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News :: International Relations |
Spying & Chemical Weapons In Iraq -- The Stories You Don't (yet) Hear. |
Current rating: 0 |
by Sascha Meinrath Email: sascha (nospam) ucimc.org (unverified!) |
02 Mar 2003
Modified: 04:35:32 PM |
Two breaking stories that remain (as yet) censored by the U.S. media: 1. The U.S. has been caught spying on U.N. security council members -- including tapping phones and stealing e-mail; 2. Chemical weapons stores have been found and are planned to be utilized in Iraq, in contradiction to the Chemical Weapons Convention... by the United States.
The stories remain uncovered by the U.S. media, but are now being mentioned in British press. |
Two breaking stories that remain (as yet) censored by the U.S. media: 1. The U.S. has been caught spying on U.N. security council members -- including tapping phones and stealing e-mail; 2. Chemical weapons stores have been found and are planned to be utilized in Iraq, in contradiction to the Chemical Weapons Convention... by the United States.
The stories remain uncovered by the U.S. media, but are now being mentioned in British press:
From the Independent:
"US prepares to use toxic gases in Iraq"
By Geoffrey Lean and Severin Carrell
02 March 2003
The US is preparing to use the toxic riot-control agents CS gas and pepper spray in Iraq in contravention of the Chemical Weapons Convention, provoking the first split in the Anglo-US alliance. "Calmative" gases, similar to the one that killed 120 hostages in the Moscow theatre siege last year, could also be employed.
Full text: http://news.independent.co.uk/world/americas/story.jsp?story=383006
***
From the Observer:
"Revealed: US dirty tricks to win vote on Iraq war: Secret document details American plan to bug phones and emails of key Security Council members"
By Martin Bright, Ed Vulliamy in New York and Peter Beaumont
Sunday March 2, 2003
The United States is conducting a secret 'dirty tricks' campaign against UN Security Council delegations in New York as part of its battle to win votes in favour of war against Iraq.
Details of the aggressive surveillance operation, which involves interception of the home and office telephones and the emails of UN delegates in New York, are revealed in a document leaked to The Observer.
Full text: http://news.independent.co.uk/world/americas/story.jsp?story=383071
From the Independent:
"US accused of spying on Security Council Washington alleged to have ordered bugging of delegates' telephones and emails"
By Andrew Clennell
02 March 2003
The United States was accused last night of launching an aggressive telephone and email bugging operation on UN Security Council members whose votes will be critical to international support for a US-led war on Iraq.
Full text: http://news.independent.co.uk/world/americas/story.jsp?story=383071
***
It begs the question, "Where's the United States media?" |
Re: Spying & Chemical Weapons In Iraq -- The Stories You Don't (yet) Hear. |
by Sascha (No verified email address) |
Current rating: 0 02 Mar 2003
|
From Portland IMC:
http://portland.indymedia.org/front.php3article_id=46860&group=webcast
How the Propaganda System Works
Orwell Chomsky 12:16pm Sun Mar 2 '03
Arab League votes No, is ignored by media
How does the U.S. and British propaganda system work? Today’s news provides a textbook example. Yesterday the Arab League voted unanimously to oppose the war in Iraq. The 22 member Arab League includes Saudi Arabia, Libya, Syria, United Arab Emirates, Kuwait, Jordan, Egypt and other Middle Eastern and African countries. These countries are Saddam Hussein’s neighbors, yet they are against the war.
That is big news, especially combined with the vote in the Turkish Parliament which denied the U.S. the use of Turkey as a staging ground for war. And it follows the Non-aligned meeting of 116 countries in Malaysia last weekend which came out strongly against the war. And of course that followed the huge world-wide Feb. 15 protests which were largest in the three European countries, Great Britain, Spain and Italy, whose leaders support this war. What the Arab League vote shows is that NOBODY in the world supports this war.
Yet, how did the U.S. and British media report the Arab League’s vote? They focused on a suggestion made by the U.A.E.. that Saddam Hussein should go into exile. This issue did not even make it on the agenda of the meeting!
So, for the media to focus on the U.A.E.. suggestion, and to ignore, or bury in the bottom paragraphs of the article, the actual statement made at the end of the meeting of the Arab League, shows clearly that the U.S. and British mass media are part of a propaganda system which is an accessory to planned mass murder, an accessory to the unprovoked attack of another country, which will result in the deaths of thousands of innocent civilians.
The Observer, a newspaper in England made no mention of the vote!
Headline: Arab Emirates leader calls for Saddam to quit
http://www.observer.co.uk/iraq/story/0,12239,906036,00.html
MSNBC ran this headline: UAE calls on Iraq leaders to quit
http://www.msnbc.com/news/879265.asp?0dm=C24HN
This is the Washington Post Headline: UAE Urges Hussein To Go Into Exile
Fox news headline: Arab Summit: Feuding Over Call for Hussein to Step Down
Buried in the Fox news story is this sentence: “The summit ended with a vague anti-war declaration that was short on specifics, the diplomats said.”
In fact the anti-war statement was not vague in the least, and it was passed unanimously, but you have to go to another news source to discover that. This is from associated press, which all U.S. newspapers and television stations subscribe to
http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/ap/20030301/ap_wo_en_ge/me_gen_arabs_iraq_communique_1 : the headline is:
Main points of Arab summit final communique
Arab leaders registered "complete rejection to any aggression on Iraq or threatening the security of any Arab country and considering it a threat to Arab national security and (reiterate) the necessity of resolving the Iraqi issue through peaceful ways."
_ Called for giving weapons inspectors enough time carry out their mission and called on inspectors to use objectivity in their work.
_ Called on Arab countries to refrain from "participating in any military action that targets the security, safety and unity of Iraq or any other Arab country."
So, the mass media makes a bare mention of the most important news, the complete rejection of the war against Iraq, and they bury it under misleading headlines, and focus on something relatively trivial, which expresses the opinion only of the leadership of one tiny country.
This is the membership of the Arab League:
Algeria, Bahrain, Comoros, Djibouti, Egypt, Iraq, Jordan, Kuwait, Lebanon, Libya, Mauritania, Morocco, Oman, Palestine, Quatar, Saudi Arabia, Somalia, Sudan, Syria, Tunisia, United Arab Emirates, Yemen.
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