NOVANEWS
by Stephen Lendman
The Times never met a US imperial war it didn’t endorse or designated enemy it didn’t vilify. Nor are concerns ever raised about constitutional and international law issues, crimes of war and against humanity, or mass slaughter and destruction.
Only supporting the home team and winning matters, not right or wrong, or cost in terms of dollars and human lives. It’s as true about Libya as US wars against Afghanistan, Pakistan, Iraq, others ongoing directly or through proxies, as well as earlier ones, at least in their earlier stages.
The Times strayed far from June 13, 1971 when it was the first broadsheet to begin publishing the top secret Pentagon Papers under Neil Sheehan’s byline. At the time, its publisher Arthur Ochs Sulzberger said, “What was revealed, had to be revealed….people had the right to know.”
In fact, in a 1996 article, The Times (belatedly) said:
The Pentagon Papers “demonstrated, among other things, that the Johnson Administration had systematically lied, not only to the public, but also to Congress, about a subject of transcendent national interest and significance.”
Did misreporting about alleged Iraq WMDs matter less?Functioning as a de facto Pentagon press agent, Judith Miller’s manipulative agitprop bears huge responsibity for America’s 2003 war, lying in daily front page bylines.
Times editors were cooperatively complicit, as they’ve been for all US presidents in their direct and/or proxy wars, notably:
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– Nixon before the Pentagon Papers and Watergate;
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– Reagan in Central America and elsewhere;
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– GHW Bush in Panama, Haiti and Iraq;
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– Clinton on Rwanda, Iraq sanctions, the Balkan wars, and especially for attacking Serbia/Kosovo in 1999;
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– GW Bush in Iraq and Afghanistan;
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– Obama in six direct wars and other proxy ones; as well as
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– every president since Johnson on Israel/Palestine.




