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Private Military Contractors Writing the News? The Pentagon's Propaganda at Its Worst

By Liliana Segura, AlterNet. Posted October 17, 2008.


Months after the Pentagon pundits flap, the Department of Defense continues to hand down contracts for propaganda in Iraq and beyond.

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Less than a week after the Washington Post reported that the Department of Defense will pay private contractors $300 million over the next three years to "produce news stories, entertainment programs and public service advertisements for the Iraqi media in an effort to 'engage and inspire' the local population to support U.S. objectives and the Iraqi government," Virginia Sen. Jim Webb wrote a strongly worded letter to Defense Secretary Robert Gates. "I have serious reservations about the need for this expenditure in today's political and economic environment," he wrote. "Consequently, I am asking that you put these contracts on hold until the Armed Services Committee and the next administration can review the entire issue of U.S. propaganda efforts inside Iraq."

Such a review, if it were to happen, would be a formidable undertaking, one that would have to start with the declaration of the "War on Terror" itself. It's a project the Bush administration has always approached as a PR campaign as much as a military one. Who can forget former White House Chief of Staff Andy Card's explanation for the need to introduce the Iraq War to Americans in September: "From a marketing point of view, you don't introduce new products in August." And remember the short-lived attempt by administration officials to re-brand the "War on Terror" by renaming it the "Global Struggle Against Violent Extremism"? (Reports at the time were that administration officials worried that the original phrase "may have outlived its usefulness," due to its sole focus on military might.)

Regardless of what you call it, the so-called "War on Terror" has cost American taxpayers hundreds of millions of dollars in propaganda costs alone. As with so much of modern war-making, most of this work is carried out by private military contractors. With the word "Halliburton" now shorthand for waste, fraud and abuse for many Americans, taxpayers' tolerance for war profiteering has reached new lows -- especially when private military companies operating with no oversight undermine the very "hearts and minds" that mission propaganda is supposedly meant to advance.

Selling the War to Americans

Perhaps one of the Bush administration's most egregious PR undertakings in the war on Iraq was revealed this spring, when the New York Times blew the lid off the Pentagon's military analyst program, in which more than 75 retired military officials were recruited to spout pro-war rhetoric on major networks in the run-up to the invasion of Iraq. These "message force multipliers," as they were branded, were provided with thousands of talking points by the Department of Defense starting in 2002. In one memo, dated Dec. 9, 2002 and titled "Department of Defense Themes and Talking Points on Iraq," a quote from Paul Wolfowitz -- "We cannot allow one of the world's most murderous dictators to provide terrorists a sanctuary in Iraq" -- was followed with a bullet point: "Saddam Hussein: A Global Threat."

The investigative piece by the Times said the project "continues to this day," seeking to "exploit ideological and military allegiances, and also a powerful financial dynamic: Most of the analysts have ties to military contractors vested in the very war policies they are asked to assess on air."

"Records and interviews show how the Bush administration has used its control over access and information in an effort to transform the analysts into a kind of media Trojan horse -- an instrument intended to shape terrorism coverage from inside the major TV and radio networks." It would be hard to overstate the implications of such a program, particularly for a country that claims to be a beacon of democracy.

Although the Pentagon was said to have suspended its PR briefings of retired military officials shortly after the Times story broke, since claiming that its inspector general is conducting an investigation, in reality there has been precious little fallout. However, in one promising move, earlier this month, the Federal Communications Commission sent five letters of inquiry to TV military analysts in an apparent probing of the program. According to one report, "at issue is that some of them were also linked to Pentagon contracts, raising the issue of conflict of interest. In its letter signed by the chief of the investigations and hearings division enforcement bureau, the FCC suggests that TV stations and networks may have violated two sections of the Communications Act of 1934 by not identifying the ties to the Pentagon that their military analysts had." Diane Farsetta at PR Watch, who has written extensively on the Pentagon's pundits, particularly their work on behalf of defense contractors, says, "the good news is that that's (a first) step toward conducting an investigation."

Profiting off the "War of Ideas"

Beyond the Pentagon's pundit "scandal," the fact that propaganda contracts continue to be awarded to the very companies that have previously been implicated in ethical breaches for disseminating unattributed U.S. propaganda abroad is reason enough to renew alarm. More than the dollar amount, what is outrageous to Farsetta about the most recent propaganda contract is that it is "blatantly illegal." "If you look at this most recent contract," she explains, "one of the 'strategic audiences' is U.S. audiences." According to federal law going back to World War II, she says "no taxpayer money can go to propagandize U.S. audiences."

