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How Media helps U.S. escalate war in Pakistan
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By Damian Lataan
The History of the 21st Century
Tuesday, May 11, 2010
Much Western media attention has been devoted to the Saturday, 1 May, failed bombing attempt in New York’s Times Square.
As I wrote recently,
had the bomb been set up by some white Christian American-born
American the story by now would be just a sheet of newspaper blowing
around in the wind up the side streets of New York. But because it was
apparently set up by a Muslim Pakistani-American, the story has been
used by the American anti-Islam propaganda machine to point the finger
of blame to the Pakistan Taliban.
At first the US administration
didn’t quite grasp the significant propaganda opportunity presented to
them. At the time of the bomb scare the US top brass, including General David Petraeus,
and the media was touting the Pakistani-American suspect as a wannabe
terrorist and ‘lone wolf’ operator. It was also reported that the Pakistan Taliban has specifically denied any part in the failed bombing attempt.
Today, however, the US is pushing the line that the attempted bombing was a concerted and highly organised effort by the Pakistan Taliban to attack America. And, just to top it off, Bill Roggio, a neocon writer at the Weekly Standard is claiming that the Pakistan Taliban personally emailed him
to tell him that they were responsible for the training of the suspect
and setting up of the bombing attempt. Roggio makes no attempt
whatsoever to explain why on earth the Pakistan Taliban, after having
denied all knowledge of the bombing, would want to email, of all
people, a nondescript neoconservative writer at the Weekly Standard to tell him that they were responsible.
The
Murdoch press is also doing its bit to propagate the myth of a Pakistan
Taliban connection to the bombing attempt by using the story to spin
the notion of the Pakistan Taliban being an entity in its own right
distinct from the Afghanistan Taliban. Sally Neighbour of Murdoch’s The Australian newspaper, Australia’s only nation-wide newspaper, tells readers:
While
policy-makers in the US and Australia have adopted the buzzword
"Af-Pak" to conflate the conflicts ravaging those countries, it is
clear the insurgencies in Afghanistan and Pakistan, while inextricably
bound together, must be treated as distinct.
This is
something the US and Australia have been trying to do for at least 18
months now. It was then that an Australian First Assistant Secretary
for International Policy told me that ‘Pakistan is going to become a
big problem that the allies will need to deal with sometime’. All they
need is an excuse to widen their war to include Pakistan. The bombing
attempt in Times Square clearly is now being used as that excuse.
For
Western governments it’s very easy to say, ‘intelligence agencies now
have firm evidence…’ but then tells us that, for security reasons, they
can’t actually show us the evidence; we’re simply expected to just take
their word for it. And, of course, most people will go along with what
the government tells them.
The US is paranoid that the Pakistan
government will topple, together with its arsenal of nuclear weapons,
into the hands of Islamic fundamentalists with close ties to the
Taliban. The problem is American
public opinion does not support any further American adventurism and,
indeed, has lost interest in the war in Central Asia. As a result
of this disinterest the administration is desperately trying to spin
everything it can in order to renew public support for continued war in
Afghanistan and expanded war in Pakistan. Hillary Clinton has even tried to say that Pakistani officials know where Osama bin Laden and Afghanistan Taliban leader Mullah Omar is.
For
the Americans, securing Pakistan’s nuclear weapons arsenal is
essential. However, they need to tread very carefully. The Taliban,
especially in the north, enjoy the support generally of the Pakistan
people; particularly when it comes to fighting Americans. US drone
strikes against Pakistanis that have killed civilians have served only
to alienate the Pakistani people further and has put pressure on the
Pakistan government. American money and support for the Pakistan government is now really all that is keeping the government in power and on side with the US.
"The US is anxious to get more boots on the ground in Pakistan though clearly Pakistan is not a country that could be invaded (even if the US had the capacity or the inclination to do so). The alternative is to get the Pakistan government to invite much larger numbers of ‘trainers’ and ‘advisors’ into the country. Already there are large numbers of private contractors there who are supposed to be there to protect those few advisors that are already there and other US diplomats and officials that are based in Pakistan."
The US needs to consolidate its position in Pakistan in order to
ensure that Pakistan’s nuclear arsenal remains secure and that a
US-friendly government remains in power.
An opportunity that arises
that may advance opportunities for the US administration to move
forward with these aims and gain support from a disinterested and
war-weary American public will be eagerly seized upon – and a Pakistan
Taliban-inspired bomb in Times Square is just the sort of 'event' that
the administration could hope for to advance their plans.
History of the 21st Century
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