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Nayirah testimony

The Nayirah testimony was false testimony given before the United States Congressional Human Rights Caucus on October 10, 1990, by a 15-year-old girl who was publicly identified at the time by her first name, Nayirah. The testimony was widely publicized, and was cited numerous times by United States senators and President George H. W. Bush in their rationale to support Kuwait in the Gulf War.

Nayirah al-Ṣabaḥ during her testimony. It was later revealed that she was the daughter of the Kuwaiti ambassador to the United States and that her testimony was false.

In 1992, it was revealed that Nayirah's last name was Al-Ṣabaḥ (Arabic: نيرة الصباح) and that she was the daughter of Saud Al-Sabah, the Kuwaiti ambassador to the United States. Furthermore, it was revealed that her testimony was organized as part of the Citizens for a Free Kuwait public relations campaign, which was run by the American public relations firm Hill & Knowlton for the Kuwaiti government. Following this, al-Sabah's testimony has come to be regarded as a classic example of modern atrocity propaganda.[1][2]

In her testimony, Nayirah claimed that after the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait she had witnessed Iraqi soldiers take babies out of incubators in a Kuwaiti hospital, take the incubators, and leave the babies to die.

Her story was initially corroborated by Amnesty International, a British-based global NGO, which published several independent reports about the supposed killings[3] and testimony from evacuees. Following the liberation of Kuwait, reporters were given access to the country. An ABC report found that "patients, including premature babies, did die, when many of Kuwait's nurses and doctors ... fled" but Iraqi troops "almost certainly had not stolen hospital incubators and left hundreds of Kuwaiti babies to die."[4] Amnesty International USA reacted by issuing a correction, with executive director John Healey subsequently accusing the Bush administration of "opportunistic manipulation of the international human rights movement".[5]

Background

Incubator allegations

Iraqis are beating people, bombing and shooting. They are taking all hospital equipment, babies out of incubators. Life-support systems are turned off. ... They are even removing traffic lights. The Iraqis are beating Kuwaitis, torturing them, knifing them, beating them, cutting their ears off if they are caught resisting or are with the Kuwaiti army or police.
— Evacuee's description as reported in St. Louis Post-Dispatch[6]

Following the Iraqi invasion and occupation of Kuwait, there were reports of widespread looting. On September 2, 1990, in a letter to the UN Secretary General Javier Perez de Cuellar, Kuwait's UN representative, Mohammad A. Abulhasan, wrote:

Further to those of our communications which are intended to inform you of the actions perpetrated by the Iraqi occupation authorities in Kuwait in contravention of all international laws, and on the basis of confirmed information provided to us by the Government of Kuwait, we wish to draw attention to a phenomenon which has no precedent in history, namely, the Iraqi occupation authorities' organized operation for the purpose of looting and plundering Kuwait. It is impossible to compare this operation to any similar incidents or to provide an exact account thereof because it is in effect an operation designed to achieve nothing less than the complete removal of Kuwait's assets, including property belonging to the State, to public and private institutions and to individuals, as well as the contents of houses, factories, stores, hospitals, academic institutes, schools, and universities ... What has occurred in Kuwait is the perpetration of an act of armed robbery by a State which has used its military, security and technical organs for that purpose.[7]

In the letter, Abulhasan also noted that "theft of all equipment from private and public hospitals, including X-ray machines, scanners and pieces of laboratory equipment."[7] The allegations of looting were also retold by evacuees who described "soldiers looting office buildings, schools and hospitals for air conditioners, computers, blackboards, desks, and even infant incubators and radiation equipment."[8] Douglas Hurd, the British Secretary for foreign affairs surmised that "they are looting and destroying in a way which suggests that they may not expect to be there for very long."[9]

The looting of incubators attracted media attention because of allegations that premature babies were being discarded or dying as a result.[10] On September 5, Abdul Wahab Al-Fowzan, the Kuwaiti health minister-in-exile, stated at a press conference in Taif, Saudi Arabia "that Iraqi soldiers had seized virtually all of the country's hospitals and medical institutions after their invasion" and that "soldiers evicted patients and systematically looted the hospitals of high-tech equipment, ambulances, drugs and plasma" which resulted in the death of 22 premature babies.[9][11] The Washington Post described the origin of the Kuwaiti baby story as follows:

The Kuwaiti baby story originated with a letter from a senior Kuwaiti public health official that was smuggled out of the country by a European diplomat late last month, according to Hudah Bahar, an architect who received the letter here in London. It was supplemented by information gathered from fleeing Kuwaitis and other sources by Fawzia Sayegh, a Kuwaiti pediatrician living here.

The letter claimed that Iraqi soldiers ordered patients evicted from several hospitals and closed down critical units for treating cancer patients, dialysis patients and those suffering from diabetes. Bahar and Sayegh said the Iraqis hauled sophisticated equipment such as dialysis machines back to Baghdad, part of the haul of cash, gold, cars and jewelry that is said by Arab banking sources to exceed $2 billion. Among the equipment taken were the 22 infant incubator units, they said.[11]

The Washington Post also noted that it was unable to verify the accusations as Iraq did not permit access to the area and had quarantined diplomats.[11]

On September 5, in another letter to the UN Secretary General, Abulhasan reiterated Fowzan's claims writing:

We are informed by impeccable sources in Kuwait's health institutions that the Iraqi occupation authorities have carried out the following brutal crimes, which may be described as crimes against humanity: ... 2. The incubators in maternity hospitals used for children suffering from retarded growth (premature children) have been removed, causing the death of all the children who were under treatment.[12]

The letter did not state how many babies had died.[11][13] The allegations in the letter received widespread media coverage in the following days.[14][15][16][17][18][19] That day, in an interview with released hostages on NPR's All Things Considered, a hostage stated that Iraqi troops were "hitting children with the butts of the guns, taking infants out of incubators and taking the incubators."[20] Reuters also reported they had been told "that Iraqi troops took premature babies out of incubators in Kuwait in order to steal the equipment."[21][22]

On September 9, NPR reported that "in a ward for premature infants, soldiers had turned off the oxygen on incubators and packed the equipment for shipment to Iraq."[23]

On September 17, Edward Gnehm Jr., the U.S. ambassador-designate to Kuwait, told reporters that Kuwaiti health officials told him 22 babies had died when Iraqi troops had stolen their incubators.[24] The Los Angeles Times reported that "refugees reported that incubators for premature babies were confiscated by Iraqi troops and the babies inside were piled on the floor and left to die."[10][25] The San Jose Mercury News also reported the same allegation that day, adding that Western diplomats thought "this is the kind of thing that some people call genocide, and if people wanted to construe it as such, it could be cause for some kind of military intervention."[26]

