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AMERICAN LIE MACHINE CONTINUES ITS COVERUP OF US WAR CRIMES IN AFHGANISTAN

by by way of wsws.org
Here is an excellent article from the World Socialist Website which exposes the role of the American Media --maintstream or alternative--in covering up a major news story about a documentary which provides evidence of heinous American War Crimes in Afghanistan. Indymedia, not suprisingly, has given this issue only token coverage.
World Socialist Website

Why is the US media blacking out documentary on war crimes in Afghanistan?

By Kate Randall
21 June 2002

Massacre in Mazar, a documentary by Irish director Jamie Doran, was screened last week before select audiences in Europe. The film documents events following the November 21, 2001 fall of Konduz, the Taliban's last stronghold in northern Afghanistan. [See: "Afghan war documentary charges US with mass killings"]

The film presents powerful testimony from Afghan witnesses that US troops collaborated in the torture and killings of thousands of Taliban prisoners near Mazar-i-Sharif. The film, which has prompted demands for an international commission of inquiry on war crimes in Afghanistan, received widespread coverage in the European press, with major stories in the Guardian, Le Monde, Suddeutsche Zeitung, Die Welt and other papers.

This major story, however, has received virtually no coverage in US newspapers or on network or cable television. Aside from stories on some alternative Internet publications, and a June 16 article on Salon.com, the story has been essentially blacked out in the US.

A search for news about the documentary in the major dailies--including the New York Times, the Washington Post, the Los Angeles Times, the Chicago Tribune, the Boston Globe and the Miami Herald--turned up empty. Web sites for ABC, NBC, CBS, Fox News and CNN have likewise carried nothing on the film.

Repeated telephone calls by the WSWS to these news sources, inquiring why they have failed to cover the story, went unanswered. How is possible that not a single major US media outlet chose to cover such an important news event? There is no innocent or journalistic explanation.

This wholesale political censorship cannot be justified on the basis that Massacre in Mazar--or the events it depicts--are not "newsworthy." The two screenings of the documentary in Germany prompted calls by a number of European parliamentary deputies and human rights advocates for an independent investigation into the atrocities exposed by the film. Calling for an inquiry, prominent human rights lawyer Andrew McEntee commented it was "clear there is prima facie evidence of serious war crimes committed not just under international law, but also under the laws of the United States itself."

The film includes scenes of the aftermath of the massacre of hundreds of Taliban fighters who were taken prisoner outside Mazar-i-Sharif, at the Qala-i-Jangi prison, showing captured troops who were apparently shot with their hands tied. The filmmaker also interviewed eyewitnesses, who describe the torture and slaughter of 3,000 prisoners, who were allegedly driven to a desert area and massacred. These witnesses--who were not paid--have offered to provide testimony before any independent investigation into the events.

The film footage is so damning that both the Pentagon and the US State Department were compelled within days to issue statements denying the allegations of US complicity in the torture and murder of POWs, which are powerfully pointed to by the film. If the US government is so concerned over the implications of what the documentary exposes, why has the US media chosen not to report on it?

Since September 11, this same print and broadcast media has consistently toed the Bush administration's propaganda line; and there has been no shortage of coverage on the Afghan war. The government's flouting of international law and the Geneva Conventions in the treatment of Afghan war prisoners at the Guantanamo Bay naval base in Cuba and proposals for secret military tribunals have gone virtually unchallenged. Assaults on the democratic rights of both immigrants and citizens--including secret detentions and suppression of protests--have been reported as legitimate aspects of the government's "war on terrorism."

One topic that has received short shrift in the American press is the civilian death toll in the US air raids in Afghanistan, which human rights advocates estimate at more than 3,500, not including the thousands facing death from starvation and displacement.

The well-known motto of the New York Times, "All the news that's fit to print," increasingly masks a practice by that newspaper and all the media of choosing to print only that which fits the war propaganda needs of the Pentagon and the White House.

