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Oct-31-2011 16:20TweetFollow @OregonNews 'Middle East Propaganda 101' and the NY Times' Thom ShankerSalem-News.comShanker has been an embedded journalist both with the US military and with various think tanks whose policies he is reporting on.
(WASHINGTON D.C) - There is an excellent article today in Salon, "Middle East propaganda 101," (see below) deconstructing a New York Times story. However, the Salon article leaves out the the name of the main reporter on the article, New York Times Pentagon correspondent Thom Shanker, and relevant information about who he is. Shanker has been an embedded journalist both with the US military and, even less widely known, with various think tanks whose policies he is reporting on. Shanker is a member of the Council on Foreign Relations and, until recently, of the Center for New American Security (CNAS), an institution created by what analyst Justin Raimondo terms "left neocons" that has worked to "build the case for widening the 'war on terrorism' to include not only Afghanistan but also Pakistan." CNAS has ties with the Republican neocons as well; itsinvitation-only launch included Philip Zelikow and Peter Feaver of the National Security Council. While neoconservatives and the Project of a New Amerian Century (PNAC) – which closed down in 2006 – successfully pushed war on Iraq, CNAS – which was formed in 2007 – often has its sites on Iran. Among its board members and senior fellows are Richard L. Armitage, a signer of the PNAC letter to Presidient Clinton calling for war on Iraq, and Robert D. Kaplan, a neoconservative whose bio emphasizes his diverse consultant positions to various branches of the US Millitary, but leaves out that the fact that, while born in the US, he became an Israeli citizen several decades ago and that his only military service was in the Israeli military. Shanker wrote his book, CounterStrike, while a writer in residence at CNAS.
When it comes to American propaganda about the Middle East, this New York Times article — detailing U.S. plans to bolster its influence in the region after it “withdraws” from Iraq — is a masterpiece. Here’s the crux of the new American strategy and its ostensible rationale:
The U.S. has Iran completely encircled. It has over 100,000 troops in the nation on Iran’s eastern border (Afghanistan, where, just incidentally, the U.S. continued through this year to turn over detainees to a prison notorious for torture) and has occupied the nation on Iran’s western border (Iraq) for eight years, and will continue to maintain a “small army” of private contractors and CIA officials after it “withdraws.” The U.S. continuously flies drone aircraft over and drops bombs on the nation on Iran’s southeastern border (Pakistan). Its NATO ally (Turkey) is situated on Iran’s northwestern border. The U.S. hastroops stationed in multiple countries just a few hundred miles across the Persian Gulf from Iran, virtually all of which are client states. The U.S. has its Fifth Fleet stationed in a country less than 500 miles from Iran (Bahrain)containing “US warships and contingents of U.S. Marines.” And the U.S. routinely arms Iran’s two most virulent rivals (Israel and Saudi Arabia) with sophisticated weaponry. But, New York Times readers were told today, the U.S. must increase its military presence still further in that region because . . . it is Iran (which has no military bases in countries bordering the U.S. or fleets stationed off its coast) that is “belligerent” and poses a “threat” (after all, they just dispatched a failed Texan used car salesman who constantly loses his own keys and can’t pay his bills to hire teams of Mexican drug cartel gunmen to attack a Saudi ambassador on American soil!). But the best proclamation in this article comes from the Secretary of State in explaining why this increased American presence is so very needed and so very noble:
The U.S. will remain in that region to protect and defend the region’s “pathway to democracy” — something it will achieve by further strengthening its “cooperative military relationships” with the tyrannical regimes in Bahrain, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait and Oman (White House, October 12: “the President and the King reaffirmed the strong partnership between the United States and Saudi Arabia”). But, explained Secretary Clinton, the ultimate U.S. goal in increasing its military presence in the region is to prevent “outside interference” in the region — just as U.S. officials spent the last decade decrying “outside interference” in Iraq and Afghanistan while simultaneously invading and occupying those nations. The only conceivable assumption which can produce this sort of pronouncement is that this region is the property of the U.S., and when it increases its military presence there, that is akin to an owner fencing in his yard to prevent trespassing. That belief — and only it — is why American officials can announce with a straight face: we’re interfering further in this region in order to prevent “outside interference” in this region (from nations that are actually in that region). I don’t expect Hillary Clinton to point any of that out, but perhaps theNew York Times might, rather than just publishing these laughable official decrees without comment. * * * * * As I noted yesterday, I’ll be on the West Coast this week, and there are two events I want to highlight: one in San Francisco, on November 2 at 6:00 p.m., that is free and open to the public, where I’ll be discussing my new bookwithSalon Founder and CEO David Talbot (event information is here), and a just finalized event in Los Angeles, the morning of November 2, at UCLA School of Law (event information here). It’s been several years since I was at an event in San Francisco and I really think the November 2 night event will be worth attending, so I hope to see as many readers in the Bay Area as possible there. # [There is less information available on Shanker's co-author, Steven Lee Myers, but some bloggers – here and here – have noted bias. Source: Council for the National Interest
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Guy Montag November 1, 2011 5:53 am (Pacific time)
Back in May 2009, Thom Shanker wrote a NYT whitewash that supposedly exonerated Gen. Stanley McChrystal's central role in the Army's cover-up of Pat Tillman's 2004 friendly fire death. Shortly afterwards, the Senate confirmed McChrystal's promotion. That same day, the General gave Shanker and Schmitt a personal tour of his new Penatagon HQ. Isn't access grand? Note: Details in the post, Lies Borne Out by Facts, If Not the Truth, at the feralfirefighter blog.
