John Pilger
an interview by David Barsamian
The Progressive magazine,
November 2002
Corporate journalism in the United States
preaches "objectivity" and scorns those who take the
side of the dispossessed and disenfranchised. But the mainstream
media in Britain makes a few allowances. John Pilger, the Australian-born,
London-based journalist and filmmaker, is one.
"I grew up in Sydney in a very political
household," Pilger told me, "where we were all for the
underdog." His father was a Wobbly, a member of the Industrial
Workers of the World. Like Orwell, whom he admires, Pilger has
a direct style. For example, he uses the term "imperialism"
and does not hesitate to attach it to the adjective "American."
He was a featured speaker at the mass
peace rally in London on September 28. He told the crowd, estimated
at between 150,000 and 350,000, "Today a taboo has been broken.
We are the moderates. Bush and Blair are the extremists. The danger
for all of us is not in Baghdad but in Washington." And he
applauded the protesters. "Democracy," he told them,
"is not one obsessed man using the power of kings to attack
another country in our name. Democracy is not siding with Ariel
Sharon, a war criminal, in order to crush Palestinians. Democracy
is this great event today representing the majority of the people
of Great Britain."
For his reporting, Pilger has twice won
the highest award in British journalism. His latest book is The
New Rulers of the World (Verso, 2002). His political films include
Paying the Price: Killing the Children of Iraq, Death of a Nation:
East Timor, The New Rulers of the
World, and Palestine Is Still the Issue.
These documentaries are shown all over Britain, Canada, Australia,
and much of the rest of the world but are rarely seen in the United
States. PBS, the Public Broadcasting Service, which has seemingly
unlimited space to air specials on animals, can't seem to find
a spot for Pilger's work.
"The censorship is such on television
in the U.S. that films like mine don't stand a chance," he
told me, and he illustrated this point with the following anecdote.
Some years ago, PBS expressed interest in one of his films on
Cambodia, but it was concerned about the content. In something
out of Orwell's Ministry of Truth, the network appointed what
it called a "journalistic adjudicator" to decide whether
the film was worthy of airing. The adjudicator adjudicated. The
film did not air. PBS also rejected another film on Cambodia that
he did. But WNET in New York picked it up-the only station in
the country to do so. On the basis of that one showing, Pilger
was awarded an Emmy.
I called him at his home in London the
day before he spoke at the huge peace rally.
Q: Is the war on terrorism a new version
of the white man's burden?
John Pilger: Classic nineteenth century
European imperialists believed they were literally on a mission.
I don't believe that the imperialists these days have that same
sense of public service. They are simply pirates. Yes, there are
fundamentalists, Christian fundamentalists, who appear to be in
charge of the White House at the moment, but they are very different
from the Christian gentlemen who ran the British Empire and believed
they were doing good works around the world. These days it's about
naked power.
Q: Why do you say that?
Pilger: The attack on Iraq has been long
planned. There just hasn't been an excuse for it. Since George
H.W. Bush didn't unseat Saddam in 1991, there's been a longing
among the extreme right in the United States to finish the job.
The war on terrorism has given them that opportunity. Even though
the logic is convoluted and fraudulent, it appears they are going
to go ahead and finish the job.
Q: Why is Tony Blair such an enthusiastic
supporter of U.S. policy?
Pilger: We have an extreme rightwing government
in this country, although it's called the Labour government. That's
confused a lot of people, but it's confusing them less and less.
The British Labour Party has always had a very strong "Atlanticist
component," with an obsequiousness to American policies,
and Blair represents this wing. He's clearly obsessed with Iraq.
He has to be because the overwhelming majority of the people of
Britain oppose a military action. I've never known a situation
like it. To give you one example, The Daily Mirror polled its
readers and 90 percent were opposed to an attack on Iraq. Overall,
opinion polls in this country are running at about 70 percent
against the war. Blair is at odds with the country.
