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AIM Report: Al-Jazeera and the Saddam Oil Bribes - June A


AIM Report  |  May 25, 2005


If the U.S. loses the battle for freedom in Iraq, some of the responsibility will fall on al-Jazeera.

By Daveed Gartenstein-Ross*

In early January, I was at Radio America's Washington, D.C. studios, about to give an interview on Mahmoud Abbas's impending election as Palestinian prime minister. Before the show, as I was chatting with host Blanquita Cullum about the issues of the day, she handed me a rather remarkable e-mail. It was a press release from the Foundation for the Defense of Democracies about an upcoming program that would expose financial links between Saddam Hussein's Ba'athist regime and a number of Arab press figures.

This exposé was to air on al-Hurra, the U.S.-funded Arabic satellite network launched in February 2004 that today reaches 120 million people in 22 countries. Walid Phares, a senior fellow at the Foundation for the Defense of Democracies, served as al-Hurra's reviewing expert for the program. One intriguing detail I gleaned from the press release was that al-Hurra's show would air newly-discovered tapes of Saddam's sadistic son Uday meeting with Arab media figures who appeared to be taking bribes from the Ba'athist regime, including a managing director of the Qatar-based al-Jazeera network.

A few months earlier, I'd seen a dramatic example of how ethical lapses in the media could capture the American public's attention, as Rathergate became a household word during the 2004 election campaign. Thus, I naturally expected that financial ties between Saddam Hussein and Arab media outlets like al-Jazeera would become a similarly big story. I was, in fact, so confident in this assumption that I didn't think it was worth my time to write about the al-Hurra tapes.

The Al-Hurra Tapes

But once I realized how far below the radar this news had fallen, I began to investigate the story behind the al-Hurra tapes in earnest. The resulting article, "Uday's Oil-for-News Program," which I co-wrote with my friend Erick Stakelbeck, was published in the May 16 issue of the Weekly Standard.

The Weekly Standard piece discusses the al-Hurra tapes in depth. Some passages from my article in the Standard are reprinted here, as the facts are worth knowing. Indeed, al-Hurra's exposé is nothing short of explosive, and the footage it aired of Uday's meetings speaks volumes. This footage had been recorded by Saddam's regime itself, a standard practice for the megalomaniacal Ba'athists.

One Arab media figure caught on tape meeting with Uday is former al-Jazeera managing director Mohammed Jassem al-Ali. Al-Hurra's documentary explains how, in the context of current allegations that have been rocking al-Jazeera, this meeting is significant. The documentary notes the commonality of views that al-Jazeera and Saddam's government held for eight years, since the station's inception, and asks, "[H]ow can we account for this chance meeting-of-the-minds lasting this long? . . . The elements of the 'coincidence' premise began to crumble immediately following the fall of the regime in Iraq and the ground started to shake under the feet of al-Jazeera's board of directors as news of financial scandals, shady dealings and secret communications with the fallen regime started to emerge."

Al-Hurra broadcast footage of a March 13, 2000, meeting between Uday and al-Ali while al-Ali still served as al-Jazeera's managing director that can only leave one with the impression that al-Ali was part of Saddam's web of corruption. Their conversation makes clear that they'd met before, and that al-Jazeera had complied with the directives that Uday had previously offered. Referring to how his advice had affected change at al-Jazeera, Uday said, "During your last visit here along with your colleagues we talked about a number of issues and it does appear that you indeed were listening to what I was saying since changes took place and new faces came onboard such as that lad, Mansour." That "lad" is Ahmed Mansour, an al-Jazeera journalist who has been criticized for pro-insurgency reporting.

Uday went on to mention that some people had relayed to him al-Ali's comment that al-Jazeera is the station of Iraq's Ba'athist regime "both literally and figuratively." Al-Ali never denied this remark; instead, he provided Uday every reason to believe that it was true. Al-Ali, for example, gave Uday his "unequivocal thanks for the precious trust that you put in me so that I was able to play a role at al-Jazeera, indeed I can even say that without your kind cooperation with us and your support my mission would have failed." Al-Ali also told Uday, in reference to al-Jazeera's mission to serve Iraq, that "the lion's share of the credit goes to you personally sir, yet we would be remiss not to mention our colleagues here who constantly strive to implement your directive."

