BBC Spanked Soundly

Written by Eric Olsen
Published January 29, 2004
page 1 | 2

....The end of the Blair era, the age in which socialism has been struck from the Labour agenda, was reported to be nigh.

Instead today, it is the opposition to Mr. Blair, both in the Conservative Party and in his own party, which have been scattered by the Hutton express. It is the headquarters of the BBC which has a jagged hole in its walls. In more than 700 pages of analysis, Lord Hutton concluded that the BBC's charge against Mr. Blair's integrity was both "very grave" and "unfounded." Its reporter had wrongly attributed to his source, who was Dr. Kelly, statements about duplicity and deception in Downing Street. Its senior editors had been "defective" in discovering and remedying this falsity.

The BBC's governors, a very British body of the "great and the good" whose job is both to regulate the Corporation's editorial performance and protect those editors from political interference, had failed to balance those two obligations. It had protected a flawed assault on the government, without even knowing, or trying to know, how false it was. The chairman of the governors has done the honorable thing and stepped down. It remains to be seen who decides to follow him — and who is gently encouraged to.

....Critics will call the Hutton report a "whitewash" and worse. London is still full of rumors that Tony Blair has done yet another deal with the Chancellor of the Exchequer, Gordon Brown, to stand aside and let his friend and rival move to Number Ten. The prime minister has certainly sometimes looked ragged and tired since the war. Hostilities to him personally, to his market reforms to education and health services, to his support for George Bush, all remain strong. That is not likely to change. But Tony Blair looked bright and sprightly in Downing Street yesterday — as the express train smashed and crashed on the media-men's side of town. The BBC neutral, fair and balanced? Hardly: anti-war, anti-Blair, leaning way to the left - let us not forget their recent craven sniveling at the feet of Muslim hypersensitivity in the Kilroy-Silk affair, either.

I have no doubt that Blair's government gave a reading to the available data that most favored their pro-war policy position, as did the Bush administration, but that is not the same as falsifying or even "sexing up" the information.

page 1 | 2
Career media professional Eric Olsen is honored to be the founder and publisher of Blogcritics.org, which, quite frankly, rules - as do his wife and four children.
Keep reading for information and comments on this article, and add some feedback of your own!
BBC Spanked Soundly
Published: January 29, 2004
Type:
Section: Video
Filed Under: Culture: Media, Video: News, Video: Television
Writer: Eric Olsen
Eric Olsen's BC Writer page
Eric Olsen's personal site
Spread the Word
Like this article?
Email this
Submit to del.icio.us Save to del.icio.us
RSS Feeds
All RSS Feeds (240+)
Comments on this article
BC articles by Eric Olsen
Culture: Media
Video: News
Video: Television
All Video Articles
Eric Olsen's personal weblog
All BC articles
All BC Comments

Comments

#1 — January 30, 2004 @ 07:11AM — taliesin [URL]

Eric,
Having made sense of my anger, not at you but at some of my compatriots, I've this morning rewritten the blog entry that gave you this trackback.
I think you are very seriously mistaken in your reading of this whole wretched business -- wherever you may be coming from on the political spectrum.
What has just happened in London has such damaging repercussions for the media worldwide that I feel we journalists would all do well to give it far more thought than you did when your posted this.
Still with warmest regards,
Nick

#2 — January 30, 2004 @ 08:08AM — Eric Olsen

Okay Nick, I will read what you have to say on the matter and take it very seriously.

#3 — January 30, 2004 @ 12:24PM — Eric Olsen

After reading and thinking seriously about this, I will state that I don't do the polls here.

#4 — January 30, 2004 @ 12:43PM — Eric Olsen

I would very much like to hear why my cursory view of this is so misinformed.

#5 — January 30, 2004 @ 12:59PM — Chris [URL]

The implications of this for journalists worldwide? I could be laboring under a misimpression/misunderstanding here, but to me this is a big deal only because the BBC is taxpayer supported, compulsory tax at that. Which I think is ridiculous.

You would never see this in America because, well, the government doesn't have much, if any, say in how press operations are run. Even NPR, for the most part, is left alone except for the occasional thundering from a backbencher Congressman-R who got a letter from Mildred in Anytown about how horribly biased NPR is and would you please do something about it?