The Washington Post story describes the contract as the latest in a series of cutting-edge PR initiatives undertaken since 2003 that represent a revolution in what it calls "the military's role in the war of ideas." "Iraq, where hundreds of millions of dollars have been spent on such contracts, has been the proving ground for the transformation."

"The tools they're using, the means, the robustness of this activity has just skyrocketed since 2003. In the past, a lot of this stuff was just some guy's dreams,'" said a senior U.S. military official, one of several who discussed the sensitive defense program on the condition of anonymity.
The Pentagon still sometimes feels it is playing catch-up in a propaganda market dominated by al Qaeda, whose media operations include sophisticated Web sites and professionally produced videos and audios featuring Osama bin Laden and his lieutenants. "We're being out-communicated by a guy in a cave," Secretary Robert M. Gates often remarks.
The new contract was awarded to four companies, most of whom Farsetta refers to as "the usual suspects," including Lincoln Group, the Pennsylvania Avenue company that in 2005 was found to have planted articles written by U.S. military officials in Iraqi newspapers without attribution. (Although the group was cleared of any illegalities, even then-Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld recognized the potential breach, remarking, "Gee, that's not what we ought to be doing."

Selling the War to Iraqis

The main target audience for the $300 million contract is Iraqis. But, different from earlier propaganda efforts, the content is not simply meant to convince them of the noble intentions of their American occupiers. "Originally, the major focus was all about the U.S.," says Farsetta. "The message then was, 'Hey, you're free now,' but over time it has shifted to more 'make sure you support your own government, your own police.'"

Indeed, the Washington Post quoted an unnamed official who described one component of the program:
"There's a video piece produced by a contractor showing a family being attacked by a group of bad guys, and their daughter being taken off. The message is: You've got to stand up against the enemy." The professionally produced vignette, he said, "is offered for airing on various (television) stations in Iraq. They don't know that the originator of the content is the U.S. government. If they did, they would never run anything.
"If you asked most Iraqis," he said, "they would say, 'It came from the government, our own government.'"
A pretty blunt admission, to be sure, and one that lays bare the dubious ethical nature of the program (not to mention the extent that the military recognizes Iraqis' antipathy for the U.S. government). But it's not the first time the U.S. government has sought to play hand puppet with Iraqi media. Last spring, the NSA obtained and made public a document, along with a PowerPoint presentation, that revealed the Pentagon's plans in the run-up to the war to create a "Rapid Reaction Media Team." Jim Lobe, D.C. bureau chief of InterPress Services, covered the revelation in May 2007; as he wrote, the proposal was for a "six-month, $51 million budget for the RRMT operation, apparently the first phase in a one- to two-year 'strategic information campaign'":
Among other items, the budget called for the hiring of two U.S. ''media consultants'' who were to be paid $140,000 each for six months' work. A further $800,000 were to be paid for six Iraqi "media consultants" over the same period.
Both the paper and the slide presentation were prepared by two Pentagon offices -- Special Operations and Low-Intensity Conflict, which, among other things, specialize in psychological warfare, and the Office of Special Plans under then undersecretary of defense for policy, Douglas Feith -- in mid-January, 2003, two months before the invasion, according to NSA analyst Joyce Battle.
''The RRMT concept focuses on USG-UK pre- and post-hostilities efforts to develop programming, train talent, and rapidly deploy a team of U.S./UK media experts with a team of 'hand selected' Iraqi media experts to communicate immediately with the Iraqi public opinion upon liberation of Iraq,'' according to the paper.
The ''hand-picked'' Iraqi experts, according to the paper, would provide planning and program guidance for the U.S. experts and help ''select and train the Iraqi broadcasters and publishers ('the face') for the USG/coalition sponsored information effort.'' USG is an abbreviation for U.S. government.
In a rather extraordinary quote, the document boasted, ''It will be as if, after another day of deadly agit-prop, the North Korean people turned off their TVs at night, and turned them on in the morning to find the rich fare of South Korean TV spread before them as their very own."