On September 25, The Washington Post reported that "Kuwait City's hospitals are being stripped of incubators."[10][27] The president of Citizens for a Free Kuwait wrote to Representative Gus Yatron stating of how he "recently learned that the Iraqi leader has ordered that maternity hospital incubators [in Kuwait], used for treating premature babies, be turned off, allowing these infants to die of exposure."[28]

 

On September 29, in a meeting between Kuwaiti leader Sheik Jabbar al Ahmed al Sabah and President George H. W. Bush, the exiled emir told the president that Iraqis were "going into hospitals, taking babies out of incubators and people off life-support machines to send the equipment back to Iraq."[29][30] In his remarks following the discussion, Bush stated that "Iraqi aggression has ransacked and pillaged a once peaceful and secure country, its population assaulted, incarcerated, intimidated, and even murdered" and that "Iraq's leaders are trying to wipe an internationally recognized sovereign state, a member of the Arab League and the United Nations, off the face of the map."[31]

On September 28, Kuwait's planning minister, Sulaiman Mutawa, reported that 12 babies had died as a result of incubator looting.[32]

On September 30, U.S. News & World Report reported that it had obtained secret US government cables based on eyewitness accounts that revealed "shocking acts of brutality inflicted by the Iraqis against innocent citizens at Kuwaiti hospitals."[33] The cables stated that on the sixth day of Iraqi invasion, Iraqi soldiers "entered the Adan Hospital in Fahaheel looking for hospital equipment to steal" and that "they unplugged the oxygen to the incubators supporting 22 premature babies and made off with the incubators", thus killing the 22 children.[33]

On October 9, at a Presidential news conference, Bush stated:

I thought General Scowcroft [Assistant to the President for National Security Affairs] put it very well after the Amir left here. And I am very much concerned, not just about the physical dismantling but of the brutality that has now been written on by Amnesty International confirming some of the tales told us by the Amir of brutality. It's just unbelievable, some of the things at least he reflected. I mean, people on a dialysis machine cut off, the machine sent to Baghdad; babies in incubators heaved out of the incubators and the incubators themselves sent to Baghdad. Now, I don't know how many of these tales can be authenticated, but I do know that when the Amir was here he was speaking from the heart. And after that came Amnesty International, who were debriefing many of the people at the border. And it's sickening.[34]

Citizens for a Free Kuwait

The Citizens for a Free Kuwait was a public relations committee set up by the Kuwaiti embassy, described by The Times News as a "Washington, D.C.- based committee comprised of concerned Kuwaitis and Americans".[35][36] Though the committee occupied embassy office space, they were to be working independently of the embassy.[35]

Hill & Knowlton

In 1990, after being approached by a Kuwaiti expatriate in New York, Hill & Knowlton took on "Citizens for a Free Kuwait."[37] The objective of the national campaign was to raise awareness in the United States about the dangers posed by Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein to Kuwait.[37]

Hill & Knowlton conducted a $1 million study to determine the best way to win support for strong action.[38] H & K had the Wirthington Group conduct focus groups to determine the best strategy that would influence public opinion.[39] The study found that an emphasis on atrocities, particularly the incubator story, was the most effective.[39]

Hill & Knowlton is estimated to have been given as much as $12 million by the Kuwaitis for their public relations campaign.[40]

Congressional Human Rights Foundation

The Congressional Human Rights Foundation is a non-governmental organization that investigates human rights abuse. It was headed by Democratic U.S. Representative Tom Lantos and Republican Representative John Porter and rented space in Hill & Knowlton's Washington headquarters at a $3000 reduced rate.[41]

U.S. government involvement

Some scholars claim the U.S. government and the White House knew nothing, others claim that the U.S. knew and was complicit. German historian Andreas Elter [de] stated:

The work of the US advertising agency for the Kuwaiti carried the signature of the White House in a certain way. President Bush was briefed by Fuller on every single step. Whether he also gave his personal consent for the baby story, however, cannot be proven. What remains, however, is that close personal contacts existed between the US government and an agency that had demonstrably given birth to lies. The same agency was even directly employed by the US government in another context.[42]

Testimony

On October 10, 1990, Nayirah was the last to testify at the Caucus. In her oral testimony, which lasted 4 minutes,[43] she stated:

Mr. Chairman, and members of the committee, my name is Nayirah and I just came out of Kuwait. My mother and I were in Kuwait on August 2nd for a peaceful summer holiday. My older sister had a baby on July 29th and we wanted to spend some time in Kuwait with her.

I only pray that none of my 10th grade classmates had a summer vacation like I did. I may have wished sometimes that I can be an adult, that I could grow up quickly. What I saw happening to the children of Kuwait and to my country has changed my life forever, has changed the life of all Kuwaitis, young and old, mere children or more.

My sister with my five-day-old nephew traveled across the desert to safety. There is no milk available for the baby in Kuwait. They barely escaped when their car was stuck in the desert sand and help came from Saudi Arabia.

I stayed behind and wanted to do something for my country. The second week after invasion, I volunteered at the AlIdar (phonetic rendering) Hospital with 12 other women who wanted to help as well. I was the youngest volunteer. The "other" women were from 20 to 30 years old.

While I was there, I saw the Iraqi soldiers come into the hospital with guns. They took the babies out of the incubators, took the incubators and left the children to die on the cold floor. It was horrifying. I could not help but think of my nephew who was born premature and might have died that day as well. After I left the hospital, some of my friends and I distributed flyers condemning the Iraqi invasion until we were warned we might be killed if the Iraqis saw us.

The Iraqis have destroyed everything in Kuwait. They stripped the supermarkets of food, the pharmacies of medicine, the factories of medical supplies, ransacked their houses and tortured neighbors and friends.

I saw and talked to a friend of mine after his torture and release by the Iraqis. He is 22 but he looked as though he could have been an old man. The Iraqis dunked his head into a swimming pool until he almost drowned. They pulled out his fingernails and then played [sic] electric shocks to sensitive private parts of his body. He was lucky to survive.

If an Iraqi soldier is found dead in the neighborhood, they burn to the ground all the houses in the general vicinity and would not let firefighters come until the only ash and rubble was left.

The Iraqis were making fun of President Bush and verbally and physically abusing my family and me on our way out of Kuwait. We only did so because life in Kuwait became unbearable. They have forced us to hide, burn or destroy everything identifying our country and our government.

