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Propaganda Still Sells Wars

February 29th 2008 07:01
Propaganda is a useful tool of the government to sell wars. As the character O’Brien declared in George Orwell’s novel 1984, “He who controls the present, controls the past.” Good ole Henry Kissinger famously said, “Perception of reality is sometimes more important than reality itself.”

Last summer the Bush administration formed a group named Freedom’s Watch (FW) to propagate support for the on-going occupation of Iraq. Prominent neo-conservatives from the Republican Jewish Coalition (RJC) created the group. On August 22, 2007 FW released a statement announcing it will “spend approximately $15 million on radio and television ads…aimed at ensuring Congress continues to fully fund the troops with the ultimate goal of victory in the War on Terror.”


FW President Bradely Blakeman said, “The mission of Freedom’s Watch is to ensure a strong national defense and a powerful effort to confront and defeat global terror, especially in Iraq.” He went on to say, “Those who want to quit while victory is possible have dominated the public debate about terror and Iraq since the 2004 election. Freedom’s Watch is going to change that.”

Former White House press secretary and FW cofounder, Ari Fleischer describes FW as “Ideologically inspired by much of Ronald Reagan's thinking: peace through strength, protect and defend America, and prosperity through free enterprise.”

The list of FW’s important members reads almost as a ‘who’s who’ of influential neo-conservatives. The inner sanctums of the group are people close to Vice-President Dick Cheney or past Bush administration employees. Blakeman served as President George W. Bush’s former deputy assistant. He joined the Gordon C. James Public Relations firm in May 2006 as a senior advisor in its Washington, D.C. office. According to the firm’s press release, Blakeman “served as… senior coordinator for logistics for the Bush-Cheney recount in Florida, and senior lead advance representative for the Bush-Cheney 2000 election.”

The August 22 press release listed among its “supporters”: Anthony Gioia, Kevin Moley, Mel Sembler, and Howard Leach. Gioia, Moley, Sembler, and Leach served as ambassadors for Bush. Moley also served various positions in former President George H.W. Bush’s administration, including Vice Chairman of the President’s Council on Management Improvement. Sembler’s website states that he is a “financial supporter of the Bush clan.”

White House Iraq Group

Freedom’s Watch is not the first propaganda group the Bush administration has created. The White House Iraq Group (WHIG), formed in August 2002 by White House Chief of Staff Andrew Card, served to bolster support for invading Iraq. The Constitution in Crisis, a report on the Bush administration by Rep. John Conyers, characterized WHIG as “an apparent effort to bolster public support for war with Iraq.”

The Washington Post quoted a senior official who participated in WHIG in an August 2003 article as saying it was “an internal working group, like many formed for priority issues, to make sure each part of the White House was fulfilling its responsibilities.”

A month after being formed, the Bush administration began a media ‘blitzkrieg’ to support invading Iraq. During the month of September Bush mentioned Iraq frequently in speeches, characterizing Saddam Hussein’s regime as a “true threat to world peace” and capable of “far greater horrors” than the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001. In October 2002 Congress authorized the use of military force against Iraq.

Reagan’s Office of Public Diplomacy

In 1983 President Ronald Reagan appointed Otto Juan Reich to be the director of the Office of Public Diplomacy for Latin America and the Caribbean (OPD). The Office of Public Diplomacy existed until 1986. Author and activist Noam Chomsky described the Reagan administration’s purpose for establishing the OPD as a means “to manufacture consent for its murderous policies in Central America,” in his book Hegemony or Survival.

A number of governmental reports reveal the activities of the OPD during its three-year tenure. A letter written on September 30, 1987 by then Comptroller-General of the U.S. found the OPD’s activities to be “prohibited, covert propaganda activities… beyond the range of acceptable agency public information activities.” The same letter said the OPD violated “a restriction on the State Department’s annual appropriations prohibiting the use of federal funds for publicity or propaganda purposes not authorized by Congress.”

The November 1987 bipartisan report of the Congressional Iran-Contra committees found that “[i]n fact, ‘public diplomacy’ turned out to mean public relations-lobbying, all at taxpayers’ expense.”

The House Foreign Affairs Committee wrote a report on September 7, 1988 which summarized investigations into the OPD. The report stated that “senior CIA officials …military intelligence and psychological operations specialists from the Department of Defense, were deeply involved in establishing and participating in a domestic political and propaganda operation.” Those connected with the OPD “raised and spent funds for the purpose of influencing Congressional votes and U.S. domestic news media,” according to the report. The report concluded that “many of the key individuals involved were never questioned or interviewed by the Iran/Contra Committees.”

Despite Elliot Abrams 1991 indictment for his role in the Iran-Contra scandal, President Bush appointed him to be the Deputy Assistant to the President and Deputy National Security Advisor for Global Democracy Strategy. Bush’s father, President George H.W. Bush, pardoned Abrams on Christmas night 1992.

