Bye-Bye CNN

I say this is a good start, its all lies anyway!

http://www.aljazeerah.info/22%20op%20eds/Bye-Bye%20CNN,%20Arab%20News%20%20aljazeerah.info.htm

Bye-Bye CNN
22 March 2003, Arab News

Shock and awe, now that it has arrived, is giving the Western satellite networks what they have been waiting for — a boost to their ratings, and images that occupy their viewers for sustained periods of time. For an hour on Thursday, CNN showed a fuzzy, static night vision image of what looked like an intersection anywhere in the world, and returned periodically to that image as the night progressed. Occasionally, something flashed left of center. Later, an unsteady camera tried to make the most of a slowly progressing evening inside an American airport as a lone reporter attempted to fill dead airtime with redundancies.

The delay in the “shock and awe” campaign caught not only the Iraqis off guard. Worst hit were the Western satellite networks. They went over to 24-hour coverage way ahead of time, it quickly transpired, and then realized after it was too late that there was nothing to fill the long hours with. No amount of animated graphics, no amount of self-proclaimed experts and retired generals, no amount of anchors here and anchors there, no amount of correspondents against interchangeable night skies with a lone minaret in the background — no amount of anything could mask the fact that, if anything was happening, we would not learn about it by watching all of this.

There was ignorance to contend with everywhere. It came in the form of journalists who were simply out of their depth, as when one BBC presenter confused Friday with “Ramadan”. He then went on to confuse rain in northern Iraq with a sandstorm in the south. Of course, the cultivation of comprehensive ignorance is part of the United States’ campaign to limit access to information to the absolute minimum. In the name of security, “embeds” may know what is going on, but they are forbidden from reporting it. And those reporters working independently of the US military are kept far away from events — their passes revoked, their movements limited, at the whim of a commander. The Committee for the Protection of Journalists yesterday announced that the Al-Rashid Hotel is Baghdad — a makeshift base for Western journalists — was being evacuated after news filtered through that the US was likely to bomb it.

While we were solemnly informed, every time a reporter spoke from Baghdad, that the dispatch was monitored by authorities there, no such warning was attached to the more stringently supervised dispatches from embeds — some 60 of whom have reportedly been expelled for “compromising the security” of their unit. Even when journalists can do their job, they are largely not bothering to do it. Nowhere in the endless flood of repetitive verbiage passed off as commentary and analysis were the motives of the US administration questioned, or even discussed. Nor did any of the legion of talking heads on the screens attempt to conceptualize events. One marine has died: That is a breaking news story. That thousands of Iraqi men — many just adolescent boys — who have been pushed onto the front lines against their will are to be slaughtered en masse in the coming days is not worth a second thought.

Iraq has now thrown CNN out of Baghdad for acting as a crude propaganda tool of the Bush administration. It is difficult to have any sympathy for that particular news outlet, so repulsively gung-ho has it been, so preposterously shallow its coverage of anything that actually matters.

CNN needs a makeover.

Sky News is the best to watch, but BBC to read :)

Yeah, I like BBC. its much better. forget CNN, NBC, MSNBC, FOX...

sky news,BBC and ARY :k:

cnn and fox :nook:

ARY is the crappers, the only intelligent person on that whole channel is that Dr with the Moustache who comes on late night. He is excellent but other than that most of them are brainless tools, especially PJ Mir, the guy needs to find an opinion that doesnt suck upto the west.

I find Sky News the best to.

CNN is owned by a jew, so i wouldnt expect much decent coverage.

~~
50

I was refering to Dr shahid wen I said ARY, I only eva watch his programs.

so far BBC and CBC has the best coverage.. cnn is just crap.

Yeah thats his name, he is excellent

~~
50

It is ironic that Donald Rumsfeld said that our media is free and minutes after CNN said that our report is subject to US Military approval.

isnt Al Jazeera's home page aljazeera.net? not .info.

It is aljazeera.net. And I cannot get to it. :crying: can anyone else in the US get to it?

Aisha yeah its been very busy, I got to it but after a long wait

hahaaaaaaaaaaaa @ cnn

:rotfl: :k: :biggthumb :wink: also @ cnn

[QUOTE]
*Originally posted by 50Cent: *
ARY is the crappers, the only intelligent person on that whole channel is that Dr with the Moustache who comes on late night. He is excellent but other than that most of them are brainless tools, especially PJ Mir, the guy needs to find an opinion that doesnt suck upto the west.

