

'Ah,
but there is the difference. We knew it was propaganda,' replied Sacha.
That is the difference. Russian propaganda was so obvious that most Russians
were able to ignore it. They took it for granted that the government operated
in its own interests and any message coming from it was probably slanted - and
they discounted it. 
In the West
the calculated manipulation of public opinion to serve political and
ideological interests is much more covert and therefore much more effective.
Its greatest triumph is that we generally don't notice it - or laugh
at the notion it even exists. We watch the democratic process taking
place - heated debates in which we feel we could have a voice - and
think that, because we have 'free' media, it would be hard for the
Government to get away with anything very devious without someone calling
them on it.
It takes something
as dramatic as the invasion of Iraq to make us look a bit more closely
and ask: 'How did we get here?' How exactly did it come about that,
in a world of Aids, global warming, 30-plus active wars, several
famines, cloning, genetic engineering, and two billion people in
poverty, practically the only thing we all talked about for a year
was Iraq and Saddam Hussein? Was it really that big a problem? Or
were we somehow manipulated into believing the Iraq issue was important
and had to be fixed right now - even though a few months before few
had mentioned it, and nothing had changed in the interim.
In the wake of
the events of 11 September 2001, it now seems clear that the shock
of the attacks was exploited in America. According to Sheldon Rampton
and John Stauber in their new book Weapons of Mass Deception , it
was used to engineer a state of emergency that would justify an invasion
of Iraq. Rampton and Stauber expose how news was fabricated and made
to seem real. But they also demonstrate how a coalition of the willing
- far-Right officials, neo-con think-tanks, insanely pugilistic media
commentators and of course well-paid PR companies - worked together
to pull off a sensational piece of intellectual dishonesty. Theirs
is a study of modern propaganda.
What occurs to me in reading their book is that the new American approach to
social control is so much more sophisticated and pervasive that it really deserves
a new name. It isn't just propaganda any more, it's 'prop-agenda '. It's not
so much the control of what we think, but the control of what we think about.
When our governments want to sell us a course of action, they do it by making
sure it's the only thing on the agenda, the only thing everyone's talking about.
And they pre-load the ensuing discussion with highly selected images, devious
and prejudicial language, dubious linkages, weak or false 'intelligence' and
selected 'leaks'. (What else can the spat between the BBC and Alastair Campbell
be but a prime example of this?)
With
the ground thus prepared, governments are happy if you then 'use the
democratic process' to agree or disagree - for, after all, their intention
is to mobilize enough headlines and conversation to make the whole thing
seem real and urgent. The more emotional the debate, the better. Emotion
creates reality, reality demands action.
An example of this process is one highlighted by Rampton and Stauber which,
more than any other, consolidated public and congressional approval for the
1991 Gulf war. We recall the horrifying stories, incessantly repeated, of babies
in Kuwaiti hospitals ripped out of their incubators and left to die while the
Iraqis shipped the incubators back to Baghdad - 312 babies, we were told.
The story
was brought to public attention by Nayirah, a 15-year-old 'nurse' who,
it turned out later, was the daughter of the Kuwaiti ambassador to the
US and a member of the Kuwaiti royal family. Nayirah had been tutored
and rehearsed by the Hill & Knowlton PR agency (which in turn received
$14 million from the American government for their work in promoting
the war). Her story was entirely discredited within weeks but by then
its purpose had been served: it had created an outraged and emotional
mindset within America which overwhelmed rational discussion.
As we are seeing now, the most recent Gulf war entailed many similar deceits:
false linkages made between Saddam, al-Qaeda and 9/11, stories of ready-to-launch
weapons that didn't exist, of nuclear programs never embarked upon. As Rampton
and Stauber show, many of these allegations were discredited as they were being
made, not least by this newspaper, but nevertheless were retold.
Throughout
all this, the hired-gun PR companies were busy, preconditioning the emotional
landscape. Their marketing talents were particularly useful in the large-scale
manipulation of language that the campaign entailed. The Bushites realized,
as all ideologues do, that words create realities, and that the right words
can over whelm any chance of balanced discussion. Guided by the overtly
imperial vision of the Project for a New American Century (whose members
now form the core of the American administration), the PR companies helped
finesse the language to create an atmosphere of simmering panic where American
imperialism would come to seem not only acceptable but right, obvious,
inevitable and even somehow kind.
Aside from the incessant 'weapons of mass destruction', there were 'regime change'
(military invasion), 'pre-emptive defense' (attacking a country that is not attacking
you), 'critical regions' (countries we want to control), the 'axis of evil' (countries
we want to attack), 'shock and awe' (massive obliteration) and 'the war on terror'
(a hold-all excuse for projecting American military force anywhere).
Meanwhile, US federal employees and military personnel were told to refer to
the invasion as 'a war of liberation' and to the Iraqi paramilitaries as 'death
squads', while the reliably sycophantic American TV networks spoke of 'Operation
Iraqi Freedom' - just as the Pentagon asked them to - thus consolidating the
supposition that Iraqi freedom was the point of the war. Anybody questioning
the invasion was 'soft on terror' (liberal) or, in the case of the UN, 'in danger
of losing its relevance'.
When
I was young, an eccentric uncle decided to teach me how to lie. Not, he
explained, because he wanted me to lie, but because he thought I should
know how it's done so I would recognize when I was being lied to. I hope
writers such as Rampton and Stauber and others may have the same effect
and help to emasculate the culture of spin and dissembling that is overtaking
our political establishments.
© Brian Eno 2003
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