Loud noises from Washington about a US pull-out from Iraq are a poor
disguise for America’s determination to keep waging war. And the same
sort of spin is at work here in Britain.
Edward Bernays, the American nephew of Sigmund Freud, is said to have
invented modern propaganda. During the First World War, he was one of a
group of influential liberals who mounted a secret government campaign
to persuade reluctant Americans to send an army to the bloodbath in
Europe. In his book Propaganda, published in 1928, Bernays wrote that
the "intelligent manipulation of the organised habits and opinions of
the masses is an important element in democratic society", and that the
manipulators "constitute an invisible government which is the true
ruling power in our country". Instead of propaganda, he coined the
euphemism "public relations".
The American tobacco industry hired
Bernays to convince women that they should smoke in public. By
associating smoking with women's liberation, he made cigarettes
"torches of freedom". In 1954, he conjured a communist menace in
Guatemala as an excuse for overthrowing the democratically elected
government, whose social reforms were threatening the United Fruit
Company's monopoly of the banana trade. He called it a "liberation".
Bernays
was no rabid right-winger. He was an elitist liberal who believed that
"engineering public consent" was for the greater good. This could be
achieved by the creation of "false realities" which then became "news
events". Here are examples of how it is done these days.
False reality
The last US combat troops have left Iraq "as promised, on schedule",
according to President Barack Obama. The TV news has been filled with
cinematic images of the "last US soldiers", silhouetted against the dawn
light, crossing the border into Kuwait.
Fact
They have not left. At least 50,000 troops will continue to operate from
94 bases. American air assaults are unchanged, as are special forces'
assassinations. The number of "military contractors" is 100,000 and
rising. Most Iraqi oil is now under direct foreign control.
False reality
BBC presenters have described the departing US troops as a "sort of
victorious army" that has achieved "a remarkable change in [Iraq's]
fortunes". Their commander, General David Petraeus, is a "celebrity",
"charming", "savvy" and "remarkable".
Fact There
is no victory of any sort. There is a catastrophic disaster, and
attempts to present it as otherwise are a model of Bernays's campaign to
"rebrand" the slaughter of the First World War as "necessary" and
"noble". In 1980, Ronald Reagan, running for president, rebranded the
invasion of Vietnam, in which up to three million people died, as a
"noble cause", a theme taken up enthusiastically by Hollywood. Today's
Iraq war movies have a similar purging theme: the invader as both
idealist and victim.
False reality It is not known how many Iraqis have died. They are "countless", or maybe "in the tens of thousands".
Fact
As a direct consequence of the Anglo-American-led invasion, a million
Iraqis have died. This figure, from Opinion Research Business, follows
peer-reviewed research by Johns Hopkins University in Washington, DC,
whose methods were secretly affirmed as "best practice" and "robust" by
the Blair government's chief scientific adviser. This is rarely reported
or presented to "charming" American generals. Neither is the
dispossession of four million Iraqis, the malnourishment of most Iraqi
children, the epidemic of mental illness, or the poisoning of the
environment.
False reality The British economy
has a deficit of billions which must be reduced with cuts in public
services and regressive taxation, in a spirit of "we're all in this
together".
Fact We are not in this together. What
is remarkable about this PR triumph is that only 18 months ago, the
diametric opposite filled TV screens and front pages. Then, in a state
of shock, truth became unavoidable, if briefly. The Wall Street and City
of London trough was on full view for the first time, along with the
venality of once-celebrated snouts. Billions in public money went to
inept and crooked organisations known as banks, which were spared debt
liability by their Labour government sponsors.
Within a year,
record profits and personal bonuses were posted and the "black hole" was
no longer the responsibility of the banks, whose debt is to be paid by
those not in any way responsible: the public. The received media wisdom
of this "necessity" is now a chorus, from the BBC to the Sun. A masterstroke, Bernays would surely say.
False reality Ed Miliband offers a "genuine alternative" as leader of the Labour Party.
Fact
Miliband, like his brother and almost all those standing for the Labour
leadership, is immersed in the effluent of New Labour. As a New Labour
MP and minister, he did not refuse to serve under Blair or to speak out
against Labour's persistent warmongering. He now calls the invasion of
Iraq a "profound mistake". Calling it a mistake insults the memory and
the dead. It was a crime, of which the evidence is voluminous. He has
nothing new to say about the other colonial wars, none of them mistakes.
Neither has he demanded basic social justice - that those who caused
the recession clear up the mess and that Britain's fabulously rich
corporate minority be taxed seriously, starting with Rupert Murdoch.
The
good news is that false realities often fail when the public trusts its
own critical intelligence. Two classified documents recently released
by WikiLeaks express the CIA's concern that the populations of European
countries, which oppose their governments' war policies, are not
succumbing to the usual propaganda spun through the media.
For the
rulers of the world, this is a conundrum, because their unaccountable
power rests on the false reality that no popular resistance works. And
it does.
New Statesman