Q: In your new book, you talk about the
group around Bush that is essentially forming war policy, people
like Vice President Dick Cheney, Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld
and Deputy Secretary of Defense Paul Wolfowitz. You single out
Richard Perle, who was Assistant Secretary of Defense in Reagan's
Pentagon. You highlighted his comment "This is total war."
Pilger: I interviewed Perle when he was
buzzing around the Reagan Administration in the 1980s, and I was
struck by how truly fanatical this man was. He was then voicing
the views of total war. All of Bush's extremism comes from the
Reagan years. That's why people like Perle, Wolfowitz, and other
refugees from that period have found favor again. I singled out
Perle in the book because I thought he rather eloquently described
the policies of the Bush regime. September 11 has given these
people, this clique, an opportunity from heaven. They never really
believed they would have the legitimacy to do what they are doing.
They don't, of course, have legitimacy because most of the world
is opposed to what they are doing. But they believe it has given
them if not a legitimacy then a constituency in the United States.
Q: They are also part of an Administration
that came to power under shady circumstances.
Pilger: I don't regard them as an elected
group. It's quite clear that Gore won most of the votes. I think
the accurate description for them is a military plutocracy. Having
lived and worked in the United States, I must add that I don't
want to make too much of the distinction between the Bush regime
and its predecessors. I don't see a great deal of difference.
Clinton kept funding Star Wars. He took the biggest military budget
to Congress in history. He routinely bombed Iraq, and he kept
the barbaric sanctions in place. He's really played his part.
The Bush gang has taken it just a little further.
Q: At least on the level of rhetoric,
it seems that the top officials of the Bush Administration are
much more bellicose. They've taken their gloves off. They speak
in extreme language: "You're either with us or you're with
the terrorists."
Pilger: We're grateful to them because
they've made it very clear to other people just how dangerous
they are. Before, Clinton persuaded some people that he was really
a civilized character and his Administration had the best interests
of humanity at heart. These days we don't have to put up with
that nonsense. It's very clear that the Bush Administration is
out of control. It contains some truly dangerous people. :,
Q: How do you assess U.S. policy toward
Israel?
Pilger: Israel is the American watchdog
in the Middle East, and that's why the Palestinians remain victims
of one of the longest military occupations. They don't have oil.
If they were the Saudis, they wouldn't be in the position they
are now. But they have the power of being able to upset the imperial
order in the Middle East. Certainly, until there is justice for
the Palestinians, there will never be any kind of stability in
the Middle East. I'm absolutely convinced of that. Israel is the
representative of the United States in that part of the world.
Its policies are so integrated with American policies that they
use the same language. If you read Sharon's statements and Bush's
statements, they're virtually identical.
Q: You write for the Mirror, the British
tabloid with a circulation of two million plus. How did you get
that job?
Pilger: I wrote for the Mirror for twenty
years. I joined it back in the 1 960s when I arrived from Australia.
You don't really have anything like the Mirror-as it was, and
as it is trying to be again-in the United States. The Mirror is
a left-leaning tabloid. It's really a traditional supporter of
the Labour Party in this country. I suppose its politics are center-left.
During the time I was there, it was very adventurous politically.
It reported many parts of the world from the point of view of
victims of wars. I reported Vietnam for many years for the Mirror.
In those days, it played a central role in the political life
of this country. It then fell into a long, rather terrible period,
trying to copy its Murdoch rival, The Sun, and just became a trashy
tabloid.
Since September 11, the Mirror has reached
back to its roots, and decided, it seems, to be something of its
old self again. I received a call asking if I would write for
it again, which I've done. It's a pleasure to be able to do that.
It's become an important antidote to a media that is, most of
it, supportive of the establishment, some of it quite rabidly
rightwing. The Mirror is breaking ranks, and that's good news.
Q: In one of your articles, you called
the United States "the world's leading rogue state."
