How do wars begin? With a “master illusion,” according to Ralph McGehee, one of the CIA’s pioneers in “black propaganda” – known today as “news management.”
In 1983, he described to me how the CIA had faked an “incident” that became the “conclusive proof of North Vietnam’s aggression.” This followed a claim, also fake, that North Vietnamese torpedo boats had attacked a US warship in the Gulf of Tonkin in August 1964.
“The CIA,” he said, “loaded up a junk, a North Vietnamese junk, with communist weapons – the agency maintains communist arsenals in the United States and around the world. They floated this junk off the coast of central Vietnam. They shot it up and made it look like a firefight, and they brought in the American press. Based on this evidence, two marine landing teams went into Danang and a week after that the American air force began regular bombing of North Vietnam.”
An invasion that took three million lives was under way.
The Israelis have played this murderous game since 1948. The massacre of peace activists in international waters on May 31 was “spun” to the Israeli public for the better part of the week, preparing them for yet more murder by their government, with the unarmed flotilla of humanitarians described as terrorists or dupes of terrorists.
The BBC was so intimidated that it reported the atrocity primarily as a “potential public relations disaster for Israel,” the perspective of the killers and a disgrace for journalism.
A similar master illusion now consumes Asian governments. On May 20, South Korea announced it had “overwhelming evidence” that a torpedo fired by a North Korean submarine sank one of its warships, the Cheonan, in March with the loss of 46 sailors. The US keeps 28,000 troops in South Korea, where the public has long supported detente with Pyongyang.
On May 26, US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton flew to Seoul and demanded that the “international community must respond” to “North Korea’s outrage.” She flew on to Japan, where the new North Korean “threat” eclipsed the briefly independent foreign policy of the now ex-prime minister of Japan Yukio Hatoyama, who had been elected last year with popular opposition to the permanent US military occupation of Japan.
The “overwhelming evidence” is a propeller that “had been corroding at least for several months,” reported the Korea Times. In April, South Korea’s national intelligence director Won Se-hoon told a parliamentary committee that there was no evidence linking the sinking of the Cheonan to North Korea. The defence minister agreed. And the head of South Korea’s military marine operations said: “No North Korean warships have been detected [in] the waters where the accident took place.”
The reference to an “accident” suggests the warship struck a reef and broke in two.
To the US media, North Korea’s guilt is beyond doubt, just as North Vietnam’s guilt was beyond doubt, just as Saddam Hussein had weapons of mass destruction, just as Israel can terrorise with impunity. But, unlike Vietnam and Iraq, North Korea has nuclear weapons, which helps to explain why it has not been attacked, not yet – a salutary lesson to other countries, such as Iran, currently in the cross hairs.
In Britain, we have our own master illusions. Imagine someone on state benefits caught claiming £40,000 of taxpayers’ money in a second-home scam. A prison sentence would almost certainly follow. But David Laws, chief secretary to the Treasury, does the same and is described as follows: “I have always admired his intelligence, his sense of public duty and his personal integrity” (Nick Clegg). “You are a good and honourable man” (David Cameron). Laws is “a man of quite exceptional nobility” (Julian Glover, the Guardian), and “a brilliant mind” (BBC).
The Oxbridge club and its associate members in politics and the media have tried to link Laws’s “error of judgement” and “naivety” to his “right to privacy” as a gay man, an irrelevance. The “brilliant mind” is a wealthy, Cambridge-groomed investment banker devoted to the noble task of cutting the public services of mostly poor and honest people.
Now imagine another public official, the force behind one of the great war criminals and liars. This official “spun” the illegal invasion of a defenceless country that resulted in the deaths of at least a million people and the dispossession of many more – in effect, the crushing of a human society. If this was the Balkans or Africa he would very likely have been indicted by the International Criminal Court.
But crime pays for the clubbable. In quick step with the Laws affair, this truth was demonstrated by the continuing celebration of Alastair Campbell, whose frequent media appearances provide a vicarious thrill for the liberal intelligentsia.
To the Guardian, Campbell is “bullish, sometimes misdirected, but unafraid to press on where others might have faltered.” The Guardian’s immediate interest is its “exclusive” publication of Campbell’s “politically explosive” and “uncut” diaries.
Here is a flavour. “Saturday May 14. I called Peter (Mandelson) and asked why he didn’t return my calls yesterday. ‘You know why.’ ‘No, I don’t.’ He said he was incandescent at my Newsnight interview…”
In a promotional interview with the Guardian, Campbell dispensed more of this dated incest, referring just once to the bloodbath for which he was a principal apologist.
“Did Iraq lose us support in 2005?” he asked rhetorically. “Without a doubt…” Thus a criminal tragedy equal in scale to the Rwandan genocide was dismissed as a “loss” for new Labour – a master illusion of notable profanity.
This article appeared in the New Statesman.
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