I want to emphasize that Kuwait is our mother and the Emir our father. We repeated this on the roofs of our houses in Kuwait until the Iraqis began shooting at us, and we shall repeat it again. I am glad I am 15, old enough to remember Kuwait before Saddam Hussein destroyed it and young enough to rebuild it

Thank you. [43]

Although Nayirah did not specify how many babies were in the incubators in her oral testimony, in the written testimony distributed by Hill and Knowlton, it read "While I was there I saw the Iraqi soldiers come into the hospital with guns, and go into the room where 15 babies were in incubators."[44] The testimony was not given under oath.[citation needed]

Representative John Porter, co-chairman of the caucus, remarked that in his eight years of service on the caucus, he had never heard such "brutality and inhumanity and sadism."[45] Nayirah's testimony was described as the most dramatic.[45]

Hill & Knowlton

It is unclear how much of Nayirah's testimony was coached. Though the firm was supposed to provide only stylistic help,[46] it was reported that H&K "provided witnesses, wrote testimony, and coached the witnesses for effectiveness."[47]

Reactions

Nayirah's testimony was widely publicized.[48] Hill & Knowlton, which had filmed the hearing, sent out a video news release to MediaLink, a firm which served about 700 television stations in the United States.[49]

That night, portions of the testimony aired on ABC's Nightline and NBC Nightly News reaching an estimated audience between 35 and 53 million Americans.[47][49] Seven senators cited Nayirah's testimony in their speeches backing the use of force.[Note 1] President George Bush repeated the story at least ten times in the following weeks.[52] Her testimony helped to stir American opinion in favor of participation in the Gulf War.[53]

Initial response

On January 13, 1991, the Sunday Times reported that a Dr. Ali Al-Huwail could vouch for 92 deaths.[54]

Iraq denied the allegations. On October 16, Iraqi information minister Latif Nassif al-Jassem told the Iraqi News Agency that "now you [Bush] are using what he [Sheikh Jaber] told you to make Congress ratify the budget which is in the red because of your policies" adding that "you, as the president of a superpower, have to weigh words carefully and not act as a clown who repeats what he is told."[55]

In a visit to Kuwait on October 21, 1990, by journalists who were escorted by Iraqi information ministry officials, doctors at a Kuwaiti maternity facility denied the incubator allegations.[56] In the visit, the Iraqi head of the Kuwaiti health department, Abdul-Rahman Mohammad al-Ugeily, said that "Baghdad had sent 1,000 doctors and other medical to staff to help run Kuwait's 14 hospitals and health centres following the invasion."[56]

Martin and MacArthur

A little reportorial investigation would have done a great service to the democratic process.
— John MacArthur[57]

On March 15, 1991, John Martin, an ABC reporter, reported that "patients, including premature babies, did die, when many of Kuwait's nurses and doctors stopped working or fled the country" and discovered that Iraqi troops "almost certainly had not stolen hospital incubators and left hundreds of Kuwaiti babies to die."[4]

On January 6, 1992, The New York Times published an op-ed piece by John MacArthur entitled "Remember Nayirah, Witness for Kuwait?"[57] MacArthur discovered that Nayirah was the daughter of the Kuwaiti Ambassador to the U.S., Saud Nasir al-Sabah.[57] MacArthur noted that "the incubator story seriously distorted the American debate about whether to support military action" and questioned whether "their [Representatives Lantos and Porter] special relationship with Hill and Knowlton should prompt a Congressional investigation to find out if their actions merely constituted an obvious conflict of interest or, worse, if they knew who the tearful Nayirah really was in October 1990."[57] The story earned MacArthur the Monthly Journalism Award from The Washington Monthly in April 1992, and the Mencken Award in 1993.[44][58]

Hill & Knowlton

We disseminated information in a void as a basis for Americans to form opinions.
— Frank Mankiewicz, Vice Chairman, Hill & Knowlton[59][60]

On January 15, 1992, the CEO of Hill & Knowlton, Thomas E. Eidson, responded to the concerns raised by MacArthur in a letter to the editor to The New York Times.[61] Eidson stated that "at no time has this firm collaborated with anyone to produce knowingly deceptive testimony", asserting that the firm "had no reason to question her veracity when she testified following her escape from Kuwait."[61] The letter explained that Nayirah's charge that Iraqi soldiers removed newborn babies from incubators was corroborated by Dr. Ibraheem Behbehani, head of the Red Crescent, before the United Nations Security Council, and that the media was not permitted back inside Kuwait "until after the liberation", so there was no way to verify the stories of refugees like her.[61] Eidson concluded that "Nayirah's credibility should no more be questioned than if she had been a doctor or teacher" and the company's work with the Kuwaitis was consistent with firm's standards stating that "the public interest was fairly served."[61]

In August 1992, Howard Paster replaced Robert K. Gray as the general manager of the Washington office in order to clean up the firm's image.[62][63]

Critics contended that Hill & Knowlton had concocted a fake popular movement, Citizens for a Free Kuwait, and subsequently used questionable evidence and suspect witnesses to influence public opinion and policy in the United States and the UN.[60][64][65]

Hill & Knowlton's actions taken on behalf of Citizens for a Free Kuwait, together with those of other major clients including Bank of Credit and Commerce International, the Church of Scientology, and an anti-abortion campaign by Catholic bishops raised ethical concerns among public relations professionals.[66] The concerns, though not new, were more vigorous than previous ones due to the prominence of the issues.[37]

Tom Lantos

Hold on to your hats. The grand campaign to rewrite the history of the Persian Gulf war is on.
— Tom Lantos' response to MacArthur[67]

While Lantos was a close friend of Bush at the time, as well as a co-chair of the Congressional Human Rights Foundation, he failed to notify Bush of his position within the Nayirah case, or of her true identity. In an interview, Lantos stated that he had concealed Nayirah's identity at the request of her father in order to protect her family and friends.[53] Lantos denied any allegations of wrongdoing arguing that "The media happened to focus on her. If she hadn't testified, they would have focused on something else."[53] Lantos also stated that:

The notion that any of the witnesses brought to the caucus through the Kuwaiti Embassy would not be credible did not cross my mind. I have no basis for assuming that her story is not true, but the point goes beyond that. If one hypothesizes that the woman's story is fictitious from A to Z, that in no way diminishes the avalanche of human rights violations.[53]

In a letter to the editor to The New York Times on Jan 27, 1992, entitled "Kuwaiti Gave Consistent Account of Atrocities", Tom Lantos responded to MacArthur's allegations. He wrote that "Mr. MacArthur's deceptive article serves only the cynics who seek to rewrite the history of the Persian Gulf war" noting "the article's sinister innuendo suggests that the girl was not even in Kuwait at the time of the Iraqi invasion, and that the whole gruesome incident was a diabolical plot by an American public relations firm."[67] Lantos wrote that "the fact that Nayirah was the daughter of the Ambassador of Kuwait made her a more credible witness" and that "her relationship to the Ambassador and Government enhanced her credibility."[67] He also noted that "her account was consistent with the information we received from other witnesses, with hundreds of other atrocity stories from Kuwait carried by media around the globe, and consistent with reports by independent human rights organizations, such as Amnesty International, who also testified at our hearing and subsequently published accounts similar to Nayirah's."[67] Lantos concluded that "given the countless cases of verified Iraqi human rights violations", it was "unnecessary and counterproductive to invent atrocities."[67]

Lantos also rejected the allegations of a special relationship between the caucus and Hill & Knowlton, stating that "caucus activities are held without regard to whether these countries are represented by any law firm or public relations firm."[67]

In a subsequent letter to The New York Times, MacArthur pointed out that the testimony had been retracted.[68]

Ambassador Sabah

The ambassador has stated that his daughter had witnessed the atrocities she described and that her presence in Kuwait could be verified by the United States Embassy in Kuwait.[53] He also stated "If I wanted to lie, or if we wanted to lie, if we wanted to exaggerate, I wouldn't use my daughter to do so. I could easily buy other people to do it."[69]

Lauri Fitz- Pegado

Pegado was the acting Vice President of Hill & Knowlton at the time of Nayirah's Testimony. It was later confirmed within the Kuwaitis investigation that Pegado was responsible for coaching Nayirah in what was proven to be her false testimony.

