that get people killed. Do people
still need to be persuaded about that?
If for no other reason than transparency, the empire must be
liquidated.