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The facts activists need to know October 25, 2002 | Page 5 WHEN THE writer I.F. Stone used to speak to journalism students, he said that the most important thing to know about being a reporter could be summed up in two words: "Governments lie." Particularly when they want to sell a war. The U.S. government has been at war with Iraq for more than a decade, and the lies have been piling up ever since. But Washington's war makers have kicked into high gear over the past few months--as George W. Bush and Co. try to sell us on another invasion of Iraq. Here, Socialist Worker's ANTHONY ARNOVE, editor of the South End Press book Iraq Under Siege--newly republished in an updated edition--exposes a decade's worth of U.S. lies and propaganda. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - MYTH FACT Iraq also lacks any long-range missiles. Even the CIA reports that "Iraq is unlikely to test before 2015 any [intercontinental ballistic missiles] that would threaten the United States, even if United Nations (UN) prohibitions were eliminated or significantly reduced in the next few years." The threat of Iraq's weapons program is being wildly exaggerated by politicians and the media to scare people into supporting a new war on Iraq. MYTH FACT MYTH FACT For example, the dossier says that Iraq "could" threaten the Persian Gulf region "if" it acquires the missiles it would need--which "might" happen within five years. Former UN weapons inspector Scott Ritter, who led dozens of teams through Iraq between 1991 to 1998, says that the UN destroyed between 90 and 95 percent of Iraq's weapons of mass destruction and its ability to manufacture them. Even more stunning is the hypocrisy of U.S. and British claims about Iraq's chemical and biological weapons. The reason that Washington knows so much about Saddam Hussein's germ weapons programs before the Gulf War is that Washington supplied the materials--"a veritable witch's brew," according to author William Blum, citing a 1994 Senate report. MYTH FACT MYTH FACT The Times obtained commercial Soviet satellite images of the area--and found nothing. "It was a pretty serious fib," says Jean Heller, the reporter who broke the story. "That [buildup] was the whole justification for Bush sending troops in there, and it just didn't exist," Heller told the Christian Science Monitor. MYTH FACT When the Senate voted to give support George Bush Sr.'s war--by a margin of only five votes--seven senators recounted Nayirah's story in justifying their "yes" vote. The president himself repeated the story several times. There's just one problem: It wasn't true. Nayirah's false testimony was part of a $10 million Kuwait government propaganda campaign managed by the public relations firm Hill and Knowlton. Rather than working as a volunteer at a hospital, Nayirah was actually the daughter of the Kuwaiti ambassador to Washington. "We didn't know it wasn't true at the time," claims Brent Scowcroft, Bush's national security adviser. But, he admitted, "it was useful in mobilizing public opinion." MYTH FACT "U.S. bombing of water treatment plants, difficulties importing purification chemicals like chlorine (which can be used for weapons), and shortages of medicines [have] led to a more than doubling of infant mortality, according to the UN Food and Agriculture Organization," Kristof acknowledged. Iraqis know that another invasion will lead to more civilian casualties. And they know that for years, Washington backed Saddam Hussein, despite his brutality--because he was a "friend." The U.S. even gave its permission for Saddam's forces to suppress a rebellion at the end of the Gulf War, maintaining him in power. MYTH FACT Some democracy. The White House's talk about controlling Iraq's oil fields reveals what this war is really about. The rhetoric about weapons, democracy and human rights is a sham--just as it was in 1991. But if we expose these lies, we can mobilize an opposition to Bush's war--and link the fight against the war on Iraq to the fight for real democracy, at home and in the Middle East.
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