Circumventing Congress

In the United States, few lawmakers have had a chance to scrutinize this latest deployment of public funds for propaganda. (Like so many other contracts awarded to private defense corporations, this one was awarded with no Congressional approval.) But Webb's letter to Defense Secretary Robert Gates suggests that it could become an issue.
At a time when this country is facing such a grave economic crisis, and at a time when the government of Iraq now shows at least a $79 billion surplus from recent oil revenues, in my view it makes little sense for the U.S. Department of Defense to be spending hundreds of millions of dollars to propagandize the Iraqi people. There is now an elected government in Iraq, which is recognized to have the power and authority to negotiate a long-term security agreement with the government of the United States. Clearly that government is capable, both politically and financially, of communicating with its own people in the manner now contemplated by these DOD contracts -- and without being accused by adversaries of being a foreign government that is fulminating internal conditions through propaganda.
Laudable as his efforts to reign in contractors may be -- much of Webb's letter was devoted to military contractors more generally, and Blackwater specifically -- his letter made no mention of the myriad ethical questions raised by the propaganda contract. To name a few, says Farsetta, "the fact that the media produced is overwhelmingly not attributed to the U.S. government;" "the fact that one of the 'strategic audiences' listed in the contract is 'U.S. audiences,' in apparent violation of U.S. law;" and "the difficulties in holding private contractors operating in war zones accountable to any standard (ethical, performance or otherwise)."

Webb, who first learned about this contract as did most Americans, from the Washington Post, has called for a thorough review of the Pentagon's "strategic communications" initiatives, including Congressional hearings." Were this to happen, says Farsetta, "I would love for those hearings to include representatives from foreign governments and civil society groups where the U.S. has major propaganda operations, including Iraq and Afghanistan. The heads of firms like the Lincoln Group, L-3 and Rendon should also testify, under oath."

But, she says, "What really bothers me is that Webb's using the "we've given Iraq so much and now it's time for them to step up" argument. That argument never fails to amaze and anger me. We bombed them in 1991, then for more than a decade placed them under such devastating sanctions that hundreds of thousands of children died, then bombed them more ferociously over a longer period of time. Yet some politicians have the gall to complain that the Iraqis aren't doing enough now? That's not to mention that the argument assumes that Iraqi leaders have the same priorities as U.S. officials. Personally, I say we need to get our propaganda and troops out of Iraq and pay them reparations."

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Dipocrits
Posted by: Col. Jackleg on Oct 17, 2008 4:51 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I have ranted and raved against this development since 9/11. Name one Dipocrit that has stood tall and told Bush to go to hell on this one? Answer: there ain't one and Obamarama in the White House will change nothing. Congress is mandated to end this scourge NOW and we must incessantly demand it. Silence breeds exacerbation and as was seen in the "bailout," Bush still rules unimpeded and the notion of a majority in opposition is pure fantasy. Wake up Emeriker...there's a helluva lot more than Depression going on. Oh, I forgot, Bush, Paulson, McCain, Palin et al say there is no Recession and Phil Gramm says we're a bunch of "whiners." Sprinkle that on your Wheaties this morning!

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syed salamah ali mahdi
Posted by: salamah on Oct 17, 2008 5:54 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
America is a country living on MAKE BELIEFS with no substance or reality. The hypnotizing and brain washing is done by MARKETING. Everything in America is marketed without reference to good or bad, fair or unfair, humane or inhumane, kind or cruel and legal or illegal! What makes Marketing desirable is GAIN and the most desirable gains are MONEY and POWER, to hell with the rest. From Churches to Brothels to Government, nothing works without PR. PR gave the US, 9/11, Afghanistan, Iraq, the Foreclosure and the Meltdown. With good PR Americans can get away with murder! This is what is happening in America on all fronts and the Best of the Best in PR are from JHVH's Chosen Race. Check the names of the PR gang which sold the Iraqi War.

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» RE: syed salamah ali mahdi Posted by: donl51
» RE: syed salamah ali mahdi Posted by: sirios
Falling in Love w/your own Lies
Posted by: weathered on Oct 17, 2008 7:20 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Humilty eludes us, denial becomes us and trouble follows us.

For some this simple but essential spiritual lesson is just too hard to grasp.

