Why Is US Media Blacking
Out The New Documentary Of
US War Crimes In Afghanistan?

By Kate Randall
WSWS.org
6-22-2
'Massacre   in Mazar,' a documentary by Irish director Jamie Doran, was screened last   week before select audiences in Europe. The film documents events following   the November 21, 2001 fall of Konduz, the Taliban's last stronghold in   northern Afghanistan. [See: 'Afghan war documentary charges US with mass   killings']
The   film presents powerful testimony from Afghan witnesses that US troops   collaborated in the torture and killings of thousands of Taliban prisoners   near Mazar-i-Sharif. The film, which has prompted demands for an   international commission of inquiry on war crimes in Afghanistan, received   widespread coverage in the European press, with major stories in the   Guardian, Le Monde, Suddeutsche Zeitung, Die Welt and other papers.
This   major story, however, has received virtually no coverage in US newspapers or   on network or cable television. Aside from stories on some alternative   Internet publications, and a June 16 article on Salon.com, the story has been   essentially blacked out in the US.
A   search for news about the documentary in the major dailiesóincluding the New   York Times, the Washington Post, the Los Angeles Times, the Chicago Tribune,   the Boston Globe and the Miami Herald - turned up empty. Web sites for ABC,   NBC, CBS, Fox News and CNN have likewise carried nothing on the film.
Repeated   telephone calls by the WSWS to these news sources, inquiring why they have   failed to cover the story, went unanswered. How is possible that not a single   major US media outlet chose to cover such an important news event? There is   no innocent or journalistic explanation.
This   wholesale political censorship cannot be justified on the basis that Massacre   in Mazar 'or the events it depicts' are not 'newsworthy.' The two screenings   of the documentary in Germany prompted calls by a number of European   parliamentary deputies and human rights advocates for an independent   investigation into the atrocities exposed by the film. Calling for an   inquiry, prominent human rights lawyer Andrew McEntee commented it was 'clear   there is prima facie evidence of serious war crimes committed not just under   international law, but also under the laws of the United States itself.'
The   film includes scenes of the aftermath of the massacre of hundreds of Taliban   fighters who were taken prisoner outside Mazar-i-Sharif, at the Qala-i-Jangi   prison, showing captured troops who were apparently shot with their hands   tied. The filmmaker also interviewed eyewitnesses, who describe the torture   and slaughter of 3,000 prisoners, who were allegedly driven to a desert area   and massacred. These witnesses - who were not paid - have offered to provide   testimony before any independent investigation into the events.
The   film footage is so damning that both the Pentagon and the US State Department   were compelled within days to issue statements denying the allegations of US   complicity in the torture and murder of POWs, which are powerfully pointed to   by the film. If the US government is so concerned over the implications of   what the documentary exposes, why has the US media chosen not to report on   it?
Since   September 11, this same print and broadcast media has consistently toed the   Bush administrationís propaganda line; and there has been no shortage of   coverage on the Afghan war. The governmentís flouting of international law   and the Geneva Conventions in the treatment of Afghan war prisoners at the   Guantanamo Bay naval base in Cuba and proposals for secret military tribunals   have gone virtually unchallenged. Assaults on the democratic rights of both   immigrants and citizensóincluding secret detentions and suppression of   protestsóhave been reported as legitimate aspects of the government's 'war on   terrorism.'
One   topic that has received short shrift in the American press is the civilian   death toll in the US air raids in Afghanistan, which human rights advocates   estimate at more than 3,500, not including the thousands facing death from   starvation and displacement.
The   well-known motto of the New York Times, 'All the news that's fit to print,'   increasingly masks a practice by that newspaper and all the media of choosing   to print only that which fits the war propaganda needs of the Pentagon and   the White House.
The   refusal of the press to report on the charges of US complicity in the torture   and mass killings in Afghanistan shown in Massacre in Mazar - or even to   acknowledge the existence of the film - serves one purpose: to keep the   American people in the dark about the Bush administrationís military actions   and human rights violations.
The   media's silence makes it complicit in what are horrific war crimes. It also   provides an even more sinister service to the Bush administration. Filmmaker   Jamie Doran decided to release a rough cut of his documentary before final   editing because he feared Afghan forces were preparing to destroy evidence of   the mass killings, scattering the remains of the victims. Self-censorship by   the US media only facilitates such a grisly cover-up.
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