The refusal of the press to report on the charges of US complicity in the torture and mass killings in Afghanistan shown in Massacre in Mazar--or even to acknowledge the existence of the film--serves one purpose: to keep the American people in the dark about the Bush administration's military actions and human rights violations.

The media's silence makes it complicit in what are horrific war crimes. It also provides an even more sinister service to the Bush administration. Filmmaker Jamie Doran decided to release a rough cut of his documentary before final editing because he feared Afghan forces were preparing to destroy evidence of the mass killings, scattering the remains of the victims. Self-censorship by the US media only facilitates such a grisly cover-up.

See Also:
Afghan war documentary charges US with mass killings of POWs
Showings in Europe spark demands for war crimes probe
[17 June 2002]
Interview with Jamie Doran, director of Massacre at Mazar
[17 June 2002]
New York Times whitewashes US torture
[19 June 2002]
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Copyright 1998-2002
World Socialist Web Site


by by way of wsws.org
Sorry, provided the wrong link for the article.

Here is the correct link.

http://www.wsws.org/articles/2002/jun2002/maz-j21.shtml
by Ronnie Ray-Gun
Oh my God! War crimes of innocent women and children and the elderly!Oh wait a minute, they were Taliban, the world is now a better place.
by COOK
I hope you are crying just as hard for the 2700+ Taliban who were in the World Trade Center when it went down. Likewise, all of sudden the world became a better place (?)
You can't rout out these chicken bastards with tweezers and surgical precision. We may hit some innocents, and I'm not trying to minimize that, but our target is the jackasses who have launched this nonsense against us.
Forget for a minute whether or not the US actually cares about the plight of their innocents, the fact is, we are not trying to hit them. They, on the other hand, have targeted our innocents, would rather kill our civilians, and are proud of it.

We didn't start the stinking fight. They did. But forget that, for a minute, because what is done is done, and whatever stupidity on either side brought it on has happened, and we are where we are right now. They are bringing our wrath down on themselves and are responsible for the suffering of their own people as a result. Their next target might be the Transamerica building in SF - and they may actually get it. But it's not going to do any good for us to stand by and make it easy for them. You may not find the US government as reasonable, loving, caring, or rational, but do you think those morons are any better, and would you rather find out just how far they can go, left unchecked?
by Howell Raines
Like the New York Times is going to do what the Pentagon and White House tells them to. Get real.
by NOTICED
The Times is on a mission from Allah. Since when has any paper cooperated with anybody? In fact, the more desirous the Pentagon is of help from the Times, the less likely it is to get it.
by Jim Gianakopoulidis
Cook,maybe if US government and all of it's allies(Israel,Turkey etc.)were more concerned of not massacring those people to get their oil wells then those people would not be so aggresive towards your country.Do you want some examples:The daily massacre of Palestinians by Israel(a war crime that is covered every day by the US government), the war in Iraq in 1991 and nowadays, Libya, Afghanistan(by the way, not every innocent afghan is responsible for 11 september day, just a loonatic who isn't actually an Afghan), Sudan.The list goes on and on and (North Korea, Vietnam, Cambodia, Panama, Serbia).Ihope that this war in Iraq will be the last one(I hope that the US government won't mess with North Korea again, this situation is very very dangerous even for the US government)even though I find it very unlike. I think that you should think more seriously that your government should pay more attention in stopping the massacre in Palestine rather than burning to ashes Iraq just because it is trying to lick its wounds from the first war. Do you know how many people,mostly children, have died since the first war and the following embargo that was placed upon the country,tens of thousands at least,a lot more than those 3000 in the WTC(By the way this act was grotesque by all means, even though I don't like he american country and it's policies I don't think that the US people should pay for it's bullshit). Educate yourselves, try to be more informed of what is going on out there. And remember that two wrong actions are not equal to one right(the war on Afghanistan didn't correct what happened in the WTC, the dead remained dead and in addition more dead were added to that 3000 list of dead people). And one more, try not to accuse the other countries of having weapons of mass destruction since you are so easy to be using them.
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