Andrew Sullivan goes after the hyperventilating dupes of the Baghdad museum-looting hoax. But he's quite gentle compared to David Aaronovitch in, yes, The Guardian. Aaronovitch's whole story is worth reading, but here's the conclusion:
This indictment of world journalism has caused some surprise to those who
listened to George and others speak at the British Museum meeting. One art
historian, Dr Tom Flynn, now speaks of his "great bewilderment". "Donny
George himself had ample opportunity to clarify to the best of [his]
knowledge the extent of the looting and the likely number of missing
objects," says Flynn. "Is it not a little strange that quite so many
journalists went away with the wrong impression, while Mr George made little
or not attempt to clarify the context of the figure of 170,000 which he
repeated with such regularity and gusto before, during, and after that
meeting." To Flynn it is also odd that George didn't seem to know that
pieces had been taken into hiding or evacuated. "There is a queasy subtext
here if you bother to seek it out," he suggests.
On Sunday night, in a remarkable programme on BBC2, the architectural
historian Dan Cruikshank both sought and found. Cruikshank had been to the
museum in Baghdad, had inspected the collection, the storerooms, the
outbuildings, and had interviewed people who had been present around the
time of the looting, including George and some US troops. And Cruikshank was
present when, for the first time, US personnel along with Iraqi museum staff
broke into the storerooms.
One, which had clearly been used as a sniper point by Ba'ath forces, had
also been looted of its best items, although they had been stacked in a far
corner. The room had been opened with a key. Another storeroom looked as
though the looters had just departed with broken artefacts all over the
floor. But this, Cruikshank learned, was the way it had been left by the
museum staff. No wonder, he told the viewers - the staff hadn't wanted
anyone inside this room. Overall, he concluded, most of the serious looting
"was an inside job".
Cruikshank also tackled George directly on events leading up to the looting.
The Americans had said that the museum was a substantial point of Iraqi
resistance, and this explained their reticence in occupying it. Not true,
said George, a few militia-men had fired from the grounds and that was all.
This, as Cruikshank heavily implied, was a lie. Not only were there firing
positions in the grounds, but at the back of the museum there was a room
that seemed to have been used as a military command post. And it was hardly
credible that senior staff at the museum would not have known that.
Cruikshank's closing thought was to wonder whether the museum's senior staff
- all Ba'ath party appointees - could safely be left in post.
Furious, I conclude two things from all this. The first is the credulousness
of many western academics and others who cannot conceive that a plausible
and intelligent fellow-professional might have been an apparatchiks of a
fascist regime and a propagandist for his own past. The second is that -
these days - you cannot say anything too bad about the Yanks and not be
believed.
Read the whole thing.
|