I find Sky News the best to.

CNN is owned by a jew, so i wouldnt expect much decent coverage.

~~
50
[/QUOTE]

what you think of Rupport Murdoch? who own sky network. I gues he is also jew.
I dont undertand arabic, but i prefer to watch al jazeera and abu dhabi TV atleast they show more iraqi side than the propoganda machines of west like reuters, sky, BBC, CNN , fox. and I agree with you on PJ. Dr shahid is the only man they have for everything. but he give good coverage even relying on scarce resouces.

even the satelites are cencored by US
I am just waiting when wll they block al jazeera by any means.

CNN needs to go to hell!!!

it is in hell sis' in islam, after the besateee the iraqi's done of em' i think it can't get any worse for such a huge network

CNN is biased. Don't trust it for your news source.

When are facts facts? Not in a war

BASRA UPRISING

Claims
Tuesday, March 25, 5.30pm
Widespread media reports of a popular uprising against President Saddam Hussein in Iraq’s second city of Basra, believed to have originated from military sources. Follows reports from pool reporter Richard Gaisford.

Claims challenged
Tuesday, March 25, 6.10pm
British military sources say they are unable to confirm reports of any popular uprising in Basra, but reiterate that they would do everything possible to encourage and support any Iraqis planning to overthrow forces loyal to Saddam.“We don’t know anything about a popular uprising,” said one British military source in Central Command in Qatar.

Iraq calls claims ‘hallucinations’
Tuesday, March 25, 7.44pm
Iraq’s information minister denies the reports, calling them “hallucinations”. “I want to affirm to you that Basra is continuing to hold steadfast,” Minister Mohammed Saeed al-Sahaf told the Arabic language al-Jazeera television network.

Army ‘confirms’ claims
Wednesday, March 26, 2.27am
A British spokesman at US Central Command headquarters in Qatar says it appears there has been an uprising. “We don’t have a clear indication of its scale or scope or where it will take us. But we will want to support it to exploit its potential. It looks like this uprising is based on the massive resentment of the population.”

Al-Jazeera rejects claims
Wednesday, March, 7.40am
An Al-Jazeera reporter, who is stationed behind coalition lines in Basra, says he has no evidence of an uprising. He says the city is crawling with Iraqi military and the streets are littered with shrapnel.

Blair backs claims
Wednesday, March 26, 12.30pm
British prime minister Tony Blair says he believes there has been a limited uprising overnight. “In relation to what has happened in Basra overnight, truthfully reports are confused, but we believe there was some limited form of uprising,” he told the House of Commons.

BASRA 1
…where an hour is a long time in the military calender.

Claim
Tuesday, March 25, 8.13am
Reuters: "British military spokesman confirmed on Tuesday British troops were probably going to go into Basra to battle irregular fighters resisting US-led invasion forces in Iraq’s second city. “We are meeting resistance from irregulars, members of the Fedayeen, who are extremely loyal to Saddam Hussein’s regime,” group captain Al Lockwood told CNN television. “They are lightly armed, and very small in number, but they are terrorising the citizens of Basra and we will probably need to go in and meet any resistance.”

Counter claim
Tuesday, March 25, 9.16am
Reuters: a British spokesman said on Tuesday British troops would not enter the southern city of Basra to battle irregular Iraqi fighters - contradicting an earlier statement. But the British did consider Basra a military target. “We’re not going into Basra, it’s simply considered a target,” a British military spokesman at Central Command headquarters in Qatar told Reuters. “The reason it is a potential target is because it has an enormous political and military importance in the area.”

UMM QASR

Claim
Thursday, March 20, 7.33pm
US-led troops have taken Iraqi border town of Umm Qasr, Iraq’s only deep-water port in the south, wires and TV report.

Counter claim
TV reporters, including Mark Austin on ITV’s News Channel, challenge the claims. They have it on Iraqi authority that Umm Qasr has certainly not been taken. “Iraqi troops deny anyone has surrendered.”

