
What
We Say, Goes!
How Bush Sr. Sold The Bombing Of Iraq
by Mitchel Cohen, December 28, 2002
"The U.S. has a new credibility. What we say goes."
President George Herbert Walker Bush, NBC Nightly News, February 2,
1991
In
October, 1990, a 15-year-old Kuwaiti girl, identified only as Nayirah,
appeared in Washington before the House of Representatives' Human Rights
Caucus. She testified that Iraqi soldiers who had invaded Kuwait on
August 2nd tore hundreds of babies from hospital incubators and killed
them.
Television flashed her testimony around the world. It electrified opposition
to Iraq's president, Saddam Hussein, who was now portrayed by U.S. president
George Bush not only as "the Butcher of Baghdad" but -- so
much for old friends -- "a tyrant worse than Hitler."
Bush quoted Nayirah at every opportunity. Six times in one month he
referred to "312 premature babies at Kuwait City's maternity hospital
who died after Iraqi soldiers stole their incubators and left the infants
on the floor,"(1) and of "babies pulled from incubators and
scattered like firewood across the floor." Bush used Nayirah's
testimony to lambaste Senate Democrats still supporting "only"
sanctions against Iraq -- the blockade of trade which alone would cause
hundreds of thousands of Iraqis to die of hunger and disease -- but
who waffled on endorsing the policy Bush wanted to implement: outright
bombardment. Republicans and pro-war Democrats used Nayirah's tale to
hammer their fellow politicians into line behind Bush's war in the Persian
Gulf.(2)
Nayirah, though, was no impartial eyewitness, a fact carefully concealed
by her handlers. She was the daughter of one Saud Nasir Al-Sabah, Kuwait's
ambassador to the United States. A few key Congressional leaders and
reporters knew who Nayirah was, but none of them thought of sharing
that minor detail with Congress, let alone the American people.
Everything Nayirah said, as it turned out, was a lie. There were, in
actuality, only a handful of incubators in all of Kuwait, certainly
not the "hundreds" she claimed. According to Dr. Mohammed
Matar, director of Kuwait's primary care system, and his wife, Dr. Fayeza
Youssef, who ran the obstetrics unit at the maternity hospital, there
were few if any babies in the incubators at the time of the Iraqi invasion.
Nayirah's charges, they said, were totally false. "I think it was
just something for propaganda," Dr. Matar said. In an ABC-TV News
account after the war, John Martin reported that although "patients,
including premature babies, did die," this occurred "when
many of Kuwait's nurses and doctors stopped working or fled the country"
-- a far cry from Bush's original assertion that hundreds of babies
were murdered by Iraqi troops.(3) Subsequent investigations, including
one by Amnesty International, found no evidence for the incubator claims.
It is likely that Nayirah was not even in Kuwait, let alone at the hospital,
at that time; the Kuwaiti aristocracy and their families had fled the
country weeks before the anticipated invasion. Some defended their country
at the gaming tables in Monte Carlo, where at least one member of the
ruling family was reported to have gambled away more than $10 million
as his fellow rulers called for economic and military assistance from
abroad.
As invasions go, Iraq's invasion of Kuwait was relatively -- I stress
the word "relatively" -- bloodless. Despite the heart-rending
testimonies TV viewers in the U.S. were subjected to night after night,
fewer than 200 Kuwaitis were killed. Compare that to such "peaceful"
ventures as the U.S. invasion of Panama the year before, which killed
an estimated 7,500 Panamanians; or, a year after the Gulf war, the 10,000
Somalis killed by <U.S./U.N>. troops in what was portrayed as
a "peace mission" to bring food aid to the allegedly starving
region.(4)
How did Nayirah first come to the attention of the Congressional Human
Rights Caucus, which put her before the world's cameras? It was arranged
by Hill & Knowlton, a public relations firm hired to rally the U.S.
populace behind Bush's policy of going to war. And it worked!
Hill & Knowlton's yellow ribbon campaign to whip up support for
"our" troops, which followed their orchestration of Nayirah's
phony "incubator" testimony, was a public relations masterpiece.
The claim that satellite photos revealed that Iraq had troops poised
to strike Saudi Arabia was also fabricated by the PR firm. Hill &
Knowlton was paid between $12 million (as reported two years later on
"60 Minutes") and $20 million (as reported on "20/20")
for "services rendered." The group fronting the money? Citizens
for a Free Kuwait, a phony "human rights agency" set up and
funded entirely by Kuwait's emirocracy to promote its interests in the
U.S.
"When Hill & Knowlton masterminded the Kuwaiti campaign to
sell the Gulf War to the American public, the owners of this highly
effective propaganda machine were residing in another country"
-- the United Kingdom -- writes Sharon Beder and Richard Gosden in PR
Watch. "Should this give pause for thought? Does it demonstrate
a certain potential for the future exercise of global political power
-- the power to manipulate democratic political processes through managing
public opinion," which Hill and Knowlton demonstrated 10 years
ago?(5)
All of this is concealed in a new HBO "behind-the-scenes true story"
of the Gulf War, which is being released at this crucial political moment.
As Fairness and Accuracy in Reporting writes, "HBO's version of
history never makes clear that the incubator story was fraudulent, and
in fact had been managed by an American PR firm, not Iraq. Curiously,
however, the truth seems to have been clear to Robert Wiener, the former
CNN producer who co-wrote 'Live from Baghdad.'As he explained to CNN's
Wolf Blitzer (11/21/02), 'that story turned out to be false because
those accusations were made by the daughter of the Kuwaiti minister
of information and were never proven.' Unfortunately, HBO viewers won't
know that when they see the film."(6)
In 1998, Hill and Knowlton found a new client -- President Clinton --
who hired them to advise him and to polish his image. The last time
they were involved, by the time their lies were exposed TV newscasters
were waxing ecstatic over the rockets' red glare, computerized "smart-bombs"
bursting in air, and 250,000 people were dead.
Mitchel Cohen is the co-editor of Green Politix, the national newspaper
of the Greens/Green Party USA. He can be reached at: mitchelcohen@mindspring.com
NOTES
1. Doug Ireland, Village Voice, March 26, 1991.
2. The use of the Big Lie to manipulate public opinion and neutralize
opposition to a particular war was not invented by Bush. See, for instance,
James Laxer, "Iraq: US has match, seeks kindle: American leaders
have often falsified reasons to attack other countries," (ActionGreens,
Mar. 31, 2001). Laxer is a Political Science Professor at York University,
Toronto.
3. ABC World News Tonight, 3/15/91.
4. In actuality, people in only certain areas of Somalia were starving
-- those that had been subjected to IMF structural adjustment programs.
See, Mitchel Cohen, "Somalia & the Cynical Manipulation of
Hunger," Red Balloon Collective, 1994.
5. Sharon Beder and Richard Gosden, "PR Watch," Volume 8,
No. 2, 2nd Quarter 2001. The PR firm has since been working at the behest
of the pharmaceutical industry to ban over-the-counter vitamin and nutritional
supplement sales in Europe.
6. Fairness and Accuracy in Reporting, "HBO Recycling Gulf War
Hoax?" December 4, 2002.
Mitchel Cohen is the co-editor of Green Politix, the national newspaper
of the Greens/Green Party USA. He can be reached at: mitchelcohen@mindspring.com
Source: http://www.counterpunch.org/cohen1228.html
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