This incurred the wrath of The Washington Times, which is owned
by the Moonies. They called your paper "a shrill tabloid
read by soccer hooligans." Your fellow Australian Rupert
Murdoch, owner of The New York Post called the Mirror a "terrorist-loving
London tabloid."
Pilger: There's one correction I want
to make there. Murdoch is not a fellow Australian. He's an American.
Q: But he was born in Australia.
Pilger: No, he's an American. He gave
up his Australian citizenship in order to buy television stations
in the United States, which is symptomatic of the way Murdoch
operates. Everything is for sale, including his birthright. The
Mirror is not read by soccer hooligans. It's read by ordinary
people of this country. That comment is simply patronizing. But
to be criticized by the Moonies and Murdoch in one breath is really
just a fine moment for me.
Q: In George Orwell's essay "Politics
and the English Language," he describes the centrality of
language in framing and informing debate. He was particularly
critical of the use of euphemisms and the passive voice, so today
we have "collateral damage," "free trade,"
and "level playing fields," and such constructions as
"villages were bombed," and "Afghan civilians were
killed." You compare the rhetoric surrounding the war on
terrorism to the kind of language Orwell criticized.
Pilger: Orwell is almost our litmus test.
Some of his satirical writing looks like reality these days. When
you have someone like Cheney who talks about "endless war"
or war that might last fifty years, he could be Big Brother. You
have Bush incessantly going on about the evil ones. Who are these
evil ones? In 1984, the evil one was called Goldstein. Orwell
was writing a grim parody. But these people running the United
States mean what they say. If I were a teacher, I would recommend
that all my students very hurriedly read most of Orwell's books,
especially 1984 and Animal Farm, because then they'd begin to
understand the world we live in.
Q: And the use of passive voice?
Pilger: Using the passive voice is always
very helpful. Mind you, a lot of that propaganda English emanates
from here. The British establishment has always used the passive
voice. It's been a weapon of discourse so those who committed
terrible acts in the old empire could not be identified. Or, today,
the British establishment uses "the royal we," as in,
"We think this." You hear a lot of that these days.
It erroneously suggests that those who are making the decisions
to bomb countries, to devastate economies, to take part in acts
of international piracy involve all of us.
Q: What's wrong with journalism today?
Pilger: Many journalists now are no more
than channelers and echoers of what Orwell called the official
truth. They simply cipher and transmit lies. It really grieves
me that so many of my fellow journalists can be so manipulated
that they become really what the French describe as functionaires,
functionaries, not journalists.
Many journalists become very defensive
when you suggest to them that they are anything but impartial
and objective. The problem with those words "impartiality"
and "objectivity" is that they have lost their dictionary
meaning. They've been taken over. "Impartiality" and
"objectivity" now mean the establishment point of view.
Whenever a journalist says to me, "Oh, you don't understand,
I'm impartial, I'm objective," I know what he's saying. I
can decode it immediately. It means he channels the official truth.
Almost always. That protestation means he speaks for a consensual
view of the establishment. This is internalized. Journalists don't
sit down and think, "I'm now going to speak for the establishment."
Of course not. But they internalize a whole set of assumptions,
and one of the most potent assumptions is that the world should
be seen in terms of its usefulness to the West, not humanity.
This leads journalists to make a distinction between people who
matter and people who don't matter. The people who died in the
Twin Towers in that terrible crime mattered. The people who were
bombed to death in dusty villages in Afghanistan didn't matter,
even though it now seems that their numbers were greater.)The
people who will die in Iraq don't matter. Iraq has been successfully
demonized as if everybody who lives there is Saddam Hussein. In
the build-up to this attack on Iraq, journalists have almost universally
excluded the prospect of civilian deaths, the numbers of people
who would die, because those people don't matter.
It's only when journalists understand
the role they play in this propaganda, It's only when they realize
they can't be both independent, honest journalists and agents
of power, that things will begin to change.
David Barsamian, director of Alternative
Radio in Boulder, Colorado, is the author of "The Decline
and Fall of Public Broadcasting" (South End Press).
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