Other

The campaign has been described by critics as corrupt, deceptive and unethical. Some charge that it was used to spread false or exaggerated tales of Iraqi atrocities.[40][70][71]

Lantos was criticized for his withholding the information.[72]

Investigations

Human Rights Watch

In 1992, the human rights organization Middle East Watch, a division of Human Rights Watch, published the results of their investigation of the incubator story. Its director, Andrew Whitley, told the press, "While it is true that the Iraqis targeted hospitals, there is no truth to the charge which was central to the war propaganda effort that they stole incubators and callously removed babies allowing them to die on the floor. The stories were manufactured from germs of truth by people outside the country who should have known better." One investigator, Aziz Abu-Hamad, interviewed doctors in the hospital where Nayirah claimed she witnessed Iraqi soldiers pull 15 infants from incubators and leave them to die. The Independent reported, "The doctors told him the maternity ward had 25 to 30 incubators. None was taken by the Iraqis, and no babies were taken from them."[73]

Amnesty International

Amnesty International initially supported the story, but later issued a retraction.[74][75] It stated that it "found no reliable evidence that Iraqi forces had caused the deaths of babies by removing them or ordering their removal from incubators."[76]

Kroll Report

Kuwaiti officials do not discuss the matter with the press.[44] In order to respond to these charges, the Kuwaiti government hired Kroll Associates to undertake an independent investigation of the incubator story. The Kroll investigation lasted nine weeks and conducted over 250 interviews. The interviews with Nayirah revealed that her original testimony was wildly distorted at best; she told Kroll that she had actually seen only one baby outside its incubator for "no more than a moment." She also told Kroll that she was never a volunteer at the hospital and had in fact "only stopped by for a few minutes."[77]

Aftermath

In fact, nearly everyone involved in peddling the tale of the unplugged babies, from Amnesty International to Kuwaiti doctors, has sprinted away from it.
— Newsday[78]

Following the end of the war, Reuters reported that Iraq returned "98 truckloads of medical equipment stolen from Kuwait, including two of the baby incubators". Abdul Rahim al-Zeid, an assistant under-secretary at the Kuwaiti Public Health Ministry, said that by returning the incubators the Iraqis had unwittingly provided proof that they took them.[79] Kuwait's chief ambulance officer, Abdul Reda Abbas, stated that "We think the Iraqis might have returned the incubators by mistake."[79]

Following the revelation of Nayirah's identity, there was a public outrage that the information had been withheld.[80]

Scholarly commentary

In the end, the question was not whether H&K effectively altered public opinion, but whether the combined efforts of America's own government, foreign interests, and private PR and lobbying campaigns drowned out decent and rational, unemotional debate.
The power house: Robert Keith Gray and the selling of access and influence in Washington[81]

The content, presentation, distribution, effectiveness, and purpose of Nayirah's testimony have been the subject of multiple public relations studies.

In his book, Strategic Maneuvering in Argumentative Discourse, Frans H. van Eemeren, stating that "visual messages which accompany verbal argumentation can be so drastic that rational argumentation becomes almost impossible", described Nayirah's story as an argumentum ad misericordiam.[82] In the paper The Hill & Knowlton Cases: A Brief on the Controversy by Susanne A. Roschwalb, the author noted that as H&K was a British firm, "what effect did British concerns -such as the possible collapse of its financial institutions, if the Kuwaiti currency, the dinar, became worthless -have on Hill & Knowlton's efforts?"[83] Ted Rowse, in his article "Kuwaitgate — killing of Kuwaiti babies by Iraqi soldiers exaggerated" in The Washington Monthly, noted that "Most reporters, having apparently been burned by Hill & Knowlton's handiwork in spreading the original Nayirah story without checking it out, seem to prefer to let the story fade away, passively falling, once again, for the company's public relations guile."[44] John R. MacArthur, who authored Second Front: Censorship and Propaganda in the Gulf War, has noted that "at the time, it was the most sophisticated and expensive PR campaign ever run in the U.S. by a foreign government."[70]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ This was viewed as important since the January 10, 1991 authorization to use force passed by only 5 senate votes.[50][51]

