The bomb-bomb-Iran 'parlor game'

Source Consortiumnews.com

Normally, if two countries with powerful nuclear arsenals were openly musing about attacking a third country over mere suspicions that it might want to join the nuclear club, we'd tend to sympathize with the non-nuclear underdog as the victim of bullying and possible aggression. You might think that–unless you were told that the two nuclear-armed countries are Israel and the United States and the non-nuclear country is Iran. Then, different rules apply, especially it seems in leading American news outlets like the New York Times. In what reads like a replay of the run-up to the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq, the Times and other major U.S. news media appear onboard for war, again happy to make the likely aggressors the "victims," and to turn the prospect of a bloody conflict in a Muslim country into a parlor game. Indeed, the New York Times on March 28 presented the idea of "imagining a strike on Iran" as "Washington's grimmest but most urgent parlor game," assessing how a military strike by Israel, "acting on its fears that Iran threatens its existence," would play out. That same day, the Times also led its front page with an alarmist story about Iranian atomic energy official Ali Akbar Salehi saying Iran might soon begin work on two new nuclear enrichment sites built into mountains to protect against bombings. The article by reporters David E. Sanger and William J. Broad repeated a recurring falsehood in the Times, that it was President Barack Obama who "publicly revealed the evidence of a [previous] hidden site," a hardened facility near Qum. The actual chronology was that Iran informed the International Atomic Energy Agency about the non-operational Qum site on Sept. 21, four days before Obama joined with French President Nicolas Sarkozy and British Prime Minister Gordon Brown in highlighting its existence.