Another of Uday's meetings that was caught on tape was with Hamida Naanaa, a Syrian writer based in France who was known for her pro-Saddam slant and who al-Hurra alleges to have received coupons from the oil-for-food program. Al-Hurra states that Saddam's regime would hand out two types of oil coupons to Arab media figures: Silver coupons which entitle their holders to a maximum of 9-million barrels of oil, and Gold coupons which are good for even more. According to al-Hurra, Naanaa had received a Gold coupon.

Footage of the meeting between Naanaa and Uday reveals that bribery evidently yields its privileges. After Uday greets Naanaa, she gushes, "Hello to you, the dear son of the dear and the precious son of the precious. Hello, is kissing allowed?" And in the course of their conversation, an incredibly sycophantic Naanaa refers to a "beautiful and sweet letter" that Uday had written to her, telling him, "I was so always looking forward to seeing you." She also bemoans the attempted assassination of Uday in 1996, saying, "[W]e got worried about you, you know. . . . I just lost it when I heard the news."

Although al-Jazeera initially claimed that the footage aired by al-Hurra was part of a conspiracy against it, al-Jazeera never denied its authenticity. In fact, it appears that al-Jazeera attempted to preempt the issue altogether by firing al-Ali shortly after the Ba'athist regime collapsed, without providing any reason for his termination. 

Implications

The information unearthed by al-Hurra matters because certain segments of the Arab media—al-Jazeera in particular—have been unstinting opponents of U.S. interests in the Middle East, and hold tremendous sway over public opinion in the region. While al-Jazeera had once unflinchingly supported Saddam's regime, its coverage seamlessly transitioned to support for the insurgency. As Walid Phares told me, "Al-Jazeera cooperated with the regime which was the target of the international coalition. Even after the regime was gone, they continued to support the jihadists." Phares even dubbed al-Jazeera "Jihad TV" in an article for National Review Online that discusses how the network transparently attempted to manipulate American opinion against the war by airing footage of dead American soldiers as well as the interrogation of American prisoners of war.

Phares believes that the al-Hurra tapes should serve as a "watershed." That is, the tapes expose the kind of backroom dealings in which the network has been engaged. The newly-aired footage also provides an opportunity for reflection on representations of the "Arab street" seen on al-Jazeera and other regional media. After all, certain segments of the same media that assured us that Arab opinion uniformly opposed the U.S. invasion of Iraq also apparently served as paid shills for Saddam's regime.

Moreover, Phares intimates that the dealings exposed by al-Hurra may only be the tip of the iceberg. "How many other regimes have been paying this media?," he asks. Mouafac Harb, al-Hurra's director of network news and executive vice president, claims that it is a "widespread practice" for Arab leaders to intimidate or bribe leaders of media outlets, or even individual journalists.

It is important that we learn the right lessons from these revelations. The first and most important lesson is that the Arab press matters. The al-Hurra tapes were for a long time virtually unknown in the United States not because a biased U.S. media was intent on covering up the story, but because we are still too parochial in our understanding of how the media affect us. Even though it is not on our screens every day, al-Jazeera has a tremendous effect on U.S. interests and, given its anti-U.S. agitation, part of the price may be paid in American lives.

A second lesson is the need for an unbiased Arab media. Both Reuel Marc Gerecht and Steven A. Cook have called for the creation of an Arab or Iraqi C-SPAN, a station that broadcasts unfiltered political debate to the Arab world. By broadcasting coverage of democracy's inner workings, such a station would be a genuine and valuable educational tool. Harb, on the other hand, thinks we should focus on creating a more vibrant media market in the Middle East. He states that the lack of a real media industry in the region leaves management and journalists open to the lure of alternative revenue streams, such as bribery.

Ultimately, it is in the U.S. interest for media free of the shackles of government manipulation and financial corruption to be enjoyed the world over.

*Daveed Gartenstein-Ross is an international counterterrorism consultant, and also works as an attorney at the law firm of Boies, Schiller & Flexner.

THE FRIENDS OF AL-JAZEERA

The Arab satellite network al-Jazeera gained international notoriety after 9/11 when it aired taped messages from Osama bin Laden and other al-Qaeda henchmen. Dubbed the CNN of the Arab world, it is now going global, having announced plans to be a "World Channel for the 21st Century," including an international channel in English.

Writing in Salon.com, Corey Pein reports that the management team of the new "Al-Jazeera International" includes former executives from the public relations firm Hill & Knowlton, CNBC and the BBC. He says the managing director, Nigel Parsons, previously worked at the television arm of the Associated Press.

