RAPID RESPONSE MEDIA ALERT:
RAPID RESPONSE MEDIA ALERT:
The title above Yasmin Alibhai-Brown's column yesterday in the Independent was a real corker, joining our list of banal nuggets from the liberal media:
'Even when our foreign policy is benevolent, it appears condescending and exploitative.' (The Independent, November 20)
In the article, the columnist mocked Tony Blair and Gordon Brown for their efforts to "sort out"
When we asked Alibhai-Brown what she thought of the misleading title given to her column by an Independent subeditor, she replied: "they do what they do I guess, often independently of what writers write." (Email, November 21, 2006)
But the title was no mere slip; it fits an ideological pattern to which the liberal media conform religiously. The standard doctrine states that since, by definition, "we" are the "good guys", British foreign policy is essentially benevolent. In elite circles, it may sometimes be admitted that, in the execution of benevolent policies, occasional "mistakes" or "misjudgements" are made.
Thus, for example, a recent editorial in the Independent referred to "the costly folly of the
The Supreme International Criminal Magically Transformed Into A 'Formidable Leader'
Whether "our" leaders' orders are criminal or merely mistakes, we must "contemplate the heroism of the men and women who risk their lives on our behalf in the armed forces." (Leading article, 'Stop the Clocks', Independent on Sunday, November 12, 2006)
How and why they are doing this "on our behalf" is left hanging in the ether.
Sadly, laments one editorial, "the war in
In particular, "reports of prisoner abuse" by British and American forces have led to "a critical erosion in our moral authority." (Leading article, 'How to lose the moral war', Independent on Sunday, February 19, 2006)
The case for "our moral authority" need not be tested or examined, but merely presented as fact.
Again, only "mistakes" can be admitted. Thus, when Tony Blair gave his last party conference speech as Labour leader, The Independent noted:
"A single speech cannot wipe out the calamitous mistakes Mr Blair has made since he resolved long ago to form a close friendship with President Bush" (Leading article, 'A tour de force from a leader with awkward months ahead', The Independent, September 27, 2006)
Nonetheless, "the speech was a reminder of why Mr Blair has been such a formidable leader."
To the Independent, then, Blair remains a "formidable leader" despite having launched an aggressive war - the supreme international crime by the standards of
The Moral Puzzle of Waging War By High Ethical Standards
In such a twisted ideological world-view, there is even a moral case for the 1960s
"Nothing destroyed the moral case for the
So, US aims in
"Of the many lessons of that conflict which optimists hoped the
How to undertake war, or rather "military engagement", by sticking to "high ethical standards" is an interesting moral problem that need not detain the leader writer. However, one thing is clear:
"Torture forfeits the high moral ground so essential to maintaining and/or winning popular consent."
What a shame this forfeit has now occurred given that:
"Before the Prime Minister decided to join President Bush in this reckless adventure [in
In those halcyon days, in the early years of the New Labour government:
"Intervention in
The Independent continued:
"But then came the distortions and lies over
As for New Labour's "ethical dimension" to foreign policy, a discreet silence now reigns. That convenient mantra, echoed by the liberal media, belied an utterly discredited mythology of 'benevolence' as a veil for raw imperialism. (See 'The Dark Heart of Robin Cook's "Ethical" Foreign Policy', Parts 1 and 2, August 22 and 24, 2005; www.medialens.org/alerts/05/050822_the_dark_heart_of_robin_cook.php;
www.medialens.org/alerts/05/050824_the_dark_heart_of_robin_cook_part2.php)
The Invisible Humanitarian Aims of
As mentioned in previous alerts, British historian Mark Curtis has shown how the primary aim of British policy-makers has been, and remains, to protect "favourable investment climates" for western corporations around the globe. This has been at the expense of human rights, social justice and environmental sustainability. State support for corporate profit opportunities has often required dealing with recalcitrant '
As for any "humanitarian" intent to foreign policy, Curtis notes that:
"humanitarian concerns do not figure at all in the rationale behind British foreign policy. In the thousands of government files I have looked through for this and other books, I have barely seen any reference to human rights at all. Where such concerns are evoked, they are only for public-relations purposes." (Curtis, 'Unpeople', Vintage, 2004, p. 3)
This simple truth has somehow eluded the attention of the ideologically bound managers, editors and reporters of the Independent, and of the liberal media as a whole.
SUGGESTED ACTION
The goal of Media Lens is to promote rationality, compassion and respect for others. In writing letters to journalists, we strongly urge readers to maintain a polite, non-aggressive and non-abusive tone.
Write to Imogen Haddon, managing editor of the Independent:
Email: i.haddon@independent.co.uk
Write to Simon Kelner, editor-in-chief of the Independent and Independent on Sunday:
Email: s.kelner@independent.co.uk
Write to Tristan Davies, editor of the Independent on Sunday:
Email: t.davies@independent.co.uk
Write to Adrian Hamilton, Independent comment editor:
Email: a.hamilton@independent.co.uk
Write to Leonard Doyle, Independent foreign editor:
Email: l.doyle@independent.co.uk
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