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BBC at
War
Lord
Hutton Blesses Blair's Attack on BBC's Investigation of Iraq War Claims
by
Greg Palast
He
did not say, "hello," or even his name, just left a one-word
message: "Whitewash."
It came from an embattled journalist whispering from inside the bowels
of a television and radio station under siege, on a small island off the
coast of Ireland: from BBC London.
And another call, from a colleague at the Guardian: "The future of
British journalism is very bleak."
However, the future for fake and farcical war propaganda is quite bright
indeed. Today, Lord Hutton issued his report that followed an inquiry
revealing the Blair government's manipulation of intelligence to claim
that Saddam Hussein had weapons of mass murder threatening imminent
attack on London.
Based on the Blair government's claim, headlines pumped the war
hysteria: SADDAM COULD HAVE NUCLEAR BOMB IN YEAR, screeched the London
Times. BRITS 45 MINS FROM DOOM, shrieked the Sun newspaper.
Given these facts only a sissy pacifist, a lunatic or a Saddam fellow
traveler would fail to see that Prime Minister "Winston" Blair
had no choice but to re-conquer it's former Mesopotamian colony.
But these headlines were, in fact, false, and deadly so. Unlike
America's press puppies, BBC reporters thought it their duty to check
out these life or death claims. Reporters Andrew Gilligan and Susan
Watts contacted a crucial source, Britain's and the United Nation's top
weapons inspector. He told reporter Watts that the Weapons of Mass
Destruction claims by Blair and our own President Bush were, "all
spin." Gilligan went further, reporting that this spin, this
"sexed up" version of intelligence, was the result of
interventions by Blair's PR henchman, Alistair Campbell.
Whatever reading of the source's statements, it was clear that
intelligence experts had deep misgivings about the strength of the
evidence for war.
The source? Dr. David Kelly. To save itself after the reports by
Gilligan and Watts, the government, including the Prime Minister
himself, went on an internal crusade to out the name of its own
intelligence operative so it could then discredit the news items.
Publishing the name of an intelligence advisor is serious stuff. In the
USA, a special criminal prosecutor is now scouring the White House to
find the person who publicly named a CIA agent. If found, the Bushite
leaker faces jail time.
Blair's government was not so crude as to give out Dr. Kelly's name.
Rather, they hit on a subterfuge of dropping clues then allowing
reporters to play '20 questions' - if Kelly's name were guessed, they'd
confirm it. Only the thickest reporters (I name none here) failed after
more than a couple tries.
Dr. Kelly, who had been proposed for knighthood was named, harangued and
his career destroyed by the outing. He then took his own life.
But today is not a day of mourning at 10 Downing Street, rather a day of
self-congratulations.
There were no weapons of mass destruction, no nuclear warheads just
short of completion, no "45 minutes to doom" bombs auguring a
new London blitz. The exile group which supplied this raw claim now
calls the 45 minute story, "a crock of shit."
Yet Blair's minions are proclaiming their vindication.
This is not just a story about what is happening "over there"
in the United Kingdom. This we must remember: David Kelly was not only
advisor to the British but to the UN and, by extension, the expert for
George W. Bush. Our commander-in-chief leaped to adopt the Boogey Man
WMD stories from the Blair government when our own CIA was reticent.
So M'Lord Hutton has killed the messenger: the BBC. Should the reporter
Gilligan have used more cautious terms? Some criticism is fair. But the
extraordinary import of his and Watts' story is forgotten: our two
governments bent the information then hunted down the questioners.
And now the second invasion of the Iraq war proceeds: the conquest of
the British Broadcasting Corporation. Until now, this quasi-governmental
outlet has refused to play Izvestia to any prime minister, Labour or
Tory.
As of today, the independence of the most independent major network on
this planet is under attack. Blair's government is "cleared"
and now arrogantly sport their kill, the head of Gavyn Davies, BBC's
chief, who resigned today.
"The bleak future for British journalism" portends darkness
for journalists everywhere - the threat to the last great open platform
for hard investigative reporting. And frankly, it's a worrisome day for
me. I'm not a disinterested by-stander. My most important
investigations, all but banned from US airwaves, were developed and
broadcast by BBC Newsnight, reporter Watts' program.
Will an iron curtain descend on the news? Before dawn today, I was
reading Churchill's words to the French command in the hours before as
the Panzers breached the defenses of Paris. Churchill told those
preparing to surrender, "Whatever you may do, we shall fight on
forever and ever and ever." This may yet be British journalism's
Finest Hour.
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