Hazánkért
Canada Online
1492 – 0956
* 2007. 08. 18. SADDAM’S INFAMOUS
"HUMAN SHREDDING MACHINES" “In war the very
first victim is always truth.” My last
column highlighted the false accusations made by Nayirah, a
15-year-old Kuwaiti girl, against the Iraqi army in October 1990. Her lies
led to the slaughter of hundreds of thousands of Iraqis. Almost 13 years
later, a member of the British Parliament lied to the world about Saddam
Hussein and
In the buildup to the March 2003 invasion of Three
days before the invasion, Clwyd spoke in the House of Commons and described
how male prisoners in Australian
Prime Minister Howard used the story to his great advantage. He supported the war and was
about to send troops, despite overwhelming opposition from his public. After
the story appeared in The Times, he
addressed his nation and said he wanted to stop the ongoing crimes of the Ba’athist regime in Others
used this story for anti-Saddam fodder. Andrew Sullivan of the Sunday Times
of Great Britain stated that Clwyd’s report showed
"clearly, unforgettably, indelibly" that
"the Saddam regime is evil." Daily Mail columnist Melanie Phillips
described the shredder in which "bodies got chewed up from foot to
head." In The Telegraph, Mark Steyn
criticized the anti-war movement with these words: If it’s a choice between letting some
carbonated beverage crony of Dick Cheney get a piece of the Nasiriyah soft-drinks market or allowing Saddam to go on
feeding his subjects feet-first into the industrial shredder for another
decade or three, then the "peace" activists will take the lesser of
two evils — i.e., crank up the shredder. The last
statement shows the ludicrous methods some pro-war journalists utilized to get
their messages across. The benign assessment of
Cheney’s involvement has been shown to be far off
the mark. During the occupation of Pro-war
journalists used many colorful and creative words
to describe this shredding machine. According to Trevor Kavanagh,
political editor of the British daily
The Sun: British resistance to war changed last year
when we learned how sadist Saddam personally supervised the horrific torture
of Iraqis. Public opinion swung behind Tony Blair as voters learned how
Saddam fed dissidents feet first into industrial shredders. As in the
case of the Kuwaiti incubators being sent to When Ann
Clwyd was asked about her sources of information,
she said that she had interviewed an Iraqi in
northern The
incidents supposedly took place at Abu Ghraib
Prison, an institution made world famous by prisoner torture; torture
perpetrated by the O’Neill
began to track down people who could either corroborate or deny the
legitimacy of shredders being used to kill
prisoners. He found an Iraqi doctor who worked at the hospital attached to
the prison at Abu Ghraib in 1997 and 1998. The
doctor’s job was to attend to those prisoners who had been
executed. He told O’Neill, "We had to
see the dead prisoners to make sure that they were dead. Then we would write
a death certificate for them." This
doctor refuted any stories about the shredding machines. O’Neill asked him if
he ever attended or heard of prisoners who had been
shredded. He replied, "No."
Then, he was asked if any of the other doctors at
the prison spoke of a shredding machine used to execute prisoners. The doctor
responded, "No, no, never. The method of
execution was hanging; as far as I know, that was the only form of execution
used at Abu Ghraib." Another
odd incident occurred that at first corroborated the shredder account, but
quickly was exposed as a ruse. An individual named Kenneth Joseph came forth and said he went to Quickly,
his testimony came under fire. Carol Lipton, an American journalist
investigated his story and said, "none of the human shield groups whom I
contacted had ever heard of Joseph." She noted that not one photo or any
segment of the 14 hours of videotape had ever been shown.
Johann Hari, a pro-war columnist with the
Independent would have liked to have believed
Joseph’s account, but, after investigation, he could not. Hari
said Joseph "was probably a bullshitter." With
pressure on her to show proof of the shredders, Clwyd, on The
Nayirah story about the dead Kuwaiti babies and the shredder fable used
similar methods to create comparable results. Both used lies to pursue an
agenda, an agenda that led to two invasions of The
difference in the stories is that no one had to pay $12 million for a public
relations firm to concoct the shredder story. An unwitting dupe used the word
of one anonymous witness and the account of one probable
"bullshitter" to galvanize the opinions of millions. To anyone
who would still believe the shredder story today, one underlying factor
should be proof enough that it never occurred. If there was a shredder, the Ann
Clwyd put forth
many outrageous lies about the human shredding machine. Even when the lies
were uncovered, she still lied. Today,
she has an unchallenged reputation of being a
person with high moral values. She
gives speeches all over the world about morals. In reality, she has agendas
and she lets no minor aspects, such as the truth, get in the way of her
actions. The guy she falsely accused of using human shredding machines
was murdered and Clwyd travels the world under the guise of being a heroine
whose ambition is to rid the world of inhumanity. Unfortunately, she has
contributed to the rise, not the diminishment, of inhumanity in the world. Article nr. 35343
sent on www.uruknet.info?p=35343 Link:
www.malcomlagauche.com/id1.html http://www.wakeupfromyourslumber.com/node/3052 Is truth a victim of the war on terror? Have the media become too soft
since 11 September? ▐ 2002 - Is truth a victim of the war on terror? Have
the media become too soft since 11 September? Dan Rather of CBS says
that fear of offending the politicians "keeps journalists from asking
the toughest of the tough questions". He adds that journalists are
finding it extremely difficult to verify information provided by the US
Government. "There has never been an American war, small or large, in
which access has been so limited as this one." Rather
is also critical of "Milatainment" - entertainment programs about
the military, which are produced in conjunction with the Department of
Defence. ◘ |