| Howard Government betrays
Australian interests for those of the American military/industrial combine |
|
Former CIA official Robert T. Crowley, the Agency's long-time liaison with corporations... "Hill and Knowlton's overseas offices," he acknowledged, "were perfect `cover' for the ever-expanding CIA. "Unlike other cover jobs, being a public relations specialist did not require technical training for CIA officers." The CIA, Crowley admitted, used its H&K connections, "to put out press releases and make media contacts to further its positions." |
|
Howard Government betrays Australian
interests It is difficult to imagine a more cynical approach to promoting the idea of a toxic waste dump in South Australia by the Howard Federal Government, than their choice of a Public Relations firm with the track record of Hill & Knowlton ... H&K's involvement with the American Central Intelligence Agency and their role in a deceitful propaganda exercise - (considered to have tipped the balance in favour of America pursuing the first Gulf war) - are public record. Extract - Spring 1993 issue of Covert
Action Quarterly "On October 10, 1990, as the Bush administration stepped up war preparations against Iraq, H&K, on behalf of the Kuwaiti government, presented 15-year-old "Nayirah" before the House Human Rights Caucus. Passed off as an ordinary Kuwaiti with firsthand knowledge of atrocities committed by the Iraqi army, she testified tearfully before Congress: "I volunteered at the al-Addan hospital...[where] I saw the Iraqi soldiers come into the hospital with guns, and go into the room where 15 babies were in incubators. They took the babies out of the incubators, took the incubators, and left the babies on the cold floor to die." Supposedly fearing reprisals against her family, Nayirah did not reveal her last name to the press or Congress. Nor did this apparently disinterested witness mention that she was the daughter of Sheikh Saud Nasir al-Sabah, Kuwait's ambassador to the U.S. As Americans were being prepared for war, her story- which turned out to be impossible to corroborate -became the centerpiece of a finely tuned public relations campaign orches- trated by H&K and coordi- nated with the White House on behalf of the government of Kuwait and its front group, Citizens for a Free Kuwait. In May 1991, CFK was folded into the Washington-based Kuwait-America Foundation. CFK had sprung into action on August 2, the day Iraq invaded Kuwait. By August 10, it had hired H&K, the preeminent U.S. public relations firm. CFK reported to the Justice Department receipts of $17,861 from 78 individual U.S. and Canadian contributors and $11.8 million from the Kuwaiti government. Of those "do- nations," H&K got nearly $10.8 million to wage one of the largest, most effective public relations campaigns in history. From the streets to the newsrooms, according to author John MacArthur, that money created a benign facade for Kuwait's image:
"The H&K team, headed by former U.S. Information Agency officer Lauri J. Fitz-Pegado, organized a Kuwait Information Day on 20 college campuses on September 12. On Sunday, September 23, churches nationwide observed a national day of prayer for Kuwait. The next day, 13 state governors declared a national Free Kuwait Day. H&K distributed tens of thousands of Free Kuwait bumper stickers and T-shirts, as well as thousands of media kits extolling the alleged virtues of Kuwaiti society and history. Fitz-Pegado's crack press agents put together media events featuring Kuwaiti "resistance fighters" and businessmen and arranged meetings with newspaper editorial boards. H&K's Lew Allison, a former CBS and NBC News producer, created 24 video news releases from the Middle East, some of which purported to depict life in Kuwait under the Iraqi boot. The Wirthlin Group was engaged by H&K to study TV audience reaction to statements on the Gulf crisis by President Bush and Kuwaiti officials. " All this PR activity helped "educate" Americans about Kuwait - a totalitarian country with a terrible human rights record and no rights for women. Meanwhile, the incubator babies atrocity story inflamed public opinion against Iraq and swung the U.S. Congress in favor of war in the Gulf." |
|
|
|
PR hard-sell for nuclear dump Hill and Knowlton, a "global communication company" which boasts 66 offices in 35 countries including two in Australia has won a Federal Government contract to "sell" a planned low-level nuclear waste repository to SA. The company, which will run the campaign from its Melbourne office, is charged with "increasing awareness" about the dump, which is almost certain to be sited near Woomera. The general manager of the company's Melbourne office, Rod Nockles, refused to comment on the campaign. "We don't confirm or discuss our clients," he said. Federal Science Minister Peter McGauran, whose department is the proponent of the dump, said the campaign had not been determined. "Hill and Knowlton are carrying out media monitoring work," he said. "The Government will constantly tailor the campaign so as to provide the public in SA with all the facts to dispel the constant misinformation and distortions being circulated." With backing from the Australian Conservation Foundation, the green coalition has planned a three-month grassroots campaign to lobby against the dump. Led by Sydney anti-nuclear campaigner Dr Jim Green, the coalition will promote its message at community events through information stalls and a public debate. Dr Green said the "Campaign Against Nuclear Dumping" was aimed at providing "the truth" about the dump, which will take waste from around Australia. He said South Australians were still missing vital information on the project, particularly on the Federal Government's plans to claim pastoral land for the dump. "The Federal Government is going to acquire the land to build the dump," he said. "It will be ripping a bit of SA out and calling it Commonwealth land." Senator McGauran defended the Government-funded campaign, saying there were already "campaigns of misinformation and distortions by opponents of the project". Federal Environment Minister David Kemp
is expected to make a decision on the dump within two months. |
|
No Nuke News - South Australia