Nygaard Notes
Independent Periodic News and Analysis
Number 417, September 3, 2008
On the Web at http://www.nygaardnotes.org/
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This Week: The "What's Going On Here?" Paragraph
1. “Quote” of the Week
2. The “Surge.” Has It Succeeded?
3. The “What’s Going On Here?” Paragraph Explained
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Greetings,Independent Periodic News and Analysis
Number 417, September 3, 2008
On the Web at http://www.nygaardnotes.org/
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This Week: The "What's Going On Here?" Paragraph
1. “Quote” of the Week
2. The “Surge.” Has It Succeeded?
3. The “What’s Going On Here?” Paragraph Explained
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I live in Minneapolis, and the news this week is dominated by the Republican National Convention (RNC) that’s happening a few miles from my house. I thought about commenting on the convention, and especially the intense and repressive police and “law enforcement” presence. However, as I look around I see that many people are commenting on this, and doing an excellent job.
The one thing that bothers me is that the police actions may be having “success” in the sense that everyone seems to be talking about the “violence” in the streets of St. Paul instead of the far, far greater violence that continues unabated in Iraq and Afghanistan. Protesting against this violence, after all, was one of the prime motivations for gathering outside the RNC. In this spirit I decided that this week’s Nygaard Notes would have two pieces: one about Iraq and one about Afghanistan and the propaganda that supports the ongoing violence.
September 5th—just two days from the day I’m publishing this—marks the 10th birthday of Nygaard Notes. On that day I hope to publish a special Birthday Edition of the Notes, complete with a special and very exciting announcement. Check your inbox on Friday!
In solidarity,
Nygaard
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1.
“Quote” of the Week
In an interview with In These Times published on July 29th, Noam Chomsky summed up the “success” of the so-called surge of U.S. forces in Iraq, saying:
“Most of the educated class [in Iraq] has either been killed or fled. The country is an array of militias, of warlords and gangs, of which the U.S. is just the biggest and most powerful militia. They call the Iraqi Army its sub-militia. We’ve just destroyed the country, and it may never recover. So that’s the way that the surge has succeeded.”
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2.
The “Surge.” Has It Succeeded?
Here is John McCain on August 20th: “No rational observer can go to Iraq and see what we are doing for the last years and say the surge hasn't succeeded.” On August 31st Mr. McCain praised his vice-presidential pick, saying that “she has got the right judgment... She knows that the surge worked and succeeded...” And, of course, the battering ram that will continue to be used against Mr. McCain’s Democratic opponent will echo what he said on August 20th: “Obama . . . opposed the surge... and then he refuses to acknowledge the surge has succeeded. Remarkable, remarkable.”
The refrain can be heard from all quarters. Even Arianna Huffington (she’s a liberal, right?) said on July 7th that “the surge has succeeded in reducing violence” in Iraq. And even a faithful Nygaard Notes reader wrote to me a couple of weeks ago to say that “the U.S. finally accomplished what ... progressives thought was impossible; the surge gave the U.S. breathing room to train/bribe enough Iraqi troops to bring increasing order to the society.”
“Remarkable” though it may be, I am among those who do not think that the “surge” has worked. I think the causes for the recent decline in “violence” in Iraq are more complex, and include the following six reasons, as listed by scholar Juan Cole:
“1. Dulaim tribesmen in Anbar developed a feud with Salafi Jihadis, who were hitting Dulaim young men who tried to join police; Dulaim took money from the United States to fight jihadis.
“2. Shiite militias ethnically cleansed hundreds of thousands of Sunnis from Baghdad and environs, leaving few mixed neighborhoods and less opportunity for neighborhood killings. (Baghdad went from 65 percent Shiite in Jan. 2007 to 75 percent Shiite by late last summer.)
“3. Extra oil income strengthened Iraqi security forces.
“4. Badr Corps paramilitary of Islamic Supreme Council of Iraq won out in South over Sadr's movement, with help of Iraqi police and army and U.S. air support (e.g. Diwaniya, Karbala).
“5. Sunnis left in West Baghdad took money from United States to form anti-jihadi militias.
“6. Extra U.S. troops in Baghdad put in blast walls, no-drive markets, bridge and other checkpoints—which may have had some impact in the capital, though ethnic cleansing of the Sunnis was more important.”