References

  1. ^ Regan, Tom (2002-09-06). "When contemplating war, beware of babies in incubators". Christian Science Monitor. Retrieved October 31, 2013.
  2. ^ Morris, Al (2009). Civilisation Hijacked: Rescuing Jesus from Christianity and the human spirit From Bondage. ISBN 978-1440182426.
  3. ^ Cockburn, Alexander (1991-02-07). "Alexander Cockburn reviews 'An American Life' by Ronald Reagan · LRB 7 February 1991". London Review of Books. lrb.co.uk. p. 9. Retrieved September 23, 2014.
  4. ^ a b Fowler, p. 22
  5. ^ Healey, John (28 January 1991). "Amnesty Responds to President Bush". The Heights. No. 1. Retrieved 26 May 2015.
  6. ^ "U.S. Evacuates 171 From Iraq, Kuwait – Women Who Made It Out Recount Tales Of Terror". St. Louis Post-Dispatch. September 8, 1990. p. 1A. Cindy of San Francisco, who declined to be identified further, said, Iraqis are beating people, bombing and shooting. They are taking all hospital equipment, babies out of incubators. Life-support systems are turned off. ... They are even removing traffic lights. "The Iraqis are beating Kuwaitis, torturing them, knifing them, beating them, cutting their ears off if they are caught resisting or are with the Kuwaiti army or police," she said.
  7. ^ a b United Nations Security Council masthead document Letter Dated 2 September 1990 From The Permanent Representative Of Kuwait To The United Nations Addressed To The Secretary-General S/21694 September 3, 1990.
  8. ^ Leff, Lisa (September 11, 1990). "Weary, wary evacuees bring tales of horror". The Washington Post. The evacuees told of soldiers looting office buildings, schools and hospitals for air conditioners, computers, blackboards, desks, and even infant incubators and radiation equipment. They described food shortages that afflicted soldiers as well as civilians, and random acts of violence.
  9. ^ a b Beeston, Nicholas (September 5, 1990). "A battle ground to test Saddam – Iraq invasion of Kuwait". The Times. London, England.
  10. ^ a b c Rendall, p. 24
  11. ^ a b c d Frankel, Glenn (September 10, 1990). . The Washington Post. Archived from the original on November 5, 2012. Retrieved March 15, 2011. (subscription required)
  12. ^ United Nations Security Council masthead document Letter Dated 5 September 1990 From The Permanent Representative Of Kuwait To The United Nations Addressed To The Secretary-General S/21713 September 5, 1990.
  13. ^ Walton, p 771
  14. ^ "Kuwait says seizure of hospital equipment caused many deaths". Reuters News. September 6, 1992.
  15. ^ "Iraq equipment removal killed patients – Kuwait". Reuters News. September 6, 1992.
  16. ^ "Kuwaiti says Iraq plundered hospitals". Charlotte Observer. North Carolina. Associated Press. September 7, 1990. p. A16.
  17. ^ "Official: Hospitalized in Kuwait are left to die". Chicago Tribune. Associated Press. September 7, 1990. p. 12.
  18. ^ "Persian Gulf crisis – More about the Mideast". Houston Chronicle. September 7, 1990. p. A18.
  19. ^ "Kuwait Says Iraq Plundered Hospitals". The San Francisco Chronicle (Associated Press). September 7, 1990. p. A21.
  20. ^ "Released Hostages Tell of Kuwait Terror". All Things Considered (Transcription of broadcast). NPR. September 7, 1990. Total destruction everywhere, cars wrecked, burned, people thrown out of cars on the street you're driving down; they just throw people over the street. They're hitting children with the butts of the guns, taking infants out of incubators and taking the incubators.
  21. ^ "Kuwait offers to help cover mideast costs - contributions should offset U.S. liability". Newport News. Virginia. September 8, 1990. Cindy, who refused to give her last name, and another woman who identified herself only as Rudi, told the Reuters news agency that Iraqi troops took premature babies out of incubators in Kuwait in order to steal the equipment.
  22. ^ Tamayo, Juan O. (September 8, 1990). "Iraqi hostage horror: 'It smelled of death'". Austin American-Statesman. p. A1.
  23. ^ "Weekend Edition Sunday (News)" (Transcription of broadcast). NPR. September 9, 1990. `Time is running out,' said one, a pediatrician. She said in the last few days, the Iraqi troops had looted a local hospital. In a ward for premature infants, soldiers had turned off the oxygen on incubators, she said, and packed the equipment for shipment to Iraq. Dr. Fawzi al-Said said the report came to her by the hospital attendants, who had buried the dead infants.
  24. ^ "Iraq tightens its grip on Kuwait". Dayton Daily News. Ohio. September 29, 1990. pp. 6A. The U.S. ambassador-designate to Kuwait, Edward Gnehm Jr., told reporters Monday that Kuwaiti health officials told him 22 babies born prematurely died when Iraqi troops removed them from incubators they stole. Gnehm has been named to replace current ambassador Nathaniel Howell, who is holed up inside the U.S. Embassy in Kuwait.
  25. ^ Murphy, Kim (September 17, 1990). "Kuwaitis bolt for border amid reports of atrocities". Los Angeles Times. p. 1A. Western officials said that they are still investigating reports of atrocities in Kuwait and added that many appeared to be well-documented and supported by enough eyewitness accounts that they could be considered true. In one case, refugees reported that incubators for premature babies were confiscated by Iraqi troops and the babies inside were piled on the floor and left to die.
  26. ^ "Air Cutoff of Iraq Gains U.N. Support Kuwaiti Refugees Spill Across Border". San Jose Mercury News. California. September 17, 1990. p. 1A. In one case, refugees reported that incubators for premature babies were confiscated by Iraqi troops and the babies inside were piled on the floor and left to die. "This is the kind of thing that some people call genocide, and if people wanted to construe it as such, it could be cause for some kind of military intervention," said a Western diplomat in close contact with the Kuwaitis.
  27. ^ Hoagland, Jim (September 25, 1990). "End Saddam's Reign of Terror". The Washington Post. p. a23. But while dissidents have been making such arguments, Saddam's actions in Kuwait show that he is not interested in compromise or in leaving Kuwait -- on any terms. He has begun to depopulate Kuwait, as he once did with Kurdistan, and to send in Iraqis with phony new citizenship documents. Based on Saddam's bloodstained track record, it is almost certain that the young Kuwaiti men being grabbed at the border and elsewhere in Kuwait are being sent to Iraq to die. American refugees and others report that Kuwait City's hospitals are being stripped of incubators and any other supplies that can be sent to Baghdad, leaving babies and infirm patients to die.ld give sanctions and negotiations a chance so he can avoid the costs of attacking Iraq's occupation forces is not enough. That does not stay Saddam's ruthless hand.
