As Gaza is savaged again, understanding the BBC’s role requires more than sentiment
We must understand the BBC as a pre-eminent state propagandist and censor by omission, says John Pilger.
By John Pilger Published 22 November 2012
In Peter Watkins’s remarkable BBC film The War Game, which foresaw the aftermath of an attack on London with a one-megaton nuclear bomb, the narrator says: “On almost the entire subject of thermonuclear weapons, there is now practically total silence in the press, official publications and on TV. Is there hope to be found in this silence?”
The truth of this statement was equal to its irony. On 24 November 1965, the BBC banned The War Game as “too horrifying for the medium of broadcasting”. This was false. The real reason was spelled out by the chairman of the BBC board of governors, Lord Normanbrook, in a secret letter to the then cabinet secretary, Sir Burke Trend.
“[The War Game] is not designed as propaganda,” he wrote: “it is intended as a purely factual statement and is based on careful research into official material . . . But . . . the showing of the film on television might have a significant effect on public attitudes towards the policy of the nuclear deterrent.” Following a screening attended by senior Whitehall officials, the film was banned because it told an intolerable truth. Sixteen years later, the then BBC director general, Sir Ian Trethowan, renewed the ban, saying that he feared for the film’s effect on people of “limited mental intelligence”.
Watkins’s brilliant work was eventually shown in 1985 to a late-night minority audience. It was introduced by Ludovic Kennedy, who repeated the official lie.
Myth-making
What happened to The War Game is the function of the state broadcaster as a cornerstone of Britain’s ruling elite. With its outstanding production values and often fine popular drama, natural history and sporting coverage, the BBC enjoys wide appeal and, according to its managers and beneficiaries, “trust”. This “trust” may well apply to Springwatch and David Attenborough, but there is no demonstrable basis for it in much of the news and so-called current affairs that claim to make sense of the world, especially the machinations of rampant power. There are honourable individual exceptions, but watch how these are tamed the longer they remain in the institution: a “defenestration”, as one senior BBC journalist describes it.
This is notably true in the Middle East, where the Israeli state has successfully intimidated the BBC into presenting the theft of Palestinian land and the caging, torturing and killing of its people as an intractable “conflict” between equals. Standing in the rubble from an Israeli attack, one BBC journalist went further and referred to “Gaza’s strong culture of martyrdom”. So great is the distortion that young viewers of BBC news have told Glasgow University researchers they are left with the impression that Palestinians are the illegal colonisers of their own country. The current BBC “coverage” of Gaza’s genocidal misery reinforces this.
The BBC’s “Reithian values” of impartiality and independence are almost scriptural in their mythology. Soon after the corporation was founded in the 1920s by John Reith, Britain was consumed by the General Strike. “Reith emerged as a kind of hero . . .” wrote the historian Patrick Renshaw, “who had acted responsibly and yet preserved the precious independence of the BBC. But though this myth persisted it has little basis in reality . . . the price of that independence was in fact doing what the government wanted done . . . [Prime Minister Stanley] Baldwin . . . saw that if they preserved the BBC’s independence, it would be much easier for them to get their way on important questions and use it to broadcast government propaganda.”
Unknown to the public, Reith had been the prime minister’s unofficial speechwriter. Ambitious to become viceroy of India, he ensured that the BBC became an evangelist of imperial power, with “impartiality” duly suspended whenever that power was threatened. This “principle” has applied to the BBC’s coverage of every colonial war of the modern era: from the covered-up genocide in Indonesia and suppression of eyewitness film of the US bombing of North Vietnam to support for the illegal Blair/Bush invasion of Iraq in 2003 and the now-familiar echo of Israeli propaganda whenever that lawless state abuses its captive, Palestine. This reached a nadir in 2009 when, terrified of Israeli reaction, the BBC refused to broadcast a combined charities appeal for the people of Gaza, half of whom are children, most of them malnourished and traumatised by Israeli attacks.
To the BBC, Gaza – like the 2010 humanitarian relief flotilla murderously attacked by Israeli commandos – largely presents a public relations problem for Israel and its US sponsor.
Corporate managers
Mark Regev, Israel’s chief propagandist, seemingly has a place reserved for him near the top of BBC news bulletins. In 2010, when I pointed this out to Fran Unsworth, elevated this month to director of news, she strongly objected to the description of Regev as a propagandist, adding: “It’s not our job to go out and appoint the Palestinian spokesperson.”
With similar logic, Unsworth’s immediate predecessor, Helen Boaden, described the corporation’s reporting of the criminal carnage in Iraq as based on the “fact that Bush has tried to export democracy and human rights to Iraq”. To prove her point, Boaden supplied six A4 pages of verifiable lies from Bush and Tony Blair. That ventriloquism is not journalism seemed not to occur to either woman.
What has changed at the BBC is the arrival of the cult of the corporate manager. George Entwistle, the briefly appointed director general who said he knew nothing about Newsnight’s false accusations of child abuse against a Tory grandee, is to receive £450,000 of public money for agreeing to resign before he was sacked: the corporate way. This and the preceding Jimmy Savile scandal might have been scripted for the Daily Mail and the Murdoch press, whose self-serving hatred of the BBC has long provided the corporation with its façade as the “embattled” guardian of “public-service broadcasting”. Understanding the BBC as a pre-eminent state propagandist and censor by omission – more often than not in tune with its right-wing enemies – is on no public agenda and it ought to be.
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55 comments
There are two possible solutions here.
1. Hamas should take all its rocket launchers out of the built up areas, collect em all in some convenient easy to bomb place in the desert so that they can be hit by the Israelis more easily without civilian casualties.
