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Ian McColgin
09-18-2007, 03:06 AM
Here's another point of view. I for one am glad that Al Jazeera is at least trying. And better than anything Murdoch has to offer.


Published on Monday, September 17, 2007 by CommonDreams.org
‘Mission Al Jazeera’: From US Marine Officer To Foreign Correspondent

by Olga Bonfiglio

A review of Josh Rushing’s book Mission Al-Jazeera:Build a Bridge, Seek the Truth, Change the World

Why is a 14-year veteran U.S. Marine officer, a Texan, working for Al Jazeera, the so-called terrorist network? Al Jazeera is not the mouthpiece of Al Qaeda, as U.S. propaganda claims. It is the only nongovernmental 24-hour news network to reach the Arab world, and its cutting-edge technology allows it to be viewed by 100 million people all over the world, which means that it is aired mostly to a non-Arabic audience.

Al Jazeera English (www.-aljazeera.net/English), first launched on Nov. 15, 2006, is viewed by people who can speak English as their first, second or third language. The network is very popular in Europe but not widely available in the United States, except on the Internet.

Al Jazeera does not worry about its news content being “fair and balanced” as much as it tries to “speak truth to power.” In other words, the network seeks to remake the international news paradigm by presenting stories from the perspective of the developing world, the poor countries, instead of from the perspective of the wealthy nations only, as the BBC does. Josh Rushing (a reporter for Al Jazeera who now lives in Washington, D.C.) likens Al Jazeera to “David standing up to the Goliath of the Western world.”

Al Jazeera also takes on controversial issues that most of its viewers have not heard about-including homosexuality, women’s rights and critiques of the Koran and policy initiatives in the Middle East. It invites Israelis to speak more than any other network in the world outside of Israel. The network is not without its critics-from all sides of the political spectrum-but it appreciates such assessments as a validation of its credibility.

The network was created and is supported by Sheikh Hamad bin Khalifa Al Thani, emir of Qatar. Located on a small peninsula on the northeastern coast of Saudi Arabia (population 841,000) Qatar is one of the most liberal countries of the Arab world. The emir is one of the richest men, too, and he is trying to win the power game against his rival, Saudi Arabia, through Al Jazeera. He also played the power card by giving the Americans permission to build a base in Qatar for the U.S. Central Command.

How did Rushing become a reporter for Al Jazeera? After finishing high school, Rushing enlisted in the Marines and then earned his bachelor’s degree from the University of Texas in classical civilization and ancient history. He subsequently served as a Hollywood military movie consultant and also as a consultant for the television show “JAG.”

Before the war in Iraq began, Rushing, then a lieutenant, was assigned to the headquarters of CentCom, in Doha, Qatar. CentCom is responsible for all military matters in the region from Sudan to Kazakhstan, including Iraq, Afghanistan and Iran. A curious fellow, Rushing excitedly took on his task as media spokesman by studying Arabic as well as the culture of the Middle East. This work helped him to form relationships with journalists from Al Jazeera, one of several news outlets he had been assigned to serve.

It was not long, however, before he realized that the military had not planned its media strategy for the war. Worse yet, the military did not know much about Al Jazeera or the negative sentiments against the United States that pervaded the region.

“Al Jazeera offered us a chance to engage the ideologies that fueled 9/11,” said Rushing, who tried to convince senior officers to pay attention to Al Jazeera in order to convey America’s purpose in the region and the larger war on terrorism. His ideas for “building this information bridge” were not only brushed aside; he was even called a traitor. Eventually Rushing also found out that the military would process news from Iraq through the Bush administration’s political handlers, who pursued a “public relations” effort.

Public affairs and public relations are vastly different, Rushing explains. Public affairs is designed to inform the public about what is going on, while public relations explains the reasoning behind the decisions. P.R. is akin to propaganda. So instead of being the “constitutional watch dog” that he had been trained to be, Rushing was pressed to be a P.R. flack “promoting the whims of politicians.” And while he claims he was never directly ordered to lie, it was clear to him that he was expected to follow a script.

Rushing’s brief service in the war took an unexpected turn after he inadvertently and unknowingly became the main character in an independent documentary called “Control Room,” which reports how the United States was perceived internationally in its war with Iraq. Although Rushing at first believed in the cause of the war and that it could serve a greater good, the film portrays him as a changed marine with a conscience. He speaks about his empathy for dead Iraqis, his view of the war and his growing skepticism when he learned that the world saw America’s action in Iraq as “naked aggression.”

His appearance in “Control Room” did not win him any favors with the Pentagon, and he-and his wife-were silenced from speaking to the press. Once the film became more popular and he more famous, Rushing understood that his career with the Marines was over, so in August 2004 he resigned his commission. Later the opportunity to work for Al Jazeera opened up as a consequence of his appearance in the film.

Rushing’s goal in working for Al Jazeera is to help Americans discover the Middle Eastern point of view, especially since the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, proved that the United States could no longer afford to isolate itself from the rest of the world. He says that America-and its leaders-must realize that other people’s perceptions of our country matter, especially since we are a global political and economic power; and he confesses that he is “dumbfounded” that most Americans still are neither interested in nor knowledgeable about the Arab world.

This book will be an eye-opener for readers, as they watch a gung-ho marine stationed at the command center of a war being transformed into a correspondent for Al Jazeera. It reads quickly and clearly and provides yet another eyewitness testimony about how the war in Iraq has been waged.

