| Disinformation and Deceit - The muzzled mainstream media |
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Julie-ann Davies, November 25, 2005 On November 7, 2004 the American-led siege of the Iraqi city of Hospitals, schools, power supplies and water lines were destroyed as the city was dragged to its knees. Reports filed from the area were scant. Most journalists present were embedded with troops and their movements were tightly controlled. Allegations that American forces were using chemical weapons in Fallujah were widely ignored by the mainstream media. On November 8, 2005, a year and a day after the The The time-honoured technique of smearing the messenger was deployed. Pentagon spokesman Todd Vician emphatically denied the use of chemical weapons in However, the American officials still insist that the use of white phosphorus is not forbidden by any treaty they are signatories to. But its use against insurgents in Fallujah is illegal according to a 1990 US Army handbook that says: It is against the law of land warfare to employ white phosphorus against personnel targets. The story, which had lain dormant for over a year was reignited by the RAI documentary which blazed across the internet. On November 16 Lieutenant-Colonel Venable finally admitted to the BBC that white phosphorus was used as an incendiary weapon against enemy combatants. However, this is not the first time the On March 22, 2003 CNN carried reports that American forces had used Napalm at Safwan Hill, close to the Iraqi border. Initially, the Facing an outcry the It is obvious the Early in 2005 a medical team sent to Fallujah by the Iraqi interim government held a press conference to publicise their findings. They confirmed that burning chemicals were used by American forces during the attack. That conference was attended by over 20 major national and international news organisations but none of these reported on the event. On 20 November 2005, in an article in the Sunday Telegraph, Toby Harnden revealed he witnessed US forces using white phosphorus to target insurgents in Fallujah. Yet his original report of the event reads somewhat differently. Written on November 9, 2004 the piece All-out assault on Fallujah says: White phosphorus shells lit up the sky as armour drove through the breach and sent flaming material on to suspect insurgent haunts. The use of white phosphorus to illuminate battle-zones or to generate smoke-screen to cover troop movements is uncontroversial. It is only when it is used against human targets, as revealed in Harndens second article, that the legality of its use becomes questionable. Harndens initial account of the event, written while embedded with US forces, was unlikely to upset the military. The real scandal behind this story is that it has taken so long for the mainstream media to cover it. We were told it was necessary to go to war with
Weapons can make no distinction between civilians and combatants they treat all their victims with equal cruelty. However, the international mainstream media seems, in this case at least, to believe that some victims are more worthy of their attention than others.
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