Guy Montag November 1, 2011 5:42 am (Pacific time)
In their book "Counterstrike", Thom Shanker and Eric Schmitt praised Gen. Stanley McChrystal’s counterterrorism legacy: “Across the military and intelligence community, General McChrystal was credited with commanding missions that captured and killed more of America’s adversaries than any other living officer. But his legacy in shifting the culture of handling intelligence is just as important.” However, the authors didn’t dwell on the role of torture in the secret campaign against Al Qaeda. They only briefly allude to its use (e.g. Camp Nama) by JSOC TF 121 special forces under Gen. McChrystal’s command. Gen. McChrystal’s counterterrorism legacy was also tarnished by his central role (e.g. he supervised the writing of Pat Tillman’s false Silver Star citation with altered witness statements, his legal officers hid info. from the medical examiner) in the government's cover-up of Pat Tillman’s 2004 friendly-fire death in Afghanistan. On May 25th 2009, the New York Times published Thom Shanker’s whitewash, “Nomination of U.S. Afghan Commander Revives Questions on Tillman Case,” that supposedly “exonerated” General McChrystal of all wrong-doing in the Tillman case. However, Shanker ignored clear evidence that McChrystal was actually at the center of the Army’s cover-up of Pat Tillman's friendly-fire death. During the week before Gen. McChrystal's June 2, 2009 Senate confirmation hearing, I corresponded several times with Shanker and sent him material which described how the Democratic Congress whitewashed McChrystal’s key role in the cover-up. However, Shanker's subsequent articles continued to parrot the government's official line (interestingly, the NYT's editors disappeared his June 2nd article from their website within a few hours after it was published). On June 10, 2009, the Senate confirmed Gen. McChrystal’s promotion. McChrystal was handed his fourth star, while the Tillman family were left with a tarnished Silver Star. Note: If you're interested in more details, see, "Lies Borne Out by Facts, If Not the Truth," the abridged version in "The [Untold] Tillman Story", “The Emperor’s General,” or the Introduction to “Jon Krakauer’s Credibility Problem” posted at the feralfirefighter blog. Afterwards, Thom Shanker enjoyed exceptionally good “access” to General McChrystal. For example, Shanker wrote: “On the day [June 10, 2009] in the summer of 2009 that a Senate vote confirmed General McChrystal and elevated him to his new command and he deployed to Afghanistan, he took two reporters from the New York Times [Shanker and Schmitt] on a tour of his new “rear headquarters” in a sealed corridor of the Pentagon basement …” And, it appears that Shanker’s whitewash opened doors for him at the Washington think tank Center for a New American Security (CNAS): “CNAS in Washington allowed each of us to spend 90 days [Fall 2009] as a “writer in residence” to work on Counterstrike …” It’s worth noting that CNAS spearheaded the push for the 2009 Afghan War ”surge” and worked closely with Gen. David Petreaus and Gen. Stanley McChrystal. Isn't "access" grand? As Shanker wrote, "A book like this simply is not possible without the cooperation and trust of a large number of government officials and military officers." I'm sure the Shanker’s NYT’s whitewash of McChrystal helped to gain the "trust" of McChrystal and others. But I didn’t come away from my personal experience with Thom Shanker with much confidence in our “watchdog” media.
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