Last March 13-16 some 250 American veterans of the Iraq and Afghan occupations gathered at the National Labor College in Silver Spring, MD for the “Winter Soldier – Iraq and Afghanistan” conference, a replica of a similar event which took place in Detroit in 1971, during the Vietnam War. This recent weekend was devoted to the Iraq and Afghanistan veterans’ first-hand testimonies regarding the events which they both witnessed and participated in during their tours of duty in those two countries, events which included abuses and atrocities from the destruction of homes to the cold-blooded murder of innocent civilians.
What seems remarkable to me in all of this is not that there were U.S. abuses, even atrocities, in Iraq. We suspected that all along. What boggles the mind is that this mass confession by more than 200 American veterans, which took place in Silver Spring, MD, not 25 miles up Georgia Ave. NW from Washington DC, received virtually no coverage in the American mainstream press. It’s as if the “normal” media, the papers that most people read, the TV news programs that most people watch, had universally boycotted this uncomfortable news event. Because a group of American soldiers, “our boys,” sitting in front of cameras and microphones recounting first-hand experiences of cold-blooded murder of Iraqi civilians, however uncomfortable, is certainly news. But CNN was not there, nor ABC, nor NBC. In order for American citizens to learn about these events they had to read reports from the alternate Internet news websites such as alternet.org, truthout.com, Democracy Now, The Real News, or Indy Media, or through the coverage of foreign news organizations who sent teams to Maryland to cover the event. Read more »
Filed under: Iraq, US media, United States, gringos, politics, sources | Tagged: NY Times, The Guardian, The Real News, Iraq, Afghanistan, our boys, Alternet, Truthout, Democracy Now, Indy Media, Winter Soldier, occupation, American mainstrr, American mainstream media, information blackout, media blackout | Leave a Comment »