Payvand.com - "You hear
that, Mabel? Come, watch!" Hank calls from the sofa. "Five of them Iranian swift
boats like they used to blow up the Cole just attacked the Fifth Fleet!
Don't say how many killed. Just – 'We've suffered casualties!' Those damn
Arab-Iranian-al-Qaeda-speedboat-sand-devils! Get in here, Mabel! Watch!"
Please
do.
It is amazing what can be done in a 90-second "news segment." In just 90
seconds, we learn that five small Iranian speedboats have "harassed" and
"threatened" a Navy frigate and two Navy destroyers – telling
these monstrous military vessels they are about to explode! Explode? All
three warships?
Before we
can say, "That's preposterous!" the segment quickly cuts to footage of small
craft moving around the wounded USS Cole, just after the attack in 2000.
Then the
segment cuts back to a grim-faced admiral as he tells the American people that:
It is
important to remember that we have been attacked by small high-speed boats.
We have suffered casualties. And we take this deadly seriously.
Cut to
footage of a Navy cruiser firing a sea-to-air missile from its forward deck as
the reporter informs us that an Iranian airliner has been shot down in a "deadly
accident." (Note the customary "tragic accident" is not invoked when Iranian
lives are involved.)
But why
mention the shooting down of the Iranian passenger plane in the first place when
the "accident" happened
20 years ago?
Obviously
there is no logical reason. The "accident" has nothing to do with the speedboat
"incident" in reality. But as Freud once said: "Time does not exist in the
unconscious." Which means that if something is reported now, we experience it as
happening now – not 20 years ago. Especially if we see (or think we see) the
USS Vincennes actually firing the missile that will bring down the plane. So
far as the viewer is concerned, the downing of the Iranian plane, the attack on
the Cole, and Monday's "dangerous showdown" all take place within the
first 58 seconds of this 90 second clip. Such is the "magic" of television.
And such
are the "dark arts" of psychology, I might add. In an article published just
before the holidays, entitled,
A Christian Christmas in Snowy Iran, I described perhaps the darkest of the
dark arts that Pentagon psychologists regularly employ to instill hate and fear
of Iran in Americans. And that is the dark art of
classical conditioning. Which is much in evidence here. Even down to the
timing. In keeping with best practice, the speedboat "incident," the airliner
"accident," and the footage of the wounded Cole all take place in less
than 60 seconds. Which, from a neuropsychological standpoint, is the precise
amount of time required to forge the strongest possible synaptic link between
these three visual events.
As I
explained in my earlier article, what we think about these experiences
really does not alter their visceral effect upon us. What the segment
succeeds in doing in a purely associative manner is to bring the word, "Iran,"
together with words and images of a powerfully fear-inducing, hate-inducing
kind. Like talk of our suffering "casualties" (from an al-Qaeda attack 8 years
ago).
At the
same time, the segment appears to provide a "motive" for those
Arab-Iranian-al-Qaeda-speedboat-sand-devils attacking the Cole and
killing all those American sailors less than 30 seconds earlier/later. (Order
doesn't matter here.) It is clearly an act of revenge for shooting down
"their" plane.
That the
attack on the Cole was actually the work of al-Qaeda, that al-Qaeda is
truly the mortal enemy of Iran, that the attack on the Cole took place
long after the shooting down of the Iranian plane, that Iran itself has never
been charged with any act of retaliation against the United States for that
questionable "accident," and that the vast majority of Iranians are not even
Arabs, but Indo-Europeans – all mean nothing to most American viewers. In their
media-muddled minds, those damn Arab-Iranian-al-Qaeda-speedboat-sand-devils just
keep on "madly" attacking us and killing our servicemen.
"Those
evil Iranians!" Hank snarls at the tube: "They're a nest of nasty hornets,
Mabel! And you know what you gotta do when you have a nest of nasty hornets
after you!"
Psychologists call this process
"seeding" the unconscious. As in the American "snuff" film,
300, where hordes of subhuman Persian/Iranians ultimately
"crucify" the Greek defenders of Western "civilization."
Remember
the Cole! Remember Thermopylae! The indoctrination of the American people
is relentless.
For those
who want to believe that the recent
NIE report has taken the military option against Iran "off the table" for
the rest of Bush's Presidency, it should be duly observed that the report gets
all of 3 seconds of attention before the segment rushes on to its
Hail-to-the-Decider-in-his-Marine-copter ending. (He knows what he's gotta do!)
This
altogether unbelievable "incident" of five small Iranian speedboats threatening
to "explode" three mighty American warships, bristling with cannons and
missiles, bears an eerie similarity to the "false flag" Tonkin Gulf "incident"
that Johnson used as a pretext to launch the Vietnam War in 1964, as summarized
in this short YouTube video.
Listen to
Ron Paul's prescient comment concerning just such an "incident" a full year ago.
As for
what you can do to stop a catastrophic war from happening, start by visiting
our new website. Check out our photos and videos there. See if you agree
with our approach of showing the American people real images of Iran. And
spread the word if you do.
You'll
find a lot of amazing photos on our site. Like these
Arab-Iranian-al-Qaeda-speedboat-sand-devils lying on the beach, dreaming of
martyrdom.
"See,
Mabel?"
"Oh,
Hank. That's not sand. Haven't you heard of the snows of Iran?"
About
the author: William Wedin, Ph.D., is a New York psychologist and
long-time activist, who is currently developing a new photo-sharing website to
counter the current war propaganda on Iran. Readers of this article are invited
to preview
this new site.