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In reply to the discussion: Spanking? America's killed a million Iraqi kids over the last 24 years. [View all]Octafish
(55,745 posts)25. Then both Parties subscribe to the same thing.
"Money trumps peace."
Otherwise, the Press would have raised a fuss when all the lies were coming down about aluminum tubes and when the Kuwaiti ambassador's daughter posed as a Kuwaiti nurse testifying before Congress she saw Saddam's army pull babies from their incubators and leave them on the "cold hospital floor."
HOW PR SOLD THE WAR IN THE PERSIAN GULF
Excerpted from Toxic Sludge Is Good For You, Chapter 10
"If I wanted to lie, or if we wanted to lie, if we wanted to exaggerate, I wouldn't use my daughter to do so. I could easily buy other people to do it."
--Saud Nasir al-Sabah, Kuwait's Ambassador to the United States and Canada
The Mother of All Clients
On August 2, 1990, Iraqi troops led by dictator Saddam Hussein invaded the oil-producing nation of Kuwait. Like Noriega in Panama, Hussein had been a US ally for nearly a decade. From 1980 to 1988, he had killed about 150,000 Iranians, in addition to at least 13,000 of his own citizens. Despite complaints from international human rights group, however, the Reagan and Bush administrations had treated Hussein as a valuable ally in the US confrontation with Iran. As late as July 25 -- a week before the invasion of Kuwait -- US Ambassador April Glaspie commiserated with Hussein over a "cheap and unjust" profile by ABC's Diane Sawyer, and wished for an "appearance in the media, even for five minutes," by Hussein that "would help explain Iraq to the American people."69
Glaspie's ill-chosen comments may have helped convince the dictator that Washington would look the other way if he "annexed" a neighboring kingdom. The invasion of Kuwait, however, crossed a line that the Bush Administration could not tolerate. This time Hussein's crime was far more serious than simply gassing to death another brood of Kurdish refugees. This time, oil was at stake.
Viewed in strictly moral terms, Kuwait hardly looked like the sort of country that deserved defending, even from a monster like Hussein. The tiny but super-rich state had been an independent nation for just a quarter century when in 1986 the ruling al-Sabah family tightened its dictatorial grip over the "black gold" fiefdom by disbanding the token National Assembly and firmly establishing all power in the be-jeweled hands of the ruling Emir. Then, as now, Kuwait's ruling oligarchy brutally suppressed the country's small democracy movement, intimidated and censored journalists, and hired desperate foreigners to supply most of the nation's physical labor under conditions of indentured servitude and near-slavery. The wealthy young men of Kuwait's ruling class were known as spoiled party boys in university cities and national capitals from Cairo to Washington.70
Unlike Grenada and Panama, Iraq had a substantial army that could not be subdued in a mere weekend of fighting. Unlike the Sandinistas in Nicaragua, Hussein was too far away from US soil, too rich with oil money, and too experienced in ruling through propaganda and terror to be dislodged through the psychological-warfare techniques of low-intensity conflict. Waging a war to push Iraq's invading army from Kuwait would cost billions of dollars and require an unprecedented, massive US military mobilization. The American public was notoriously reluctant to send its young into foreign battles on behalf of any cause. Selling war in the Middle East to the American people would not be easy. Bush would need to convince Americans that former ally Saddam Hussein now embodied evil, and that the oil fiefdom of Kuwait was a struggling young democracy. How could the Bush Administration build US support for "liberating" a country so fundamentally opposed to democratic values? How could the war appear noble and necessary rather than a crass grab to save cheap oil?
"If and when a shooting war starts, reporters will begin to wonder why American soldiers are dying for oil-rich sheiks," warned Hal Steward, a retired army PR official. "The US military had better get cracking to come up with a public relations plan that will supply the answers the public can accept."71
Steward needn't have worried. A PR plan was already in place, paid for almost entirely by the "oil-rich sheiks" themselves.
Packaging the Emir
US Congressman Jimmy Hayes of Louisiana -- a conservative Democrat who supported the Gulf War -- later estimated that the government of Kuwait funded as many as 20 PR, law and lobby firms in its campaign to mobilize US opinion and force against Hussein.72 Participating firms included the Rendon Group, which received a retainer of $100,000 per month for media work, and Neill & Co., which received $50,000 per month for lobbying Congress. Sam Zakhem, a former US ambassador to the oil-rich gulf state of Bahrain, funneled $7.7 million in advertising and lobbying dollars through two front groups, the "Coalition for Americans at Risk" and the "Freedom Task Force." The Coalition, which began in the 1980s as a front for the contras in Nicaragua, prepared and placed TV and newspaper ads, and kept a stable of fifty speakers available for pro-war rallies and publicity events.73
Hill & Knowlton, then the world's largest PR firm, served as mastermind for the Kuwaiti campaign. Its activities alone would have constituted the largest foreign-funded campaign ever aimed at manipulating American public opinion. By law, the Foreign Agents Registration Act should have exposed this propaganda campaign to the American people, but the Justice Department chose not to enforce it. Nine days after Saddam's army marched into Kuwait, the Emir's government agreed to fund a contract under which Hill & Knowlton would represent "Citizens for a Free Kuwait," a classic PR front group designed to hide the real role of the Kuwaiti government and its collusion with the Bush administration. Over the next six months, the Kuwaiti government channeled $11.9 million dollars to Citizens for a Free Kuwait, whose only other funding totalled $17,861 from 78 individuals. Virtually all of CFK's budget -- $10.8 million -- went to Hill & Knowlton in the form of fees.74
CONTINUED...
http://www.prwatch.org/books/tsigfy10.html
Which is too bad, for the People in a Democracy not deserve -- they have a RIGHT -- to the Truth.
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Spanking? America's killed a million Iraqi kids over the last 24 years. [View all]
Octafish
Sep 2014
OP
Agreed, I am not sure either problem has been totally overlooked. Just because there is lots of kid
Thinkingabout
Sep 2014
#82
Because there was no military/strategic advantage of occupation given the history of
whereisjustice
Sep 2014
#84
You don't have to agree, history has more than proven my assertions correct.
whereisjustice
Sep 2014
#109
What Adrian Peterson did was horrific, but this is a million times more horriffic.
Initech
Sep 2014
#13
I actually can get behind air strikes in Iraq, but intervening in Syria is ridiculous
Hippo_Tron
Sep 2014
#40
Not trying to divert attention from spanking, but to the killing of a million innocent people.
Octafish
Sep 2014
#65
I was surprised at both the focus and its size. Please see #65 above and this from the same below...
Octafish
Sep 2014
#66
Iraqi people had nothing to do with 9-11. They didn't even vote for CIA-installed Saddam Hussein.
Octafish
Sep 2014
#70
Dead kids have a power to open eyes. Yet some spend years trying to shut your mouth.
johnnyreb
Sep 2014
#72
what we do to our kids matter. what we do to other people's children also matter.
La Lioness Priyanka
Sep 2014
#75
In 1990, Iraq was given a green light to attack Kuwait by Baker per April Glaspie.
Octafish
Sep 2014
#92
Saying we have no opinion in a dispute over slant drilling is NOT a green light for war.
EX500rider
Sep 2014
#94
Father Bush lied his miserable way into an Iraq war just like his dim son did.
LawDeeDah
Sep 2014
#122
It was a green light to Saddam, remember that Rumsfeld and the PNACers were buds with Saddam
LawDeeDah
Sep 2014
#127