AlterNet looks at Kofi and the Scandal Pimps:
Routine distortions, exaggerations and unreported context about the United Nations Oil-for-Food program (OFF) makes it arguably one of the worst-covered stories of our times.The oil-for-food story is a classic piece of Rove-like GOP spin:
That's hardly an accident. The story confirms a cherished piece of the conservative worldview...
We're supposed to focus on "corruption" at the U.N. and ignore both the actual corruption in the program -- almost all of which was between the regime of Saddam Hussein and international bankers, energy traders and other assorted hucksters, some connected to the Bush administration -- and the moral questions raised by a sanctions program that has been blamed for the deaths of as many as a million Iraqi children under the age of five.Not suprisingly, the roots of the story lie with Judy Miller's other favourite source, Ahmed Chalabi. See the Alternet story for the full details on anti-UN lies and distortions.
On all counts, the diversion has been a success. For progressives, the most instructive part of the story is how a "scandal" conceived and cultivated by a small group of writers within a small circle of conservative publications has been so thoroughly embraced by the mainstream media. While most of the right's claims about the U.N.'s supposed perfidy are readily debunked, the mainstream press repeats them uncritically.
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