As Daveed Gartenstein-Ross's article shows, al-Jazeera's coverage has been compromised and shaped by outside agents with an anti-American agenda. The firing of its general manager, Mohammed Jassem al-Ali, was significant. Al-Ali had set up and run the network since its inception in 1996. He had previously worked for Qatar television; al-Jazeera is based in Qatar, but repeatedly aired exclusive footage provided by Iraqi officials during the war. The firing came after the London Sunday Times reported that Iraqi intelligence agents had successfully penetrated the network and converted it into an "instrument" of the Iraqi regime. Al-Jazeera spokesmen had denied any connection between the reports and al-Ali's removal. Now we know that al-Ali was caught on tape with Iraqi officials. 

The Times obtained documents from top secret Iraqi intelligence files that cover the period from August 1999 to November 2002. The files show three Iraqi agents worked inside the network. Their mission was to secure favorable coverage by the network for the Saddam Hussein regime.

The news of al-Ali's dismissal received widespread coverage in Europe and throughout the Middle East. In the U.S., wire-service stories were picked up by a number of local dailies and the Fox News Channel ran a brief piece. But the mainstream media ignored the story altogether. Now we have the cover-up of the compromising tapes.  

The truth must be told. If the U.S. loses the battle for freedom in Iraq, some of the responsibility will fall on al-Jazeera.

Dorrance Smith, a former executive producer at ABC's "Nightline," wrote a column for the Wall Street Journal noting that, "Osama bin Laden, Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, and al Qaeda have a partner in al-Jazeera and, by extension, most networks in the U.S. This partnership is a powerful tool for the terrorists in the war in Iraq. Figures show that 77% of Iraqis cite TV as their main source of information; 15% cite newspapers. Current estimates are that close to 100% of Iraqis have access to satellite TV, 18% to cell phones, and 8% to the Internet. The battle for Iraqi hearts and minds is being fought over satellite TV. It is a battle today that we are losing badly."

Smith adds, "The collaboration between the terrorists and Al-Jazeera is stronger than ever. While the precise terms of that relationship are virtually unknown, we do know this: Al-Jazeera and the terrorists have a working arrangement that extends beyond a modus vivendi."

At a State Department briefing, Lorne Craner, deputy assistant secretary for democracy and human rights, told reporters that al-Jazeera "is quite different" from news organizations that criticize the war effort. "They go a lot further than 'New Yorker' Magazine or CBS," he said, referring to coverage of alleged abuses of Iraqi prisoners at Abu Ghraib. He said al-Jazeera was guilty of "incitement of violence" against U.S. troops. These statements alarmed a reporter named Ehmed Mekay of Inter Press Service, who wrote a piece complaining that the statements "were the last in a series of high-level U.S. moves to muzzle the TV network, which has so far managed to outpace many U.S. news sources in covering the U.S.-led attack and occupation of Iraq…"

This was an interesting way to put it. How has al-Jazeera managed to "outpace" the U.S. media? Perhaps the answer lies in the network's terrorist ties. Spanish authorities arrested a correspondent for al-Jazeera, Tayseer Allouni, accusing him of having links to al Qaeda. The group called "Friends of Al-Jazeera" has launched a campaign to have him freed. Former CNN producer Danny Schechter is counted among those "friends" and recently reported that he was "a guest of al-Jazeera's first TV production festival" in Qatar to show his film critical of media coverage of the Iraq war.

One of al-Jazeera's most popular programs is a 90-minute hit show called "Religion and Life," which features Sheikh Al-Qaradawi, who promotes suicide bombings and hopes to die by beheading.

Al-Qaradawi is known for penning the theological justification of suicide bombing that appears on the Hamas website. It's therefore not surprising that on March 7, 2003, Al-Qaradawi delivered a sermon on Qatar Television in which he called Hamas the mouthpiece of the Islamic nation and said that groups like Hamas, Hezbollah, Islamic Jihad, Al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigade and Abu-Ali Brigades are not terrorist organizations, but defensive groups which should be praised. "The mujahid becomes a 'human bomb' that blows up at a specific time and place, in the midst of the enemies of Allah and the homeland, leaving them helpless in the face of the brave Shahid." Suicide bombings are "the supreme form of jihad" and are "heroic operations," the cleric maintains. In 1999, Qaradawi was banned from entering the U.S.

