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In Push-Back On Torture Pics Report, Is Obama Mimicking Bush?

We've told you in recent months about the Obama administration's disappointing tendency to mimic some of its predecessor's more troubling war-on-terror tactics. But is the administration's approach to public relations another area to add to the list?

Yesterday's aggressive push-back against the Daily Telegraph report on torture photos suggests it could be.

To recap: The British paper reported Wednesday that according to Antonio Taguba, the retired Army General who led an internal probe of torture at Abu Ghraib, some of the photos whose release the administration is fighting show US soldiers raping and sexually abusing Iraqi detainees, including at least one woman.

In response, the Obama administration didn't just deny the story -- it attacked the messenger. In fact, it atacked British journalism as a whole. White House press secretary Robert Gibbs declared form the podium: "I think if you do an even moderate Google search you're not going to find many of these newspapers and truth within, say, 25 words of each other."

Gibbs went on to pull out what seemed like a carefully scripted line:

If I wanted to read a write-up today of how Manchester United fared last night in the Champion's League cup, I might open up a British newspaper," Gibbs said. "If I was looking for something that bordered on truthful news, I'm not entirely sure it'd be in the first pack of clips I'd pick up.

If Gibbs had ever before displayed an interest in European soccer, we missed it. (Man U lost 2-0 to Barcelona, by the way.)

Leaving aside the validity, or lack thereof, of Gibbs' claim, it's at the very least noticeable that the White House press secretary would go out of his way to slam the press corps of America's closest ally. (In an email to TPMmuckraker, a British reporter based in the US called Gibbs's attack "bizarre and revealing", and the Manchester United reference, Britishly, "too clever by half.")

That take-no-prisoners style -- and reluctance to offer specific corrections, in favor of launching broad attacks designed to destroy an outlet's credibility -- is almost reminiscent of the Bush White House. Especially in their first term, when Ari Fleischer ran the show, the Bushies' press shop set a new standard for going out of its way to bully and intimidate reporters, particularly when it came to the war on terror.

Indeed, though Gibbs has replaced Ari Fleischer at the podium, another key figure in the administration's war on terror PR effort is a Bush holdover noted for his aggressive M.O.

The first person to push back against the Telegraph story yesterday was Pentagon spokesman Bryan Whitman, who said the paper had shown "an inability to get the facts right," and had "completely mischaracterized the images."

Whitman, whose official title seems to be deputy assistant secretary for Public Affairs, played the same role when Donald Rumsfeld ran the Pentagon. As Scott Horton points out on the Daily Beast, it was Whitman who, in 2005, launched a theatrical attack on Newsweek, after the magazine reported that a Koran had been thrown down a toilet at Guantanamo. Newsweek, under pressure from Whitman and DOD, retracted the story and apologized -- but it was later established to be true. Now Whitman is playing the same role for Bob Gates and Obama.

One doesn't want to extrapolate too far from a few preliminary signs. And no one should expect complete transparency and straightforwardness from any administration -- that's the nature of public relations. But the bullying, reflexively political PR style -- especially as regards the war on terror -- adopted by the Bush White House and Rumsfeld DOD was one of the most damaging aspects of the Bushies' approach to governing. So any sign that that's continuing under Obama is worth noting.


15 Comments

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Rapid response is a good idea. Except when it isn't!

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I thought Gibbs' statement very accurate. The British press is not reliable as a general statement and Daily Telegraph has little if any credibility. They (DT) broke the NEW IMAGES of abuse story with photos previuosly published.Be very careful with repeating stories from these sources.

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This would seem to back up every factual assertion published in the Telegraph article:

http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article6527.htm

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Taguba has discredited the story in daily telegragh.

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Also you might want to google " fake photos re-emerge" this is a ploy by a conservative rag, The Daily Telegraph, to negate the impact of actual atrocities.

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Oh, please. Obama is NOT Bush. Get over it.

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Obama partisans seem to have an inability to isolate the difference between "is" being used as a linking verb (Obama "is" Bush) and a helping verb (Obama's action "is like" Bush's). I suppose it isn't surprising, democrats historically have had difficulty with the word "is". :-)

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I am sick of this Obama = Bush-lite nonsense, which was initiated by Dems and gleefully promoted by Repubs looking to derail Obama's presidency.

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Perhaps one thing we should take away from the lies continually fed to the press during the Bush years is to not rely on information supplied by politicians in general if we're interested in learning what is true and what is not. i.e. *think WMDs*

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They were originally going to release the photos but were pressured not to. I highly doubt anyone would think of releasing photos of US soldiers raping men and women to begin with.

Sorry, but if such photos existed they would be on lock down and no one would probably even know they existed, much less contemplate releasing them.

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I am sorry but I will have to side with Zachary on this one. Instead of addressing the allegations with the seriousness they desrve, Gibbs tried to downplay the whole thing, invalidate the source, and deflect the questions.
Unfortunately for Gibbs (and the adminsitration), Gen. Antonio Taguba has much more credibility than any staff member, especially considering that he was the one commissioned by the Pentagon to write the full report on the abuses at Abu Ghraib and submit it to Congress after the first set of pictures showed up in 2004. And let us not forget that the General was asked to retire shortly thereafter mainly because Rumsfeld did not like the repercussions of the report.
The real problem for Obama is that both Democrats and Republicans in Congress were aware of these abuses [PRECISELY because they all had access to the Taguba report] so the pressure to downplay the whole thing is most likely coming from those Democrats that need to keep everything under wraps for fear of appearing weak and cowardly acquiescent to the Bush administrations' excesses.

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I seem to recall Rummy himself lamenting during congressional testimony that there are worse photos around that would eventually be released or leaked of just such acts. Hersh too wrote about them.

Gibbs non denial denial notwithstanding the Telegraph does have a lousy record of reporting on Iraq.

The whole point of not releasing the photos is to prevent more animosity toward the US and attacks against our troops. Dwelling on the photos, describing the ghastly acts in print, does not further that goal. If you'd like to see more violence in Iraq, Pakistan and through out the Muslim world, especially toward Americans, then by all means let's keep discussing and demanding the release of the photographs.

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wbgonne
Can I get you a tissue?

Alguein
Good comment. Gibbs would not have attacked the telegraph and the Brit media as a whole if he were not on the defensive.

Another question Gibbs responded badly to at an earlier briefing,
was when David Corn from MoJo asked for a response on the Spanish torture investigations and Gibbs turned it into a mocking joke which he then turned into a running gag over the period of the rest of the briefing.

ScottW
"Sorry, but if such photos existed they would be on lock down and no one would probably even know they existed, much less contemplate releasing them."

Day late and a dollar short. The claim that holding back the photos is crap. I don't buy it.
Just this week, Petreaus, while admitting on Fox that the US has violated Geneva Conventions, also mentioned fighters have been picked up with GTMO torture flyers in their possession. These people have access to info just as you and I do and they have seen the current crop already and , more importantly, already released detainees were released with their lips and larynxes intact.
In other words, some photos aren't going to make that much difference at this point. The world knows.

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Thanks for proving my point:

"this Obama = Bush-lite nonsense [] initiated by Dems and gleefully promoted by Repubs looking to derail Obama's presidency."

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I disagree.

This is Obama and the Obama Administration derailling the Obama Presidency.

Note the following quote:

"The first person to push back against the Telegraph story yesterday was Pentagon spokesman Bryan Whitman, who said the paper had shown "an inability to get the facts right," and had "completely mischaracterized the images.""

"completely mischaracterized the images."

How would he know?

Makes a person wonder how many people have already seen these photo's if even a Pentagon spokesman has seen them.

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