 |
|
U.S.
claimed that it found key documents among the rubble of the Iraqi
intelligence building
|
WASHINGTON,
April 30 (IslamOnline.net & News Agencies) – After the U.S. and
Britain were shown to be providing bogus
"intelligence"
documents to the U.N. Security Council to proved Iraq's weapons of
mass destruction program, the world's media is now being fed a steady
stream of U.S.-found Iraqi "intelligence" documents from the
rubble of Iraq's intelligence headquarters.
The
problem with these documents is that they are being provided by the
U.S. military to some of its "favored" reporters, Wayne
Madsen, an American investigative journalist, wrote Wednesday,
April 30, in the Online Journal.
"The
Telegraph's April 27 Sunday edition reported that its
correspondent in Baghdad, Inigo Gilmore, had been invited into the
intelligence headquarters by U.S. troops and miraculously
"found" amid the rubble a document indicating that Iraq
invited Osama bin Laden to visit Iraq in March 1998," elaborated
Madsen, author of the forthcoming book, "America's Nightmare: The
Presidency of George Bush II."
He
said Gilmore told the BBC that he noticed some "erased"
information on the documents he discovered.
Gilmore
said the erasures were apparently made with a combination of black
marker ink and correction fluid, adding that he scraped away at the
paper with a razor and "miraculously" found the name bin
Laden in three places.
Dismissing
the claims as "spurious," the investigative journalist said:
"If one holds up such a sheet of paper at a 45 degree angle and
under a bright phosphorescent light, the lettering under the ink can
be ‘read’ because the lettering almost appears to be
‘raised’."
"If
a razor blade were used to scrape away the markings, the indelible ink
and the toner ink would be obliterated. The standard procedure for
redacting a classified document is to only use a black indelible
marker to mask classified information," Madsen averred.
Face
Saving
The
American journalist said that the U.S. let favored journalists to walk
freely about some of Iraqi government facilities, such as intelligence
headquarters, to find any "shred" of paper that can be used
in its smear campaign against Iraq but clamped water-tight security on
other facilities, chief among which the oil ministry.
"The
reason for this is obvious. While the intelligence building can be
salted with phony intelligence documents, the Oil Ministry is likely
rife with documents showing the links between Saddam Hussein and Dick
Cheney's old firm, Halliburton.
"The
company signed more than $73 million in contracts with Saddam's
government when Cheney was its chief executive officer. The contracts,
negotiated with two Halliburton subsidiaries—Dresser-Rand and
Ingersoll Dresser Pump Co.—were part of the U.N. oil-for-food
program," said Madsen.
He
added that the reports about Cheney's "links" to Saddam
Hussein's oil industry have been papered over by media sources,
including ABC News, The Washington Post, and The Texas
Observer.
The
American investigative journalist said that America's propaganda
channel, Fox News, featured the "found" document on its lead
story on its Fox Sunday News program.
"Fox
anchorman Tony Snow asked the ethically-tainted Iraqi National
Congress leader Ahmed Chalabi about the document. Chalabi responded,
saying the document provided enough information that Saddam Hussein
was knowledgeable about the September 11 attacks on the United
States," he said.
Smear
Campaign
Madsen
further said that the "found" documents were also aimed at
tarnishing the image of some leading anti-war activists such as George
Galloway, the famed British MP and member of Labor Party.
He
said that the so-called documents "revealed" that
"anti-Bush" Galloway had solicited hundreds of thousands of
dollars from Iraq, which were skimmed from the country's oil-for-food
program.
Madsen
recalled that Galloway immediately smelled the rat of a disinformation
campaign when he responded to The Telegraph about the
"found" document.
"Maybe
it's the
product of the same forgers who forged so many other things in
this whole Iraq picture . . . It would not be the Iraqi regime that
was forging it. It would be people like you [Telegraph journalists]
and the Government whose policies you have supported," Galloway
said.
The
American investigative journalist noted that the "smoking
gun" document on Galloway was further played up on Fox News
Sunday.
"William
Kristol, a leader of the neo-conservatives, and Fox's Brit Hume, a
right-wing ideologue, said the documents implicating Galloway in
accepting money from Saddam Hussein were the 'tip of the
iceberg,'" he said.
Fox
also announced that Galloway may have given classified satellite
imagery to al- Qaeda.
"As
is so often the case, the Fox News panelists provided no evidence for
their slanderous claims," said Madsen.
Octopus
Media
Madsen
also said that such newspapers like The Telegraph and channels
like Fox News are taking advantage of their "octopus"
sources to disseminate their right-wing propaganda "masked as
news."
"To
understand the process, it is important to understand the relationship
between The Daily Telegraph and its parent company, the
Hollinger Corporation, which is owned by British subject and former
Canadian Conrad Black.
"Hollinger,
Like Rupert Murdoch's News Corporation, is a mega-media company that
spins right-wing propaganda around the world through 379 newspapers,
including the Jerusalem Post.
"Tom
Rose, the publisher of the Jerusalem Post, is a major supporter of
Ariel Sharon's Likud Party and is a favorite guest on the right-wing
talk shows on Clear Channel radio stations, including that of G.
Gordon Liddy of Watergate infamy.
"Clear
Channel, headquartered in Dallas, is owned by close Bush supporters
and one-time business partners. To add to the spider's web, one of
Rose's Jerusalem Post directors is Richard Perle, a member of Donald
Rumsfeld's advisory board," said Madsen.
"There
is no right of rebuttal for the accused. They are guilty as charged by
a whipped up public that gets its information from the telescreens of
the corporate media," he added.