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Missed 2 important points...
Posted by: Reader11722 on Oct 17, 2008 8:46 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
First, the Pentagon's propaganda has collaborators in the zioni$t Mainstream Media. Second, the same MSM that promotes the pentagon's propaganda simultaneously censors truthful stories. After all, censorship is becoming America's favorite past-time. The US gov't (and their corporate friends), already place protesters in fenced-in cages, ban books like America Deceived (book) from Wikipedia, Amazon and Facebook, and shut down Ron Paul. Free Speech forever.

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Dumbing down......
Posted by: Spiritgirl on Oct 17, 2008 9:08 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Americans have been dumbed down, maybe it's because everyone is overworked, stressed out, watching way too much "nonsense" t.v.! The truth is that by the time most people get home they might throw some food on the tables and prop up in front of the tube! The corporate owned media don't help because they just spew the pablum that their handlers want us to know! Shame on us as Americans for not doing more to protect ourselves and seek out real news, not just in our local area, but around the world!

We all know that the "government" doesn't inform it's citizens but the current Mis-Administration has taken it to new highs or lows depending on how you look at it. This must stop, the propaganda is reminiscent of Nazi Germany - it doesn't win hearts and minds it reminds the rest of the world why tyrants in "diplomatic" clothing need to be stopped!

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It goes like this...
Posted by: jeffrey7 on Oct 17, 2008 9:47 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The 'War on Terror' is bullshit. To keep folks pouring through the doors of the recuitment offices we need some 'war glamour' stories and a dose of war horror stories all carefully screened for conten so it makes you jump up and enlist in Uncle Sam's Global Hit Squad. If you were'nt made to fear things by the Tower drop,then by god you'll be made to fear some asshole we'vwe had pinned down for years and now have decided to over run their country as 'Terrorists'.

Our thoughts are shaped for us everyday by the media. It's put together that way on purpose. Why? Besides the selling of crap, they don't believe you're smart enough to think for yourself. So they need some method of pushing you into the direction they want you to go.
Propaganda works well. You can point fingers at everyone else saying they use it all the while you're using it yourself. It's the perfect mind fuck.

Is there any better reason to demilitarize America? If we stopped fucking everybody over with our foriegn policies we most likely would'nt have enemies. Lies by military field reporters is older than this war and as long as we keep lie-ing to the people for the sake of military spending then we run the very great risk of the lies being used to forceably remove the government by the citizens and disband the military.
Power through Peace
Jeffrey7

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Remember the 60 Women and Children
Posted by: perkywa on Oct 17, 2008 10:03 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
killed by Americans in Afghanistan a few months ago? Of course at the time the Pentagon denied it was 60 and their reporter had told them that only 7 "Taliban" were killed in the raid. Well, I was floored to find out the "embedded" reporter that reported "only 7 Taliban were killed" was none other then Col. Oliver North...but hey he wouldn't lie. Oh wait he DID lie, TO CONGRESS, during the Iran/Contra hearings and then laughed about it. But, Hey, that was 21 years ago we can trust Ollie to be honest now right? He wouldn't lie for his buddies at the Pentagon.

FACT IS America breathed its last breath in 1987 when Ollie and His merry gang admitted there was a secret government that was in the drug and war business and that it had plans for Martial Law right here in the "Homeland" and the reaction from the People was a collective YAWN and "honey what time is American Gladiators on?". The American Sheople have been collectively asleep for at least 21 years...I KNEW we were fucked when we didn't rise up and yank the criminals out of the White House and Congress and Lynch them on the Capitol Mall in 1987.

It's just been a slow death spiral since...NOW some of the Sheople are "waking up" but it's 21 years past midnight kids...TOO LATE.

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Very simple rule
Posted by: kegbot1 on Oct 17, 2008 10:22 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
And this is coming from someone who worked on five mainstream daily newspapers, one mainstream AM radio talk show and 10 years in Army recruiting public relations (and is now completely blacklisted from all of it):

If any information is coming from any of the mainstream news sources, including TV, radio or wire services, believe nothing about it unless you can get corroborating evidence from foreign or alternative press sources who have on the scene people reporting.

And even then don't necessarily believe anything unless it passes a logical smell test.

And you can no longer believe your own eyes either - our government now has a myriad of ways to manipulate what you see on any of the visual mediums. I know, I went to the Defense Information School and saw them demonstrate it first-hand. Of course, we were told, we don't do this to spread misinformation to Americans (HA!) but we do have these capabilities to mess with foreign news sources. . .