# # #

Olga Bonfiglio is a professor at Kalamazoo College in Kalamazoo, Michigan, and author of Heroes of a Different Stripe: How One Town Responded to the War in Iraq. She has written for several national magazines on the subjects of social justice and religion. Her website is www.OlgaBonfiglio.com. Contact her at olgabonfiglio@yahoo.com.

JimD
09-18-2007, 03:35 AM
I read the Al Jazeera website a couple times a week. There's nothing radical about it. If anyone thinks 'remaking the international news paradigm' should mean more news and less Britney Spears then, dear reader, you might like to give it a try.

LeeG
09-18-2007, 05:55 AM
Last week AlJazeera English did a couple programs on the nature of the Al Anbar insurgency and the sheik Abu Risha,,before he was killed.

I tried to use it on another forum that is a bit more blue collar than this one and it was dismissed out of hand. The average American is not the intended customer. BBC is foreign enough. Having middle eastern or even an American associated with a Middle eastern network is like a talking chicken, it doesn't compute.

re. Josh Rushing, his book is a quick read and worth it. I was surprised how little material the documentary The Control Room was based on filming Rushing. I think it had a change of producer half way through or change of focus once when the filming was done. Either way it's an incredible film.

Andrew Craig-Bennett
09-18-2007, 06:00 AM
David Frost works for Al-Jazeera; I wonder if blue collar Americans remember him?

LeeG
09-18-2007, 06:07 AM
One more reason to suspect the foreigners, they converted David Frost. Merv Griffin could be next.

JimD
09-18-2007, 06:09 AM
David Frost works for Al-Jazeera; I wonder if blue collar Americans remember him?

From the Washington Post, about 2 years ago http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/10/07/AR2005100702191.html :


"I love new frontiers and new challenges," Frost, 66, said yesterday from London. He said the new network, al-Jazeera International, has promised him "total editorial control" and that he had checked out the company with U.S. and British government officials, "all of which gave al-Jazeera a clean bill of health in terms of its lack of links with terrorism."http://media.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/photo/largerPhoto/images/enlarge_tab.gif (http://javascript<b></b>:void(popitup('http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/photo/postphotos/orb/asection/2005-10-08/index.html?imgId=PH2005100702199&imgUrl=/photo/2005/10/07/PH2005100702199.html',650,850)))
http://media.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/photo/2005/10/07/PH2005100702196.jpg (http://javascript<b></b>:void(popitup('http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/photo/postphotos/orb/asection/2005-10-08/index.html?imgId=PH2005100702199&imgUrl=/photo/2005/10/07/PH2005100702199.html',650,850))) David Frost, interviewing Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice for the BBC in February, will host a weekly interview show for al-Jazeera International. (By Jeff Overs -- Bbc Via Reuters)





But the Bush administration has repeatedly denounced al-Jazeera. Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld has accused the Qatar-based operation of promoting terrorism and "vicious lies" and has banned its reporters from Iraq. The State Department has complained about "false" and "inflammatory" reporting.
Said Frost, who will host a weekly interview program: "For all the people who think it's anti-American, there are various countries in the Middle East who think it's too pro-Western.

And if Rummy said that about them you know it must be true.

ishmael
09-18-2007, 06:20 AM
An interesting shift in the last sixty years. A different war, a different world.

I've not looked at Al Jazeera much, but I don't have any inherent objection. I hope they are reporting the wacko Muslim religionists sawing off journalist's heads, as much as they are US kids stuck in a hard place and doing wrong things at times.

LeeG
09-18-2007, 07:46 AM
you mean before you were born? No kidding.

Your comment is odd, do you think a news organization wouldn't report a journalists beheading?

ishmael
09-18-2007, 07:54 AM
"do you think a news organization wouldn't report a journalists beheading?"

Surely. Do they?

JimD
09-18-2007, 08:14 AM
"do you think a news organization wouldn't report a journalists beheading?"

Surely. Do they?

Yes, of course. It was big news. A little googling will turn up plenty of old Al Jazeera reports. Here's one: http://english.aljazeera.net/English/archive/archive?ArchiveId=3678

Ian McColgin
09-18-2007, 08:15 AM
Ish, did you note in the article how radical Islamists dislike Al Jazeera? Bah-da-bing.

The question of integrity would be in better faith were ill informed Westerners to ask if Fox news reports how many cluster bombs were dropped in Palestine, how many cholera victems have resulted from the US destruction of Iraqi water systems, etc. etc.

Try scanning it for yourself. Al Jazeera makes errors like any news outfit does. Just as the NYT and WSJ recited lies about WMD, because their sourses lied to them, so too Al Jazeera reports what various Mid East leaders, including Bin Laden, say - which is not always the fullest possible truth.

Al Jazeera is a wonderful way of gaining alternative items, still often needing further verification, that undercut and dispute the US point of view. And despite it's problems, it really is now understood as more generally creditable than Murdoch's propaganda machine. But that's damning with feint praise. Al Jazeera has the higher goal to inform people because information is a liberating power.

jack grebe
09-18-2007, 08:49 AM
One more reason to suspect the foreigners, they converted David Frost. Merv Griffin could be next.
I don't think so, Merv is dead:D

LeeG
09-18-2007, 09:23 AM
see, they got to him

LeeG
09-18-2007, 09:26 AM
"do you think a news organization wouldn't report a journalists beheading?"

Surely. Do they?

don't call me surely. Do you have factual basis to support your belief or is it simply a rhetorical question based on not listening to Al Jazeera?

ishmael
09-18-2007, 09:34 AM
I'm not propounding any belief. Just asking.