President George H.W. Bush’s Desert Storm Propaganda

During the fall 1990 run-up to the 1991 invasion of Kuwait to oust Iraqi forces, known as Desert Storm, the U.S. main stream media reported a story by a 15-year old Kuwaiti girl know as Nayirah. She testified before Congress and described how she saw Iraqi troops storm the Kuwaiti hospital where she worked as a volunteer, and steal incubators leaving 312 babies “on the cold floor to die.” Seven senators referred to the incubator story during the debate to authorize the use of force. President George H.W. Bush mentioned the story five times, characterizing the supposed incident as “ghastly atrocities” and “Hitler revisited.”

Several weeks before the U.S. dropped bombs on Iraqi forces in January 1991, a few reporters began to question the validity of the incubator story. It later turned out that Nayirah was the daughter of the Kuwaiti ambassador to the U.S. and never volunteered in the Kuwaiti hospital she mentioned in her story. The famous public relations firm, Hill and Knowlton coached her and others in a $10 million contract with the Kuwaitis to sell Desert Storm to the American people and Congress.

President George H.W. Bush’s national security advisor, Brent Scowcroft said the incubator story was “useful in mobilizing public opinion” although they “didn’t know it wasn’t true at the time.” Scowcroft served as Bush’s Chairman of the President’s Foreign Intelligence Advisory Board from 2001 to 2005.

President Lyndon B. Johnson’s Propaganda Groups

The Vietnam War was not popular, to say the least. In order to sell the war to the American public, by 1967 President Lyndon B. Johnson created two groups: the White House Information Group and Citizens Committee for Peace with Freedom in Vietnam. The two groups worked “to consolidate favorable news coverage,” according to historian David Brinkley.

The White House Information Group consisted of White House staff members who provided “more effective and better coordinated information to those seeking to defend U.S. policy,” as William Conrad Gibbons stated in his book The U.S. Government and the Vietnam War. The role of the group was to “gather information” and work with “information officers at the State and Defense Departments to coordinate and improve the flow of information.” The Citizens Committee was “a citizens’ organization to campaign for the administration’s policy.”

WWI’s Committee on Public Information

While Europe was embroiled in World War One, President Woodrow Wilson asked journalist George Creel to head up the Committee on Public Information (CPI) in 1971, commonly referred to as the Creel Commission. The purpose of the CPI was to market the war to the American people who were reluctant to get involved, or in the words of historian Howard Zinn, “It was a massive effort to excite a reluctant public.”

In order to market the war, the CPI enlisted the help of the entertainment and advertising industries. The CPI developed and trained a nationwide group of public speakers dubbed the “Four-Minute Men” who went into movie theaters or other public places and delivered four minute speeches urging their listeners to support the war effort by donating to the Red Cross, joining the military, or buying Liberty Bonds. The Four-Minute Men delivered 7,555,190 speeches in 1917 and 1918, according to the CPI’s records.

The CPI produced a multi-media marketing blitz. Filmmakers were recruited to produce pro-war films. Pamphlets called “Red, White and Blue Books” were published which contained essays in support of the war. Posters were created which urged people to support the war effort by buying Liberty Bonds or enlisting in the military. The most famous poster featured Uncle Sam sternly pointing his finger, with caption, “I Want You.” CPI issued over 6,000 press releases and 200,000 “lantern slide” shows.” Boy Scouts delivered copies of Wilson’s speeches door-to-door. Churches, schools, and other organizations were used to disseminate CPI brochures and other literature.

In Creel’s 1920 account of the CPI, titled How We Advertised America, he wrote that the “war was not fought in France alone…It was the fight for the minds of men, for the conquest of their convictions.” He noted that “there was no part of the great war machinery that we did not touch, no medium of appeal that we did not employ.”

“It was in recognition of public opinion as a major force that the Great War differed most essentially from all previous conflicts,” Creel wrote in a 1922 essay. Since then U.S. presidents have made use of the weapon called the mainstream media to manipulate public opinion. In the words of Noam Chomsky, presidents like to “manufacture consent” for war.
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Comments
3 Comments. [ Add A Comment ]

Comment by James Rickard

February 29th 2008 23:56
It's like Fonzie said, "Bull makes the world go round."

Comment by The wonderful Peter Yang

March 1st 2008 00:20
Propaganda not only sell war. Propaganda is basically the war it self. I mean the success and failure of the miliatary propaganda can directly determine the out come of the war. (Win or loose)

For example, One of the main reasons the Americans lost the Vitnam war, wasn't because they were getting their ass kick, but because their propaganda department was doing a shitty job. They did very poor information control, amount the American media and let the American public see all the dead bodies on TV.

Comment by Gina-Marie Cheeseman

March 1st 2008 05:22
That's a great point!

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