This list, and the comments of several other people more well-informed than I, can be found on the website of The American Prospect, in an article entitled “How Important Was the Surge? Ten Iraq Experts Weigh in on the Effectiveness of the Surge.” July 28, 2008. http://www.prospect.org/cs/articles?article=how_important_was_the_surge
Here are three more credible Internet sources for information on the relation of the escalation (the “surge”) to the decline in violence in Iraq:
* The July 30th Counterpunch ran an article called “Assessing the Surge,” by Brian M. Downing. http://www.counterpunch.org/downing07302008.html
* Juan Cole’s blog “ Informed Comment: Thoughts on the Middle East, History, and Religion,” is excellent. On July 24th he ran a piece called “A Social History of the Surge.” It explains his six-point list above. http://www.juancole.com/2008/07/social-history-of-surge.html
* The July 29th issue of In These Times has an interview with Noam Chomsky in which he addresses the issue. Go to http://www.inthesetimes.com/article/3831/gunning_for_a_prize/
As a little bonus, here’s a note on the (usually irrelevant) opinions of the Iraqi people themselves. On July 23rd the House Committee on Foreign Affairs heard testimony from Dr. Steven Kull, Director of the very reputable Program on International Policy Attitudes. He told the Committee about “the most recent polling,” saying that “In March of this year [British polling group] ORB conducted a poll for the British Channel 4, asking Iraqis what they would like to see happen with the Multinational Forces. Seventy percent said they want the Multi National Forces to leave, with 78 percent of this group wanting them to leave within six months or less and 84 percent within a year. Thus about six in ten of the whole sample said they want the troops out within a year or less. In a poll conducted in February of this year for a consortium of news outlets led by ABC News, 73 percent said they oppose the presence of coalition forces in Iraq. Sixty-one percent said that the presence of US forces in Iraq is making the security situation in Iraq worse.”
http://foreignaffairs.house.gov/110/kul072308.pdf
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3.
The “What’s Going On Here?” Paragraph Explained
The daily news is typically limited to reporting on specific daily events. Since reporters are aware that no event makes sense without a context, they will often insert into an article what I call the “What’s going on here?” paragraph. While the point of such paragraphs is to make the specific event (that is, the focus of the story) more understandable, they do not always succeed. That is, they don’t always succeed in helping us understand the story. But, since reporters are drawn from the educated/political classes, these paragraphs that they write almost always help us to understand a bit of the foundational premises upon which our public reasoning is based. That is, they are very revealing as to the mindsets that produce our news, which in turn has a huge influence on how people think about the world.
This article takes a look at one such paragraph to expose what I think it reveals.
The article in question appeared on page nine of the New York Times of August 26th under the headline: “Afghans Want a Deal on Foreign Troops.” If you haven’t been following recent events in Afghanistan, here are two key facts to know: 1. On August 22nd, according to the Washington Post, “at least 90 civilians—two-thirds of them children—were killed in a U.S.-led airstrike” in Herat, Afghanistan; 2. This has, not surprisingly, “caused the Afghan government to call for a review of U.S. and NATO military operations in the country.”
This appears to be the largest single known massacre by U.S. airstrikes in Afghanistan, but there have been plenty of other innocents killed by U.S. airpower in that country since the 2001 invasion. 22 innocents were killed by “international forces” on the Fourth of July, for example. 47 more on July 6. Four more on July 17. Nine on July 20. Three children killed on September 1. And so forth.
The above numbers are only the deaths reported in the U.S. media, and we have to imagine there are some number of unreported deaths, as well. Consider that the most recent official reports from the U.S. Air Force show an average of 67 airstrikes a day. Although these reports never refer to “death” or “killing,” be assured that there is a large and mostly unreported toll in human lives from all of these airborne attacks. (Perhaps as a result of the “rising public outrage” at the toll the Air Force appears to have suspended, as of August 10th, its daily reporting of its activities in Afghanistan. Not that anyone besides Nygaard Notes has been reporting these shocking numbers, but still...)
The reason that the Afghan government wants a new agreement is easily understood if we read the lead paragraph from a Washington Post story of August 28th: “For the past six years, military relations between the United States and Afghanistan have been governed by a two-page ‘diplomatic note’ giving U.S. forces virtual carte blanche to conduct operations as they see fit.”
What the U.S. “sees fit” is not the same as what most Afghans “see fit,” and there, I would suspect, is the problem with that “carte blanche.”