  28. ^ Hall, Lawrence. "Suffer the Children: Summit must herald a new era in lives of our endangered young". The Star Ledger. Newark, New Jersey. The president of Citizens for a Free Kuwait recently wrote Rep. Gus Yatron (D-Pa.), decrying the brutality of this madman."Nothing points to the ruthlessness of Saddam Hussein more poignantly than his unmerciful misuse of the very young. His manipulation of political opponents through the abuse of their children is, sadly, a well documented fact. We recently learned that the Iraqi leader has ordered that maternity hospital incubators (in Kuwait), used for treating premature babies, be turned off, allowing these infants to die of exposure," he wrote.
  29. ^ "Iraq plunders Kuwait, US warns war closer- The Gulf crisis". The Sun Herald. Sydney, Australia. September 30, 1990. p. 8. The emir told Bush of Iraqis going into hospitals, taking babies out of incubators and people off life-support machines to send the equipment back to Iraq.
  30. ^ Raum, Tom. "Iraqi provocation\Emir's tales of Iraqi atrocities in Kuwait may spur U.S. military response". Philadelphia Daily News. Associated Press.
  31. ^ "Remarks Following Discussions With Amir Jabir al-Ahmad al-Jabir Al Sabah of Kuwait". September 28, 1990. Iraqi aggression has ransacked and pillaged a once peaceful and secure country, its population assaulted, incarcerated, intimidated, and even murdered. Iraq's leaders are trying to wipe an internationally recognized sovereign state, a member of the Arab League and the United Nations, off the face of the map.
  32. ^ Spiegelman, Arthur (September 28, 1990). "Its leaders in exile, Kuwait plans for the day of freedom". Reuters News. He said that Iraqi troops were plundering his country, removing even the rides and merry-go-around from a children's amusement park. "They went into a hospital and took babies from incubators. Twelve babies died so they could send the incubators to Baghdad."
  33. ^ a b Gergen, David (September 30, 1990). "The barbarities of Saddam Hussein – In Kuwait, 22 babies died when invaders stole their incubators". U.S. News & World Report. p. A16. Secret U.S. government cables, obtained by U.S. News & World Report, reveal shocking acts of brutality inflicted by the Iraqis against innocent citizens at Kuwaiti hospitals. The cables are based on eyewitness accounts from Kuwaiti doctors and others traumatized by what they have seen. Among their allegations: -- On the sixth day of their invasion, Iraqi soldiers reportedly entered the Adan Hospital in Fahaheel looking for hospital equipment to steal. They unplugged the oxygen to the incubators supporting 22 premature babies and made off with the incubators. All 22 children died.
  34. ^ "The President's News Conference". The American Presidency Project. October 9, 1990.
  35. ^ a b Deparle, Jason (3 September 1990). "THE MEDIA BUSINESS; Gulf Crisis Starts a Costly Fight for Good Press". The New York Times. p. 31.
  36. ^ "Kuwaitis loan jets to transport troops". The Times News. Associated Press. August 28, 1990. p. 5.
  37. ^ a b c Roschbwalb, p. 268
  38. ^ Rowse, Aruther E. (October 18, 1992). "Teary Testimony to Push America Toward War". The San Francisco Chronicle. p. 9/Z1.
  39. ^ a b Andersen, p. 170
  40. ^ a b The Washington Post (July 8, 1992). . Sun-Sentinel. Archived from the original on 7 April 2019. Retrieved November 7, 2017.
  41. ^ "Deception on Capitol Hill". The New York Times. January 15, 1992. p. A20.
  42. ^ Elter, Andreas: Die Kriegsverkäufer: Geschichte der US-Propaganda 1917–2005. Frankfurt a. M.: Suhrkamp. 2005, p. 241, quoted in: Anton, Andreas & Schink, Alan. (2019). Review of Michael Butter (2018). "Nothing is as it seems." About conspiracy theories. In: Journal of Anomalistics, Volume 19 (2019), p. 471-486
  43. ^ a b CSPAN Video Recording
  44. ^ a b c d Rowse, "Kuwaitgate – killing of Kuwaiti babies by Iraqi soldiers exaggerated"
  45. ^ a b Brosnan, James W. (October 11, 1990). "Witenesses describe atrocities by Iraqis". The Commercial Appeal.
  46. ^ Pratt, p. 288
  47. ^ a b Sriramesh, p. 864
  48. ^ Walton, p. 772
  49. ^ a b Rowse, "How to build support for war"
  50. ^ Walton, p. 772
  51. ^ Eemeren, p. 70
  52. ^ Walton, p.771
  53. ^ a b c d e Krauss, Clifford (January 12, 1992). "CONGRESSMAN SAYS GIRL WAS CREDIBLE". The New York Times.
  54. ^ Alderson, Andrew; Wavell, Stuart (January 13, 1991). "Paradise lost: The full story of Iraq's violation of Kuwait – Gulf Crisis". Sunday Times.
  55. ^ "Iraq rejects U.S. charges of atrocities". Reuters News. October 16, 1990.
  56. ^ a b "Doctors deny babies killed in Iraqi invasion". Reuters News. October 21, 1990.
  57. ^ a b c d Arthur, John (January 6, 1992). "Remember Nayirah, Witness for Kuwait?". The New York Times.
  58. ^ "MacArthur, John R." Harper's Magazine. Retrieved March 16, 2011.
  59. ^ Bennett, p. 131
  60. ^ a b Gilboa, p. 9
  61. ^ a b c d "P.R. Firm Had No Reason to Question Kuwaiti's Testimony". The New York Times. January 17, 1992.
  62. ^ Roschwalb, p. 273
  63. ^ Lee, Gary (August 28, 1992). "Troubled Public Relations Firm Names New Washington Manager; Paster Replaces Gray, Who Retains Title as Chairman of the Board". The Washington Post. p. A24.
  64. ^ Trento, p. 381
  65. ^ Grunig, pp. 137-138
  66. ^ Roschbwalb, p. 267
  67. ^ a b c d e f "Kuwaiti Gave Consistent Account of Atrocities". The New York Times. January 27, 1992. p. A20.
  68. ^ MacArthur, John (January 27, 1992). "Kuwaiti Gave Consistent Account of Atrocities; Retracted Testimony". The New York Times.
  69. ^ Stauber, p. 143
  70. ^ a b Weiss, Tara (March 15, 2001). "NPR insists funding doesn't influence news". The Hartford Courant.
  71. ^ Hebert, James (July 14, 2003). "Always consider the source ... if you can identify it". Copley News Service. "It was a corrupt, unethical thing to be doing," Broom says of the incident and Hill and Knowlton's role in it.
  72. ^ "Deception on Capitol Hill". The New York Times. January 15, 1992.
  73. ^ Leonard Doyle, "Iraqi Baby Atrocity is Revealed as Myth," The Independent (12 January 1992) p. 11.
  74. ^ "INCUBATOR STORY NEEDED VERIFICATION". Sun Sentinel. Jan 21, 1992. (subscription required)
  75. ^ Koenig, Robert L. (January 9, 1992). "Testimony Of Kuwaiti Envoy's Child Assailed". St. Louis Post-Dispatch. p. 1C.
  76. ^ Priest, Dana (January 7, 1992). "Legislator to Probe Allegations of Iraqi Atrocities; Accuser Identified as Daughter of Kuwait Ambassador to U.S." The Washington Post. (subscription required)
  77. ^ Ted Rowse, "Kuwaitgate – killing of Kuwaiti babies by Iraqi soldiers exaggerated," Washington Monthly (September 1992).
  78. ^ Dwyer, Jim (July 3, 1992). "Desert Mirage Of Dead Babies". Long Island, New York. (subscription required)
  79. ^ a b Brough, David (September 6, 1992). "IRAQ RETURNS STOLEN INCUBATORS TO KUWAIT". Reuters.
  80. ^ Richissin, Todd (October 17, 2001). "Media finds war access denied ; Coverage: Journalists are bristling at the Pentagon's tightening control on what they're allowed to see". (subscription required)
  81. ^ Qtd. in Trento, p. 389
  82. ^ Eemeren pp. 70-71
  83. ^ Roschwalb, p. 272

