![]() Please support independent media by subscribing and/or donating to In These Times magazine: http://www.inthesetimes.com/subscribe/ | http://www.inthesetimes.com/donate Disinformation Follies
When the Iran-Contra scandal broke, the Office of Public Diplomacy was dismantled and its unit of Psychological Operations (Psyops) agents sent home to their U.S. Army base at Fort Bragg, North Carolina. Three administrationsand several enemieslater, Army Psyops agents were again deployed in Washington, again fighting evil, but this time from the Pentagons new Office of Strategic Influence (OSI). The covert mission: Target foreign media organizations in the Middle East, Asia and Western Europe with disinformation campaigns. The objective: Convince foreign leaders and citizens to support U.S. policy. The difference this time around is that conscientious Pentagon officials leaked OSIs plans to the New York Times. A senior Pentagon official put it this way, Everybody understands using information operations to go after non-friendlies. When people get uncomfortable is when people use the same tools and tactics on friendlies. The resulting media furor led Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld to close the program on February 26. The office is done, he told reporters. What do you want, blood? How about some honest information? A good place to start would be the administrations fiscal year 2003 defense budget. Bush says increased spending is necessary because the nation is at war. Rumsfeld has explained that he inherited a military that was overused and underfunded. On February 12, Lawrence Korb (who wrote our April 2, 2001 cover story, Pentagon Spending Spree) testified before the House Budget Committee. The former assistant secretary of defense in the Reagan administration, who now works with Business Leaders for Sensible Priorities, pointed out that should the Bush budget be approved: Defense spending will have risen by $88.2 billion, or 30 percent, since fiscal year 2001. The United States alone will consume about 40 percent of the worlds total military expenditures. The United States will spend more on defense than the next 15 countries in the world combined. Korb refuted Bushs justifications for the increase. Weve already budgeted for the militarys role in the war against terrorism, he said. The Defense Department received a $20 billion supplement, about what the administration calculates the war will cost. Joel Bleifuss is the editor and publisher of In These Times, where he has worked as an investigative reporter, columnist and editor since 1986. He is on the board of the Institute for Public Affairs, which publishes In These Times. |