And the mainstream media, especially at the national level, is honeycombed with either overt in place government agents or people on the unofficial CIA/DOD payroll. Most of them are editors or in management and act as gatekeepers to not only keep stories that conflict with the official government view off the air or out of the newspapers but also to seal off or end the careers of journalists who slip through the cracks and take their jobs seriously. It happens all the time (Ashleigh Banfield - remember her? And that's only the ones you hear about).

So kiddies, welcome to Total Information Awareness state brought to you by the bastard child of George Orwell and Edward Bernays.

Trust no one.

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» Ask Judith Miller's editors Posted by: weathered
» Amen! Posted by: trappedintwilightzone
No-it is the british agents in usa and BBC and fox news which were instigators of war.
Posted by: avatar_singh on Oct 17, 2008 12:18 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"The British Foreign Office's Jeremy Bentham and Bentham's protege Lord Palmerston had conspired to break up and subjugate our United States through a massive barrage of operations, including the often overlooked genocide against the Cherokee nation, and the massive infusion of African slaves into the U.S.A. through Britain's puppet, the Nineteenth-Century Spanish monarchy. The U.S. leaders of the conspiracy which was the Confederacy plot were agents of the same British Foreign Office which thrust the Habsburg tyrant upon democratic Mexico through combined British, Napoleon III's, and Spanish monarchy forces, all as part of the British empire's scheme in using Foreign Office puppets as Napoleon III and the Spanish slave-trading monarchy in the effort to conquer both Mexico and the United State"==from "http://www.larouchepac.com/news/2008/10/17/

6th march,2007.

BBC comment(atleast her washingtons correspondent's comments) on scooter LibBy's gulity verdit on 6th march,2007--"it does not matter to white house as long as iraq war turns out to be all right"!! for BBc illegal occupation of iraq and killing of million civilians does not matter -it will be al r ight for american occupation. This is human rights and democracy ala BBc and british propaganda.
see and watch todays bbc and realize how much bbc and other british propaganda machinary is responsible for bush war crimes.
He also assuredly told that this "white house is quite safe"as wished for by the british ofocurse. during gore-bush florida tussle bbc was advocating gore to leave bush alone as britian was waiting for american missile defence to come her shore soon and so no delay in small matter of who should be presidentof usa be allowed.d-bit belicve it? look at all british propaganda between 1st novembr till 20th novembr of 2000.
it is high time that engish spies in american establishment be eliminated..

it is high time that these english spies in usa are taken care of .

also during and after the gulf war(first iraq war) the british were taking full creidit for insitagating bush 1 to start and persue war agasint iraq. the reason war criminal blair diidnto take full creidt for iraq war 2 was because that went sour(failure has no fathers claming thiers). itis a fact that merciless war done by america has benen perpetauted by the british agents inside america( and not some indepdnet israli agents as claimed-it jsut so happend that only know israli interest happend to coinside with those of english parasites -that is why war on and for behalf of england is being waged by america the world over.
By the way in IN '88 when Dalai lama, at the height of Tibetan disturbances, visited west, the then british prime minister refused to meet Him. Later on with the demise of Russia and usefulness of China gone and with manipulation to keep power in Hong Kong somehow intact, the same british media and government ,like dog, started barking at China. It is interesting that amnesty international selectively targets those very countries( as it did china after cold war) who are out of favour (because they would not be a british stooge) of the british media and govt. This is not surprising as amnesty international is the creation of british govt, and british media. england with the most appalling record of human rights in last 200 years of her evil rule, needed some organisation to keep the others from charging england off her past and current evil practices. In other words it went for aggressive posture in propaganda war so that others can be demoralized and stopped from pointing out the real evil which is england. That is why amnesty international is one armour of the british lies to exploit the rest of the world. Amnesty international must be ignored and an independent human watchdog (which england will simply ignore) created.

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Pentagon is requesting a record-breaking budget
Posted by: fanny666 on Oct 17, 2008 1:01 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Chaoslution
Posted by: Right Wing Psychoholic In Denial on Oct 17, 2008 7:34 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Chaoslution process shuffled and slopped up many disorganized state sapiens lifeforms through the ages that have caused all these problems throghout history.

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