Journals

  • Bishop, Ed (April 2003). "Not so ancient history". St. Louis Journalism Review.
  • Cull, Nicholas J. (Fall 2006). . Transnational Broadcasting Studies. Archived from the original on 2011-04-05. Retrieved 2011-03-18.
  • Fowler, Giles; Fedler, Fred (1991). "A Farewell to Truth: Lies, Rumors and Propaganda as the Press Goes to War". Florida Communication Journal. 22 (1): 22–34. ISSN 1050-3366.
  • Gilboa, Eytan (2001). "Diplomacy in the media age: Three models of uses and effects". Diplomacy & Statecraft. 12 (2): 1–28. doi:10.1080/09592290108406201. ISSN 0959-2296.
  • Grunig, James E. (Summer 1993). "Public relations and international affairs: effects, ethics and responsibility". Journal of International Affairs. 47 (1): 137–162. ISSN 0022-197X. (subscription required)
  • Mundy, Alicia (September–October 1992). . Columbia Journalism Review. Archived from the original on October 31, 2007.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  • Pratt, C (1994). "Hill & Knowlton's two ethical dilemmas". Public Relations Review. 20 (3): 277–294. doi:10.1016/0363-8111(94)90041-8. ISSN 0363-8111.
  • Rendall, Steve; Hart, Peter; Hollar, Julie (January–February 2006). "20 Stories That Made a Difference". Extra!. 19 (1): 23–28. ISSN 0895-2310.
  • Roschwalb, S (1994). "The Hill & Knowlton cases: A brief on the controversy". Public Relations Review. 20 (3): 267–276. doi:10.1016/0363-8111(94)90040-X. ISSN 0363-8111.
  • Rowse, Ted (September 1992). "Kuwaitgate – killing of Kuwaiti babies by Iraqi soldiers exaggerated". The Washington Monthly.
  • Rowse, Arthur E. (September–October 1992). . Columbia Journalism Review. Archived from the original on April 20, 2008.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  • Walton, Douglas (1995). "Appeal to pity: A case study of theargumentum ad misericordiam" (PDF). Argumentation. 9 (5): 769–784. doi:10.1007/BF00744757. ISSN 0920-427X. S2CID 18245372.
  • "Nayirah's Testimony". C-SPAN. Retrieved October 17, 2017.
  • "How PR Sold the War in the Persian Gulf". PR Watch. PR Watch. Retrieved 2013-07-05.
  • "Gulf War ground offensive begins". History. A&E Tevelvision Networks.
  • "Deception on Capitol Hill". The New York Times. January 15, 1992.

Books

  • Andersen, Robin (2006). A century of media, a century of war. Peter Lang. pp. 170–172. ISBN 978-0-8204-7893-7.
  • Baillargeon, Normand (January 4, 2008). A short course in intellectual self-defense. Seven Stories Press. ISBN 978-1-58322-765-7.
  • Barra, Ximena de la; Buono, Richard Alan Dello (2009). Latin America after the neoliberal debacle: another region is possible. Rowman & Littlefield Publishers. ISBN 978-0-7425-6605-7.
  • Bennett, W. Lance; Paletz, David L. (1994). Taken by storm: the media, public opinion, and U.S. foreign policy in the Gulf War. University of Chicago Press. ISBN 978-0-226-04259-6.
  • Bivens, Rena Kim (October 2008). The Road to War: Manufacturing Public Opinion in Support of U.S. Foreign Policy Goals. GRIN Verlag. ISBN 978-3-640-17931-2.
  • Carpenter, Ted Galen (1995). The captive press: foreign policy crises and the First Amendment. Cato Institute. p. 192. ISBN 978-1-882577-22-4.
  • Doorley, John; Garcia, Helio Fred (October 20, 2006). Reputation management: the key to successful public relations and corporate communication. Taylor & Francis. ISBN 978-0-415-97470-7.
  • Eemeren, Frans H. van (2009). Examining Argumentation in Context: Fifteen Studies on Strategic Maneuvering. John Benjamins Publishing Company. pp. 70–71. ISBN 978-90-272-1118-7.
  • Effarah, Jamil E. (September 2007). Think Palestine to Unlock Us-Israelis and Arabs Conflicts. AuthorHouse. p. 240. ISBN 978-1-4343-3252-3.
  • Ewen, Stuart (October 22, 1998). PR!: a social history of spin. Basic Books. ISBN 978-0-465-06179-2.
  • Foerstel, Herbert N. (June 2001). From Watergate to Monicagate: ten controversies in modern journalism and media. Greenwood Publishing Group. pp. 51–52. ISBN 978-0-313-31163-5.
  • Frenay, Robert (March 30, 2006). Pulse: the coming age of systems and machines inspired by living things. Macmillan. pp. 412–413. ISBN 978-0-374-11327-8.
  • Gardner, Lloyd C. (March 2, 2010). The Long Road to Baghdad: A History of U.S. Foreign Policy from the 1970s to the Present. The New Press. ISBN 978-1-59558-476-2.
  • Grandin, Greg (2007). Empire's Workshop: Latin America, the United States, and the Rise of the New Imperialism. Macmillan. ISBN 978-0-8050-8323-1.
  • Jaco, Charles (January 1, 2002). The complete idiot's guide to the Gulf War. Penguin. ISBN 978-0-02-864324-3.
  • Jamieson, Kathleen Hall; Waldman, Paul (June 21, 2004). The press effect: politicians, journalists, and the stories that shape the political world. Oxford University Press US. p. 19. ISBN 978-0-19-517329-1.
  • Knightley, Phillip (2004). The first casualty: the war correspondent as hero and myth-maker from the Crimea to Iraq. JHU Press. ISBN 978-0-8018-8030-8.
  • Loehr, Davidson (October 11, 2005). America, fascism, and God: sermons from a heretical preacher. Chelsea Green Publishing. ISBN 978-1-931498-93-7.
  • Maass, Peter (August 10, 2010). Crude World: The Violent Twilight of Oil. Random House Digital, Inc. ISBN 978-1-4000-7545-4.
  • MacArthur, John R. (2004). Second front: censorship and propaganda in the 1991 Gulf War. University of California Press. ISBN 978-0-520-24231-9.
  • Manheim, Jarol B. (January 2, 1994). Strategic public diplomacy and American foreign policy: the evolution of influence. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-508738-3.
  • Marlin, Randal (2002). Propaganda and the ethics of persuasion. Broadview Press. ISBN 978-1-55111-376-0.
  • McCusker, Gerry (March 2006). "Propaganda-Truth is the first casualty of PR War". Public Relations Disasters: Talespin--Inside Stories and Lessons Learnt. Kogan Page Publishers. pp. 196–198. ISBN 978-0-7494-4572-0.
  • McPherson, James Brian (2006). Journalism at the end of the American century, 1965-present. Greenwood Publishing Group. ISBN 978-0-313-31780-4.
  • Miller, Karen S. (1999). The voice of business: Hill & Knowlton and postwar public relations. UNC Press Books. pp. 182–183. ISBN 978-0-8078-2439-9.
  • Müller-Kulmann, Thomas (November 2007). Propaganda and Censorship in Gulf War I. GRIN Verlag. pp. 6–7. ISBN 978-3-638-78145-9.
  • Phillips, Kevin P. (September 6, 2004). American dynasty: aristocracy, fortune, and the politics of deceit in the house of Bush. Penguin. p. 309. ISBN 978-0-14-303431-5.
  • Rossi, Melissa L. (November 29, 2005). What every American should know about who's really running the world: the people, corporations, and organizations that control our future. Penguin. ISBN 978-0-452-28615-3.
  • Spragens, William C. (1995). Electronic magazines: soft news programs on network television. Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 51. ISBN 978-0-275-94155-0.
  • Sriramesh, Krishnamurthy (January 10, 2009). The global public relations handbook: theory, research, and practice. Taylor & Francis. pp. 864–865. ISBN 978-0-415-99513-9.
  • Stauber, John Clyde; Rampton, Sheldon (1995). Toxic sludge is good for you: lies, damn lies, and the public relations industry. Common Courage Press. ISBN 978-1-56751-060-7.
  • Trento, Susan B. (October 1992). The power house: Robert Keith Gray and the selling of access and influence in Washington. St. Martin's Press. ISBN 978-0-312-08319-9.
  • Unger, Craig (March 16, 2004). House of Bush, house of Saud: the secret relationship between the world's two most powerful dynasties. Simon and Schuster. ISBN 978-0-7432-5337-6.
  • Walton, Douglas N. (June 1997). "The Nayirah Case". Appeal to pity: Argumentum ad misericordiam. SUNY Press. ISBN 978-0-7914-3461-1.
  • Winkler, Carol (2006). In the name of terrorism: presidents on political violence in the post-World War II era. SUNY Press. ISBN 978-0-7914-6617-9.
  • Willis, Jim; Willis, William James (2007). The media effect: how the news influences politics and government. Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 3. ISBN 978-0-275-99496-9.
  • Winter, James P. (1992). Common cents: media portrayal of the Gulf War and other events. Black Rose Books Ltd. p. 25. ISBN 978-1-895431-24-7.
  • Foundation for Public Relations Research and Education (U.S.) (1997). Public relations review. JAI Press.