Here’s The Paragraph
It was on August 22nd that the innocent 90 (the U.S. is quibbling about the exact number) were killed by U.S. airstrikes. Four days later, on August 26th, the Times ran the “Afghans Want a Deal on Foreign Troops” article. In this article, the “What’s going on here?” paragraph was Paragraph Number Five. Here it is:
“Heavy-handed bombing raids and house raids, which are seen as culturally unacceptable by many Afghans who guard their privacy fiercely, and the detention of hundreds of suspects for years without trial at the Bagram air base and Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, have stirred up Afghans' strong independent streak and ancient dislike of invaders.”
One 57-word paragraph, but it says so much! Let’s take it apart into six pieces for a closer look.
1. The reporting of “bombing raids” that kill hundreds of innocents (between 200 and 300 have been reported so far this year) as “heavy-handed” is euphemistic, at best. As to the nature of “house raids” in Afghanistan, such details are rarely reported, but if they are anything like U.S.-conducted “house raids” in Iraq (in which “soldiers feel free to ‘shoot first and ask questions later,’” as Rahul Mahajan reports), then it is also a gross understatement to refer to them as “heavy-handed.” Other adjectives that would be more accurate might include “deadly,” or “brutal,” or “savage,” or even “arguably illegal” (so says the Red Cross: http://www.icrc.org/Web/eng/siteeng0.nsf/html/afghanistan-news-090708)
2. Bombing raids and house raids by an occupying army are “seen as culturally unacceptable,” reporter Carlotta Gall says. It is hard to imagine a society where such wanton killing would be “culturally acceptable.” It must just be those exotic Afghans who, for some bizarre reason, seem to...
3. “...guard their privacy fiercely.” This implies that somewhere else must exist a people who aren’t so “fierce” in guarding their “privacy,” and who thus have a “culture” that wouldn’t find a little “heavy-handed” killing—done for their own good, after all!—perfectly “acceptable.” Such a people would, presumably, understand why the freedom from summary execution for the crime of being in the wrong place at the wrong time (their homes) is wrong. It’s because it violates their “privacy.”
4. Again, can one imagine, anywhere, a people who do not possess an “independent streak” that is sufficiently “strong” as to have a problem with arbitrary and unchallengeable detentions at the hands of a foreign occupying army and innumerable deadly airstrikes and house raids that may occur at any hour? I confess that I cannot imagine such a people.
5. The reference to the “ancient dislike of invaders” being “stirred up” is perhaps the most complex of the references here. First of all, the idea of U.S. actions “stirring up” something implies that the U.S. invasion of Afghanistan was not an invasion, but instead was something that reminds the Afghans of an invasion. After all, it would sound strange, indeed, to say that “the U.S. invasion stirs up Afghans’ ancient dislike of invaders.” It would make more sense to say that Afghans—like anyone you can imagine—do not want to be invaded by a foreign military. There’s nothing “ancient” about it.
6. To say that Afghans “dislike” invaders is, again, a bizarre understatement.
Underlying all of these revealing phrases are two “foundational premises”—or what I call “Deep Propaganda”—that the reporter appears to hold: The first one is that THE U.S. IS VIRTUOUS, and any negative consequences must simply be due to poor (i.e. “heavy-handed”) execution of our virtuous plans.
The second premise is that THE PEOPLE OF AFGHANISTAN ARE DIFFERENT from “us,” and presumably from others who do not guard their “privacy” so “fiercely,” and for whom U.S. actions would not be “culturally unacceptable.” They have other exotic features, as well, such as their “strong independent streak” and their “ancient dislike of invaders.”
If we change our premises to “The U.S. is no more or less virtuous than any other powerful nation” and “The people of Afghanistan are just like anyone else,” then the “What’s going on here?” paragraph might read something like this:
“What’s going on here? The U.S., being no different than any other imperial power, places its interests ahead of the interests of the people of Afghanistan. This is an affront to the people of Afghanistan, as it would be to any people. As with any military invasion and occupation, the people who are occupied are resisting, and this resistance takes many forms, and is strengthened and given momentum when confronted with the standard abuses that accompany all such illegitimate uses of power.”
The foundational premises that result in paragraphs such as the one in the Times are assumed by the reporter and her editor to be widely, if not universally, shared by all readers. What makes this assumption dangerous is that many readers/viewers engage with “the news” without being fully aware of their own beliefs about how the world works. The result is that they absorb the premises of the media, since those premises are what makes the story “work.”
The best defense against absorbing such propagandistic premises is to keep our own foundational premises in mind when reading the news. It doesn’t change the “facts.” But it can radically alter the meaning that those “facts” have for us.
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Jeff Nygaard
National Writers Union
Twin Cities Local #13 UAW
Nygaard Notes
http://www.nygaardnotes.org
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