Here is a sampling of comments made by the sheikh on "Religion and Life," as provided by the Middle East Research Institute:

• June 19, 2001, al-Jazeera aired a "Religion and Life" show on the Prophet Mohammed as a Jihad Model. Al-Qaradawi stated that Mohammed was the "epitome of religious warriors" and had been ordered by Allah to "fight for religion." About suicide bombing, the sheikh said that act "is not a suicide…He kills the enemy while taking self-risk, similarly to what Muslims did in the past…He wants to scare his enemies, and the religious authorities have permitted this. They said that if he causes the enemy both sorrow and fear of Muslims…then he is permitted to risk himself and even get killed."

The sheikh also issued a fatwa calling for the abduction and killing of American civilians in Iraq. The Middle East Research Institute reported this occurred at a convention held on "Pluralism in Islam" in Cairo in August of 2004.

The sheikh sees himself as on a mission from God, ever since the age of nine when he says "the people of my village gave me the title 'sheikh.'" Al-Qaradawi says he is not afraid of the Mossad, which he claims has threatened to kill him. Even so, the sheikh claims that Allah will grant him "martyrdom [shahada] for His sake and that my life will end by my dying at the hands of the enemies of Islam." According to the London Arabic-language daily, Al-Hayat, the sheikh hopes to die "a virtuous death" which means "that the head would be severed from the body."

What You Can Do

Send the enclosed cards or cards and letters of your own choosing to Donald Graham, head of the Washington Post Company; Barbara Slavin of USA Today, and Senator George Voinovich.


CLIFF'S NOTES
by Cliff Kincaid

DEAR FELLOW MEDIA WATCHDOG:   5/19/05

"NEWSWEEK SPARKS GLOBAL RIOTS WITH ONE PARAGRAPH ON KO-   ran." This was the headline over a London Sunday Times article about what happened when Newsweek magazine published an item by Michael Isikoff and John Barry citing unnamed sources as saying that it had been confirmed that interrogators at the U.S. terrorist detention center at Guantanamo Bay had flushed a copy of the Koran down a toilet. Newsweek has since admitted that the charge was based on unconfirmed information and has apologized to the victims of the riots. Newsweek is owned by the Washington Post Company, headed by Donald E. Graham. We urge you to send the enclosed postcard to him, protesting this outrage. In recent days I have been on the Fox News Channel twice, the "Scarborough Country" show on MSNBC, and the Canadian Broadcasting Company (CBC) to discuss it. I have given over a dozen radio interviews. 

THE RESULT OF PUBLISHING THIS UNVERIFIED ALLEGATION WAS DEATH AND DESTRUCTION throughout the Middle East and a setback to American efforts to win the war in Iraq and spread democracy in the Middle East. At least 16 people were killed and more than 100 wounded "as a wave of anti-American demonstrations swept the Islamic world from the Gaza Strip to the Java Sea, sparked by a single paragraph in a magazine alleging that U.S. military interrogators had desecrated the Koran," as the London Sunday Times put it. However, the key to understanding the global riots was in the third paragraph. It said that while the original report in Newsweek was small, "it was re-broadcast by television networks such as al-Jazeera and al-Arabiya..." Our next AIM Report will examine how this inflammatory allegation has been exploited by the anti-American Islamic radicals.   

NEWSWEEK WAS GROSSLY IRRESPONSIBLE FOR RUNNING THIS CHARGE.  IT COULD SPARK more terrorism against Americans. The controversy also shows how questionable allegations can be used by al-Jazeera to incite anti-American hatred around the world. And that is why this AIM Report on al-Jazeera and its friends is so important. You can reach the author, Daveed Gartenstein-Ross, at:

HERE'S THE TEXT OF THE NEWSWEEK REPORT: "INVESTIGATORS PROBING INTERROGATION abuses at the U.S. detention center at Guantanamo Bay have confirmed some infractions alleged in internal FBI e-mails that surfaced late last year. Among the previously unreported cases, sources tell Newsweek: interrogators, in an attempt to rattle suspects, flushed a Qur'an down a toilet and led a detainee around with a collar and dog leash." Such charges have surfaced in the past, but what made the Newsweek account incendiary was the claim that it had been confirmed by investigators. The Newsweek item was confusing, perhaps deliberately so. The FBI e-mails, in the possession of the ACLU, did not refer to a Koran being flushed down a toilet. The "sources" were supposed to be government officials, who, Newsweek now admits, did not confirm the alleged incident. Newsweek later said the claim was based on one confused anonymous source. The real sources of these charges invariably turn out to be lawyers for the detainees or the detainees themselves. The detainees are terrorists or accused terrorists. In any case, the claims are questionable. In its follow-up story, Newsweek noted that a U.S. military spokesman, Army Col. Brad Blackner, had dismissed the claims as unbelievable. "If you read the Al Qaeda training manual, they are trained to make allegations against the infidels," he said. The Pentagon said there have not been any confirmed accounts of the Koran being flushed down a toilet, and that the only case that comes close involves a detainee who was reported by a guard to be ripping pages out of a Koran and putting them down a toilet to stop it up as a protest.

THE VICIOUS MEDIA-ASSISTED ATTACK ON BUSH U.N. NOMINEE JOHN BOLTON HAS BEEN taken to another extreme. Pornographer Larry Flynt has entered the picture, making inflammatory charges about Bolton's divorce. There is no evidence for anything, but it shows how far the extreme left will go to derail this nomination. AIM uncovered the fact that one of Bolton's accusers, Lynne D. Finney, who accused him of yelling at her 20 years ago, is a specialist in self-hypnosis and "recovered memories" that can turn out to be false. We suggest sending a postcard to Barbara Slavin of USA Today, who publicized this allegation, urging her to apologize to Bolton.
  
OHIO REPUBLICAN SENATOR GEORGE VOINOVICH WAS HAILED IN A MAY 10 WASHINGTON Post story as the "Senator Known for Independence" before he unleashed a vicious personal attack on Bolton at a Foreign Relations Committee hearing. Post reporter Stephen Barr depicted Voinovich as someone critical of Bolton's alleged harsh treatment of government bureaucrats because of the Senator's own concern about the welfare of federal employees. This theme was picked up by the Wall Street Journal's John Harwood, who was on MSNBC saying that Voinovich has an "independent" or "maverick" streak. What he neglected to mention was that Voinovich failed to attend two Foreign Relations Committee hearings on Bolton, and raised his objections in a third committee hearing. The truth, reported Human Events newspaper, was that "Voinovich disgraced himself by failing to do his job as a Senator." At that third hearing, noted the conservative weekly, the Ohio Senator "allowed himself to be bamboozled by Democratic Sen. Joe Biden of Delaware, a notorious blowhard, who read a histrionic anti-Bolton letter from a woman who formerly headed a local chapter of Mothers Opposing Bush." Biden is not only a blowhard but a plagiarist.

THAT WOMAN, MELODY TOWNSEL, DELIVERED WHAT COMMITTEE CHAIRMAN SENATOR Richard Lugar called "one of the most sensationalized accusations" against Bolton—that 11 years ago he chased her around a Moscow hotel throwing things at her. Lugar said that Townsel, under questioning from staff, had backtracked, saying that her original accusation—that he chased her— was not accurate. "Ms. Townsel provided no eyewitnesses to the incidents, which are said to have occurred in public or open areas of the hotel," Lugar said. It was also disclosed that Townsel had a history of plagiarism, dating back to her college days. This was significant because Biden had been forced out of the 1988 presidential race when he was caught plagiarizing a speech from a British politician. This is the woman who wrote the anti-Bolton letter, read by Biden, that caused Voinovich to declare at the third hearing that he wanted more time to examine the anti-Bolton charges. And even though this charge—and the allegation from Finney—were extremely questionable, if not proven false, Voinovich still decided to oppose Bolton. It seems clear that Voinovich was sticking a thumb in the eye of not only Bolton, but the President who nominated him, because he enjoyed the rave reviews from the Post and other liberal media about being an "independent" thinker. The record shows that he didn't do enough thinking, and didn't take the nomination seriously when it came before the committee on which he served. This is the way Washington sometimes works. Human Events reports that Voinovich was also "lavishly praised" for his anti-Bolton stance "by liberal editorial pages in his home state" of Ohio and elsewhere. We suggest dropping the enclosed postcard to Senator Voinovich, urging him to do his job and quit pandering to the liberal press. This case shows how the liberal media can manipulate political events by feeding the egos of Washington politicians. The old media have demonstrated their clout in the Bolton and Newsweek cases. This is why Accuracy in Media is needed now more than ever.   

For Accuracy in Media
Cliff Kincaid
Editor


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