Source: LRC
Michael S. Rozeff
Michael S. Rozeff
The best way to get news is to read actual testimony, reports,
transcripts, and speeches. The worst way is to read headlines, unless
you like to be subjected to distortions and misunderstandings. In
between, one can read news reports and then blogs, comments, and
editorials about news reports.
No matter what one reads, the next step is to think about the matter
and place it in perspective based on important factors, past events,
past news, past communications, history, and so on.
Case in point: the testimony of Director of National Intelligence James R. Clapper today. See here for his actual testimony
in written form. Most important is that he said clearly that Iran is
not building nuclear weapons and CIA chief David Petraeus said the same
thing, and the latter said he had met with the head of Mossad to convey
his view. This portion of his testimony was not reported in the Boston Herald
article. Instead, it pieced together two unconnected parts of his
testimony and left the impression that Iran was making enriched uranium
in order to conduct an attack on the U.S.!! See here. This is disgracefully poor reporting and utterly misleading.
Google provides headlines. Many of
these, that I will not cite, are disgraceful too. They leave the
impression that Iran has bolstered its threats unilaterally and
is suddenly more willing to attack the continental U.S. This is not at
all what Clapper said. He said that Iran is "now more willing to conduct
an attack on the United States" in the case of a "real or perceived"
threat by the U.S. to the regime. In other words, an attack on them or a
U.S. threat on them that they considered deadly serious might possibly
be met by their attacks on American soil. That's his opinion, but even
that doesn't get reported accurately. For example, the Washington Post
says, according to Google, "launch terrorist attacks inside the United
States in response to perceived threats from America and its allies..."
Notice that they added the word "terrorist" to Clapper's testimony and
they left out the part about a real threat. This is really pitiful and biased reporting.
In fact, Clapper's words are heavily hedged in three ways that the
reporting doesn't make clear. First, he said that it was the plot to
assassinate the Saudi ambassador that is what is indicating to the CIA
that "some Iranian officials" are more willing to attack the U.S. in
response to real and perceived threats on their regime. OK, but that
plot is alleged and the evidence for Iran's involvement is vanishing. It
was so far-fetched and so clownish, whom does it convince? Not me at
any rate. Maybe the bright boys in the CIA. Clapper seems to be reaching
for a convincing story. Second, other parts of his testimony make clear
that there are big divisions and conflicts among Iran's rulers. That is
why he hedged by saying "some Iranian officials." This is hardly a
ringing statement that says that Iran has decided to target the U.S.
Third, he says that the top leader "probably" has changed his calculus.
How does he know that? It too is hedged language.
In reality, the two short paragraphs on the threat from Iran do not
deserve consideration even as major news and they do not deserve scare
headlines, much less misinterpreted headlines or biased news reports.
There have been numerous threats coming out of Iran about what damage it
might choose to inflict if attacked. Their language has waxed as the
U.S. threats have waxed. It doesn't take a CIA with a huge budget to
figure out what's going on. The plot to assassinate the Saudi
ambassador, such as it was, is actually peripheral to the ongoing threat
dynamic.
Fox News uses the phrase "emboldened Iran" when it says it
is "more willing" to attack the U.S. Where do they get "emboldened"
from? That too makes it sound as if Iran, for some unknown reason or
unilaterally, has taken upon itself to make the U.S. a target.
Clapper testified that Iran was a cyber threat, along with Russia and
China. (Foreign hacking and spying is up on many fronts from many
places also.) He didn't explain why it had risen as a threat. It would
be well to ask why Iran has become a cyber threat. Might it not
be because it is under attack by the U.S. in many ways and that looking
at cyber methods of response is a sensible thing for it to do? Dropping
context and history quickly leads to flawed understanding.