Confirmation
Friday , March 21, 11.35pm
Admiral Michael Boyce, chief of the British defence staff, confirms the off-the-record briefings received by media in Kuwait and southern Iraq. “Umm Qasr has been overwhelmed by the US Marines and now is in coalition hands,” he says.

Further confirmation
Friday, March 21, just after midnight
US defence secretary Donald Rumsfeld says US forces have taken Umm Qasr. The fog of war thickens.

Challenge
Saturday, March 22, breakfast time
TV reporters on Sky and BBC say Umm Qasr have witnessed fighting and dispute claims that the port has been has been “taken”. They explain the new town is under coalition control but the old town is putting up resistance and therefore Umm Qasr cannot qualify as “taken”.

Challenged again
Sunday, March 23, 05.53am
A heavy firefight breaks out between US Marines and Iraqi forces, witnesses say.

Confirmation again
Tuesday, March 25, 9.53am
Reuters: “The southern Iraqi port town of Umm Qasr, where US and British forces have faced Iraqi resistance for days, is now “safe and open”, a British commander said on Tuesday. Brigadier Jim Dutton, commander of the British Royal Marines’ 3rd Commando Brigade, told reporters he hoped the first ship bringing aid to Iraq would arrive within 48 hours.”

**NASSIRIYA **

Claim
Saturday, March 22, 11.12pm
US forces have captured Nassiriya in central Iraq, according to wire reports from Iraq.

Fresh claim
Sunday, March 23, 1.30am
US forces say they have captured Nassiriya, international wire services report.

Alternative claim
Sunday, March 23, 10.21am
US-led forces suffer heaviest casualties so far with stiff resistance at Nassiriya, Najaf, Basra and Umm Qasr.

Exasperation begins to show
Sunday, March 23, 5.50pm
Defence analyst Francis Tusa says on Sky News: “We have now been told three times that Nassiriya has been captured. How many more times are we going to hear this?”

Battle goes on
Monday, March 24, 11.43am
US Marines were still bogged down early on Monday at the southern Iraqi city of Nassiriya, the key to opening a second route north to Baghdad, after taking significant casualties there on Sunday.

51st DIVISION

Claim
Friday night, March 21
Wires, TV and radio report official claims that coalition commanders have accepted the surrender of the 8,000-strong 51st Iraqi infantry division near the southern city of Basra on Friday.

Counter claim
Sunday March 23, 10.33pm
Reuters: “Iraqi officials denied US statements that the US commander of the Iraqi divison had surrendered, which US officials said on Friday.”

Counter claim number 2
Monday, March 24, 3.22am
New York Times wire service: “US officials were quick to announce the surrender of the commander of the 51st Division. On Sunday they discovered that the ‘commander’ of the surrendered troops was actually a junior officer masquerading as a higher-up in an attempt to win better treatment.”

GRENADE ATTACKER

Claim
Sunday, March 23, 12.10am
Ten US soldiers were wounded in an attack on Camp Pennsylvania, a military base in northern Kuwait, a US military spokesman said, without giving further details. Jim Lacey, a Time magazine correspondent who was at the camp, told CNN two grenades had been rolled into the command tent in what appeared to be a “terrorist attack”. The report gives way to instant discussions of al-Qaida terrorist cells operating in Kuwait.

Details of attacker change
Sunday, March 23, 12.40am
Sky News says the suspect for the attack is a US soldier, later revealed as Asan Akbar, who was born Mark F Kools. But the information hasn’t filtered through everywhere. The BBC’s Radio 5 Live still discussing the terrorist attack on the 1.00am news on Radio 5 Live.

SCUDS

Claim
Thursday, March 20, 10.15am
An Iraqi Scud missile fired at US troops on the Kuwaiti border was intercepted by Patriot missiles, the US military says. Reports of scud attacks widespread.

Admission
Sunday, March 23, 4.30am
US general Stanley McChrystal says: “So far there have been no Scuds launched… We have found no caches of weapons of mass destruction to date.”

lol good stuff aisha!

hmm waiting for NY or Chalta to respond!

Another one...

Civilian casualties in Baghdad

This morning US said that they had not targetted Shaab district of northern Baghdad.

This morning US said Iraqi missiles caused the civilian casualties.

This afternoon US said US missiles "may" have caused civilian casualties in Baghdad.