Orlando
Attack Was Retaliation For U.S. Aggression In
Afghanistan
By Matt Peppe
June 15,
2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- In the aftermath of the horrific mass murder at
the Pulse nightclub in Orlando over the weekend in
which 50 people were killed, media including
CNN,
USA Today,
NPR,
NBC News, and CBS
News, all reported that the gunman called 911
during his murderous rampage and pledged allegiance
to ISIS. None of the journalists writing for any of
these news outlets heard the call themselves; they
all cite the FBI as their source.
The U.S. government has been engaged in a war
against the self-professed Islamic State for the
last two years. Their military intervention consists
of a bombing campaign against ISIS targets in Iraq
and Syria. Hyping the threat members connected to
the terror group - or spiritually loyal to it - pose
to American citizens is supportive of U.S. foreign
policy. If ISIS, or people claiming to act on behalf
of ISIS, are a real danger to Americans, it bolsters
the notion that the group is a threat to national
security and helps justifies the government's
military response.
The FBI seems eager to show itself as disrupting
ISIS plots in the States. As
Adam Johnson has written in FAIR, the FBI
has put Americans in contact with informants who
claim to represent ISIS and then led the targets to
believe they would help the targets join the
terrorist organization. The media have then
conflated this with an "ISIS Plot" and "ISIS
Support," when no members of ISIS were ever involved
in any way.
The FBI's motivation to portray events in a way that
supports U.S. foreign policy, and its history of
portraying its actions in a way that has served to
hype an ISIS threat should make journalists cautious
about taking officials' words at face value.
Especially in the case of a 911 call, which is a
public record in Florida, proper journalistic
due diligence would be to consult the actual source
of the claims being disseminated.
Instead, not a single journalist appears to have
done this with Orlando killer Omar Mateen's 911
call.
On Tuesday, CNN aired interviews of
eyewitnesses to the shooting spree who described
their harrowing encounters with the gunman inside
the club. Patience Carter, who was inside a bathroom
stall feet from the gunman when he called 911, said
he told the dispatcher that "the reason why he was
doing this is because he wants America to stop
bombing his country." (Mateen is a native of the
United States, but he was presumably referring to
Afghanistan, where both of his parents are from.)
She said he then declared that "from now on he
pledges his loyalty to ISIS."
This demonstrates that his primary motive for his
terror attack was retaliation for the U.S.
aggression in Afghanistan, where nearly
100,000 people have been killed since the
illegal U.S. invasion in 2001. His mention of ISIS
seems merely adjunct to what he admits was his
justification for the attack. His motivation
precedes his ideological alignment with ISIS, not
the other way around.
Anti-war activists have long argued that overseas
military operations endanger not only the
populations whose countries are invaded, occupied
and bombed, but Americans in the United States who
are at risk of terrorist retaliation from people
outraged by the death and destruction war inevitably
produces to the point of being willing to resort to
violence themselves.
Carter's version of the 911 call reveals a very
different picture than the partial one revealed by
the FBI and reprinted by each of the largest news
organizations. The complete conversation depicts
Mateen as indicating that he considered his actions
a response to U.S. foreign policy. Of course, the
murder of innocent civilians is always reprehensible
and can never be justified by claiming they are a
response to a state's military aggression,
regardless of how deadly and devastating such
military operations are. But it should be
predictable that some people will use this
rationalization regardless and seek out soft targets
in the country whose government they claim to be
retaliating against.
The FBI chose to omit Mateen's professed motive
entirely when recounting the 911 call to the media,
and merely state that he professed allegiance to
ISIS. Perhaps they recognized how putting Mateen's
call in context may lead people to question whether
U.S. wars in Afghanistan (and Iraq) raise the
terrorist threat at home.
After all, this is not the first time this has
happened. The surviving Boston Marathon bomber cited
the U.S. wars abroad as his motivation for
committing the attack that killed three people
and maimed dozens more.
It is not clear whether any journalist even asked to
hear the 911 call themselves. But it is clear that
they chose to disseminate second-hand information
when the primary source should have been easily
accessible. If it was not made available (as
required by law), the public deserves to know that
it was suppressed and be given an explanation why.
Media stenographers parroted government officials'
descriptions of the call, which left out the
killer's professed motivation for his politically
motivated attack and failed to put the ISIS claim in
any context. Unsurprisingly, their misrepresentation
served the government's policy agenda and avoided
having the incident serve as an example of a
negative consequence of U.S. foreign policy - one
that anti-war dissenters have used in arguing
against the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq since the
War on Terror was launched more than a decade and a
half ago.
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