BagNews Archives About Staff BagNews is a progressive site dedicated to visual politics and the analysis of news images.
Tuesday, May 22, 2012

Twitter

@bagnewsnotes »
Advertisement



March 27, 2007

Pictures As Projectiles

27Weapons-600

(click for full size)

This photo accompanies a NYT story this morning analyzing how the Pentagon developed its case charging Iran with providing roadside bombs to anti-American Iraqi Shiites.

The BAG’s question is, is the NYT once again shilling for the government in its anti-Iran campaign, and using its photo coverage to back it up?

Today’s story is written by Michael Gordon, who also wrote the February 10th article for The Times (“Deadliest Bomb in Iraq Is Made by Iran, U.S. Says”) detailing the Government’s case that Iran is producing highly lethal EPD’s or Explosive Penetrator Devices. (It was Gordon, by the way, who worked side-by-side with Judith Miller in “exposing” those aluminum tubes as part of the build-up to the U.S. Iraqi invasion.)

A key piece of evidence in the latest article is that trucks have been intercepted “within a few miles of the Iranian border, carrying copper discs machined to the precise curvature required to form the penetrating projectile.”  That’s all well and good, but it doesn’t take into account the WSJ report (via TPM Muckracker, with photo), of the discovery, late last month, of a “makeshift factory” in Southern Iraq manufacturing devices with the same configuration, including the copper disks.

Which brings us back to the photo.

In February, the visual aspect of the story consisted primarily of government-issued handouts of devices components (BBC photo gallery).  Is it possible today’s shot, however, far from indicting the discs in question, more specifically illustrates the role of The Times as staging partner in this specific, almost two-month long promo campaign?

(image: Robert Nickelsberg/Getty Images, for The New York Times.  February 2006.  nytimes.com. caption: American soldiers displayed parts of weapons, known as explosively formed penetrators, after finding them last month in a Shiite village near Baghdad. The copper liners in the foreground become projectiles when the explosive devices are set off.)

  • Mad_nVT

    Yes, NYTimes again looks guilty of being an organ of the Bush House.
    I don’t get the photo. It is a lousy photo that offers no information about the Iran connection, or much of anything else.
    I don’t get the argument either. Iran is probably providing lethal weapons to their neighbors and religious allies, seeking to expand its power and religion. The US is providing and using lethal weapons, seeking to expand its power, and determined to control/steal the natural resources (a different kind of religion).

  • margaret

    Heigh ho. and, to the Times, Ho-Hum.

  • jtfromBC

    I know the BAG was serious but still I was unable to stifle a snicker when considering this query “..about more specifically illustrates the role of The Times as staging partner…” I’ve found the following GEM to email Michael Gordon for his informed opinion ?
    “A moment of honesty penetrates the stifling compromise, lies and utter indifference. But this should be on the front page of the Guardian, not on the website”
    Posted by The Editors on March 27, 2007, (http://www.medialens.org/board/)
    link [http://commentisfree.guardian.co.uk] scroll down:
    ‘Counting the cost’ by Richard Horton.
    The figures have now been vindicated by the government’s own advisers. It’s time we held our leaders to account for the 650,000 Iraqi dead.

  • Dr William Dyer

    I find it interesting that two years ago the story was that the the United States failed to secure 350+ tons of high explosives in their march towards Baghdad. The news came out right before the election, it made splash, and then after the second Tuesday in November the story disappeared. Now high explosives are being packed into cast iron pipes with a copper bowl top to devastating effect on the armor in the region. Give any militant group just ton of high explosives and your gonna see more then fireworks. In this case, hundreds of tons have gone unaccounted.
    Maybe if the Times bothered to look at what they themselves reported about Al Qaqaa, they would have a better explanation of as to how the insurgents are getting a hold of their weapons.

  • jtfromBC

    This archaeological dig type photo may be more persuasive for the unwary as the article is with its unnamed sources, speculations, half truths and absolute certainty of Iran as source, from none other than Tony Blair whose record of “misspeaking”, while ignoring his high level confidential sources is legendary. Like GWB he resorts to a faith based belief system when confronted with disturbing realities.
    March 23, 2007 from the LA Times
    A Big problem, Few words, Little coverage, Down the Rabbit Hole for MSM, or time for my medications ?
    Little accounting of Iraq weapons, audit says
    “The Government Accountability Office report… number of unaccounted munitions “could range significantly from thousands to millions of tons,” said an unclassified version of the report released at a congressional hearing” http://www.thenewstribune.com/news/nationworld/story/6428974p-5729443c.html

  • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nwSA0Tckwbk MonsieurGonzo

    so you’re sayin’ this guy’s got brass balls ?

  • jf

    I think you’ve got a typo in the second paragraph. Don’t you mean “anti-Iran?” Most readers probably understood your meaning, but fwiw . . .

  • lytom

    The photo of the “yard sale showcase of copper disks” used as a proof of Iran’s involvement in Iraq seems to be MSM peddling job to fool the public again…The effort is one of many to label Iran as the terrorist state.
    So these artifacts are coming from Iran and are very threatening to the occupation forces?
    The US occupation forces’ arsenal in addition to the army of contractors are much more deadlier to Iraqi population.
    At the present time the Global positioning data has been provided as a “proof” by Britain’s ministry of defense that 15 British sailors were well inside Iraqi waters, when they were captured by Iran…
    The propaganda lies for another aggresion war are on the main page.

  • http://home.comcast.net/~sfs73/index.html MonsieurGonzo

    crosspost; JC : “the US keeps accusing the Iranian government of deliberately trying to destabilize Iraq . . . it does not in fact make sense that Iran would try to topple the first friendly Shi’ite regime ever to come to power in Baghdad.
    MG : yes, Professor; Indeed, it would be more accurate to “accuse IRAN of deliberately trying to stabilize IRAQ,” for they are de facto, if only ‘by proxy militas enabled’, rival Occupiers of IRAQ, and no doubt desire to remain so.
    Only after conceding this grounded reality, viewing afresh IRAN in this manner, can we compare & contrast the successes and failures, the costs and benefits apparent ~ of ‘The Sunni/American Occupation of IRAQ’, and ‘The Shi’ite/Iranian Occupation of IRAQ’.
    In Baghdad, fwiw ~ there exist numerous (i daresay, classical) walls delineating two distinct Occupation Zones; not unlike, say ~ Berlin (there are countless other examples an historian could cite), replete with the requisite ‘CheckPoint Charlie’ interfaces, etc. All that’s missing from IRAQ is the recognition of realpolitik ‘checkpoint signs’, announcing : “You Are Now Entering The American Sector”. Perhaps such signs are there, scrawled all over these walls ~ only written in scripts that few of us are able, or willing to read?
    In any case, after completing the intellectual hurdle of rival Occupations, if only for mind game ~ we can parse a plethora of “national” data into “zones” apparent, and what a revelation this is . . .
    . . . Foremost, Zone Américaine is a cost center, while Zone Iranienne is a profit center. For another, construction of infra-structure ~ roads, waterworks, powerlines, sanitation, greengrocers, schools and remarkably Western-like, entreprenurial investment ~ thrives in one Zone d’Occupation, yet remains stalled, corrupted or crumbling, in the other.
    Unfortunate for the Americans, they cannot contract ‘Occupation’ out to the Iranians, for they appear to be better at this business. Unfortunate for the Iranians, they suffer not only from outside sanctions, but also prejudices from within their own Theocratic fundamentalism ~ against those ‘other’ brave Muslims ~ who might otherwise be willing to become their brothers and sisters.