#6 — January 30, 2004 @ 13:42PM — Eric Olsen

I think that's about right, Chris. Follow-up here.

#7 — January 30, 2004 @ 15:56PM — Nick Barrett [URL]

I've read and appreciated your follow-up, Eric, which really strikes me as rather more measured. ;)
The main problem I had with what you initially wrote here, and I know I was pretty harsh, arises from a trend which has disturbed me in a great deal of American thinking and writing since what you people call "9/11".
Without wishing to sound in the least bit patronising or "old-Europe" superior and arrogant Brit, it appears to me that ever since that appalling event, some Americans have opted a blinkered and sometimes navel-gazing outlook on the rest of the world, particularly in foreign policy issues, for which we all have to pay very high prices.
It's as if you can visit that 'Biased BBC', again making a excellent point simply by virtue of a good link, without the distance and judgement to see that it's a biased place in its own right.
Note the comment there from Andrew Marr, the BBC's political editor, who really must be one of the brightest and most respected journalists in the UK.
I don't think Americans, or anybody else for that matter, should consider that what has just shaken Britain is a purely domestic matter and something which "couldn't happen here".
The Hutton report, if you take the admittedly considerable time required to read the thing virtually a whitewash for Blair's government.
It's one of the many things happening across the media worldwide today which gives governments an increasing edge in silencing genuine, independent inquiry and investigation.
One of the repercussions is that an increasingly fragilised BBC may -- just may -- no longer dare to tackle head on the underlying issues Hutton refused to handle and face.
Of course I acknowledge differences in international approaches. Hutton certainly could not have happened in France because there's scarcely a journalist left in this country who dares write about what virtually every ordinary Frenchman knows to be routine lying, corruption and concealment on the part of most of their politicians.
The BBC should have apologised earlier. There's no smell of roses about about that institution, but there's a fearful reek of rose-water spray about the British government right now.
The kinds of questions that badly need answers -- and almost certainly will not be answered now -- are, for instance:
Who gave Hutton his brief in the first place?
Why did the judge accept limitations in that brief which render the genuine independence from government of the British judiciary highly doubtful?
Was not the notorious "45-minute" claim that underlies this whole wicked affair and eventually "killed" Kelly still an appalling lie -- whether or not Blair believed it at the time?
Both Bush and Blair lied their way into this war. They attacked Iraq on false proclaimed premises, perhaps themselves deceived about WMD and the threat posed by such weapons by flawed intelligence, though I doubt it.
We're a damned sight closer to 1984, by consensual acquiescence, in what still passes for modern western "democracy" than most people would care to admit.
Hutton has made the risks of the completion of that process by a whole host of governments -- whether yours in the States, mine here in France, or that Teflon one in Britain -- that little bit easier.
The creeping crushing of any genuine independence of thought and investigative work by journalists of the likes of you, me and others here, has never been more of a risk, in my opinion, since the complacencies of the 1930s than it has become today.




#8 — January 30, 2004 @ 15:58PM — Dwaine AKA Scooter AKA D.J.

WOW!!!!!!!!!!!!! I just had a spicy-ass fish sandwich!

#9 — January 30, 2004 @ 17:04PM — Eric Olsen

Nick, Not being able to top Dwaine in brevity or eloquence, I will simply say thanks for your informative and heartfelt response. I certainly understand your perspectie and concerns now, and for that I am grateful.

I, inevitably I imagine, have a different perspective and don't see things nearly as grimly as you do. As I said originally, i am certain both the Bush and Blair governments read the intelligence to most favor their own perspectives, but who doesn't? I don't think anyone "lied" - everyone thought Iraq had WMD, including, apparently, Saddam himself.

And for me, even if they didn't have them - recently - it doesn't change much. The world is still a much better place and the sanguine repercussions of "regime change" continue to all of our benefit.

Want comments emailed to you? No spam, promise! Address:

Add your comment, speak your mind

(Or ping: http://blogcritics.org/mt/tb/12145)

Personal attacks are not allowed. Please read our comment policy.





Remember Name/URL?

Please preview your comment!

Fresh
Articles
Fresh
Comments