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The price of good news

Posted by Lakshmi Chaudhry at 10:05 AM on December 1, 2005.


So the Pentagon has been paying to place military-authored articles in Iraqi newspapers. Why is everyone pretending to be surprised?

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The Bush administration may not be much good at many things -- like, say, picking, planning, and executing a war or disaster relief -- but no one can fault their expertise in "information operations." So it should comes as no surprise that the Pentagon has been covertly paying a Washington-based firm called Lincoln Group to translate and place military-authored "articles" in Iraqi newspapers. [LAT]

The critics said the usual things about hypocrisy, violating democratic norms, blah blah. But let's face it, the White House is an equal-opportunity bullshitter. What's good for Americans -- fake reporters and columnists, press releases dummied up to look like TV news -- ought to be good enough for those Iraqis.

That would explain why some of them remain unperturbed at the news

Iraqi editors apparently reacted with a mixture of shock and shrugs when told they were targets of a U.S. military psychological operation. The editor of Al Mada, widely considered the most thoughtful and professional of Iraqi newspapers, said if his cash-strapped paper had known the story was from the U.S. government he would have "charged much, much more." [Guardian via CSM]

Digg!

Lakshmi Chaudhry is a senior editor at In These Times, and the former senior editor of AlterNet. You can write to her at lakshmi@alternet.org.


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