2. Or THEY COULD STOP ROCKETING ISRAEL.
Or third option,
Israel simply stops occupying more and more lands. If you come and live next door to me then start taking and claiming by force with backing from the Mafia (America us and the rest of Europe) my garden then parts of my house and eventually most of my home, I would too take up arms and become a so called "terrorist" against you.
We in the west are too cowerdly to even admit wrong is being done. We are hypocrites as on one front we condemn the Holocaust yet allow Israel to do the same. We do not speak out against the human rights in China because they will turn the economic trade tap off! We created the monster Israel and now we have a moral duty to put right what we did wrong by giving birth to Israel.
Also it is a probably a fact that more people have died at the hands of America with our help than all the poor innocent jews that were slaughtered by Hitler.
It is Israel and Zionism that is at fault and wrong not the jewish people!
But who will the Arab countries blame for all their shortcomings, John? And why deprive John Pilger of a good narrative?
This article should have been the NS leader instead of the useless hand wringing that it has led with about Israel's need to defend itself smartly quoting a former Foreign Sec, David Miliband, whose job in relation to the criminal state of Israel, as any British Foreign Secretary's job is, was to drive the get-away car.
The NS is playing a duplicitous game. It leads with mainstream drivel and then gives principled commentators like Pilger a small space further in, as if to say, "See! Space for all in this tent." It just comes across as schizo. Pilger and Greenwald should lead. End of.
Thank you Mr Pilger. You pulled the scales off my eyes many years ago and they have remained off.
I'll second that!
Thank you John Pilger,
For being a voice of compassion and humanity in a world in which blood-letting of innocent people is accepted as a justifiable practise by our governments which preach democracy and practise neo-colonialism on a staggering scale.
Thank you for staying true to the ethics of your profession and for shining a light on the continued appeasement of aggressor nations by the media corporations which claim to 'educate and inform us.'
Thank you for giving those of us demoralised by the relentless pursuit of the agenda of the powerful, hope, as we turn to alternative means of receiving the facts, in our millions.
Thank you for daring to challenge the farcical notion of the BBC's' impartiality and independence' when it comes to news matters such as the present collective shame of Israels bombardment of the Palestinian people.
Thank you
I once met Pilger. It was at the Martha Gellhorn awards dinner bout 8 yrs back. I had too much to drink and became quite rude to him, telling him his work was just one long exercise in demonstrating his moral superiority, and as someone whose wages were paid by Geoffrey Robinson, friend of Capn Bob and then prop of the New Statesman, his fulminations on corporate horribleness were somewhat ironic . A lady then came up to me and said "Dont you talk to my partner like that."
Pilger like the rest of the western left studiously ignores Hamas's genocidal anti semitism, which it is entirely open about, the hundreds, possibly thousands of Fatah officials who have been murdered by them in their fratricidal takeover of the West Bank from the previous PLO regime, the awe inspiring levels of corruption over decade in the PLO: as their people starved, Arafat's wife and the others senior members mistresses were all shopping at Harrods and salting away millions in aid money in their Swiss banks - which was one of the reasons for the rise of the (at least non corrupt) Hamas, the thousands of Palestinians killed in internal blood letting, the intimidation and opression of Palestinian Christians, almost all of whom have left the West Bank, terrified of Hamas taking over there too. We have seen the six men shot dead in the street without any semblence of a trial, as Israeli spies. Maybe they were spies: more likely they were people who were shot because they had incurred the wrath of the local Hamas Islamoloonies for some minor infraction of Sharia law, or becasue of some personal grudge.
He also seems utterly blaze about Arab on Arab murders, as is the western left generally. Assad has probably killed 40,000 of his people in the last two years, and his dad killed about the same number back in 82: no demonstrations, no hand wringing editorials from the NS no appalled articles by Pilgerfiskchomsky, just silence.
Either Israel has the right to exist or it does not. If Pilger thinks it does not, then let him come out and say it, and also explain where the six million Jews should then go to. If it does, then like all states, it has the right to defend itself. If Israel lifts the blockade on concrete and building materials, Hamas will exploit this to build missile bunkers. If they allow petrol in, Hamas will use this to fuel rockets. If they allow financial aid to get through, Hamas will use this to buy weapons: or maybe follow the PLO's example and line their own pockets. Or both. If Hamas ever gets hold of nuclear capability, Israel will cease to exist.
Likewise, innocent Palestinian civilians have the right to defend themselves and their children from being murdered by the Israelis, their livelihoods, land and resources. I note YOU ommitted that from YOUR comments.
Perhaps you could also explain why Israel has chosen to ban footballs, children's story books, wheelchairs, crayons, pasta, lentils, juice, tomato paste and crisps when it pleases. You think they could make a blue peter do-it-yourself bomb from those too?
Now go and collect your cheque from the Israeli embassy !
John Pilger:
'What has changed at the BBC is the arrival of the cult of the corporate manager.'
The impression I receive is that the BBC is currently run by corporate mediocrities. When was the last time that the BBC had a genuinely distinguished, let alone visionary, Director General?
The impression I also receive is that these 'corporate mediocrities' dislike culture. Or perhaps they're afraid of it. Either way, it explains why so much of the BBC's current drama output consists of soapy genre retreads. Long gone are the days of Dennis Potter, Mike Leigh or Ken Loach - of Jonathan Miller and 'Play for Today'. There is no genuinely original (let alone experimental, or socially challenging) drama on the BBC today.
I agree with David Attenborough that the BBC should represent 'the highest cultural aspirations of the nation' as opposed to the lowest. Unfortunately, the latter is what it most often gives us, these days.
Come to think of it, why hasn't the BBC invited John Pilger to make a documentary or two. Or three. Or four....
If I was Director General of the BBC, I would have the lot of you back in. Plus Alan Bennett. And the soapy Americanised junk that we currently have to put up with would be given the chop very quickly indeed, I can assure you.