External links

nayirah, testimony, false, testimony, given, before, united, states, congressional, human, rights, caucus, october, 1990, year, girl, publicly, identified, time, first, name, nayirah, testimony, widely, publicized, cited, numerous, times, united, states, senat. The Nayirah testimony was false testimony given before the United States Congressional Human Rights Caucus on October 10 1990 by a 15 year old girl who was publicly identified at the time by her first name Nayirah The testimony was widely publicized and was cited numerous times by United States senators and President George H W Bush in their rationale to support Kuwait in the Gulf War Nayirah al Ṣabaḥ during her testimony It was later revealed that she was the daughter of the Kuwaiti ambassador to the United States and that her testimony was false In 1992 it was revealed that Nayirah s last name was Al Ṣabaḥ Arabic نيرة الصباح and that she was the daughter of Saud Al Sabah the Kuwaiti ambassador to the United States Furthermore it was revealed that her testimony was organized as part of the Citizens for a Free Kuwait public relations campaign which was run by the American public relations firm Hill amp Knowlton for the Kuwaiti government Following this al Sabah s testimony has come to be regarded as a classic example of modern atrocity propaganda 1 2 In her testimony Nayirah claimed that after the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait she had witnessed Iraqi soldiers take babies out of incubators in a Kuwaiti hospital take the incubators and leave the babies to die Her story was initially corroborated by Amnesty International a British based global NGO which published several independent reports about the supposed killings 3 and testimony from evacuees Following the liberation of Kuwait reporters were given access to the country An ABC report found that patients including premature babies did die when many of Kuwait s nurses and doctors fled but Iraqi troops almost certainly had not stolen hospital incubators and left hundreds of Kuwaiti babies to die 4 Amnesty International USA reacted by issuing a correction with executive director John Healey subsequently accusing the Bush administration of opportunistic manipulation of the international human rights movement 5 Contents 1 Background 1 1 Incubator allegations 1 2 Citizens for a Free Kuwait 1 3 Hill amp Knowlton 1 4 Congressional Human Rights Foundation 1 5 U S government involvement 2 Testimony 2 1 Hill amp Knowlton 3 Reactions 3 1 Initial response 3 2 Martin and MacArthur 3 3 Hill amp Knowlton 3 4 Tom Lantos 3 5 Ambassador Sabah 3 6 Lauri Fitz Pegado 3 7 Other 4 Investigations 4 1 Human Rights Watch 4 2 Amnesty International 4 3 Kroll Report 5 Aftermath 6 Scholarly commentary 7 See also 8 Notes 9 References 9 1 Journals 9 2 Books 10 External linksBackground EditIncubator allegations Edit Iraqis are beating people bombing and shooting They are taking all hospital equipment babies out of incubators Life support systems are turned off They are even removing traffic lights The Iraqis are beating Kuwaitis torturing them knifing them beating them cutting their ears off if they are caught resisting or are with the Kuwaiti army or police Evacuee s description as reported in St Louis Post Dispatch 6 Following the Iraqi invasion and occupation of Kuwait there were reports of widespread looting On September 2 1990 in a letter to the UN Secretary General Javier Perez de Cuellar Kuwait s UN representative Mohammad A Abulhasan wrote Further to those of our communications which are intended to inform you of the actions perpetrated by the Iraqi occupation authorities in Kuwait in contravention of all international laws and on the basis of confirmed information provided to us by the Government of Kuwait we wish to draw attention to a phenomenon which has no precedent in history namely the Iraqi occupation authorities organized operation for the purpose of looting and plundering Kuwait It is impossible to compare this operation to any similar incidents or to provide an exact account thereof because it is in effect an operation designed to achieve nothing less than the complete removal of Kuwait s assets including property belonging to the State to public and private institutions and to individuals as well as the contents of houses factories stores hospitals academic institutes schools and universities What has occurred in Kuwait is the perpetration of an act of armed robbery by a State which has used its military security and technical organs for that purpose 7 In the letter Abulhasan also noted that theft of all equipment from private and public hospitals including X ray machines scanners and pieces of laboratory equipment 7 The allegations of looting were also retold by evacuees who described soldiers looting office buildings schools and hospitals for air conditioners computers blackboards desks and even infant incubators and radiation equipment 8 Douglas Hurd the British Secretary for foreign affairs surmised that they are looting and destroying in a way which suggests that they may not expect to be there for very long 9 The looting of incubators attracted media attention because of allegations that premature babies were being discarded or dying as a result 10 On September 5 Abdul Wahab Al Fowzan the Kuwaiti health minister in exile stated at a press conference in Taif Saudi Arabia that Iraqi soldiers had seized virtually all of the country s hospitals and medical institutions after their invasion and that soldiers evicted patients and systematically looted the hospitals of high tech equipment ambulances drugs and plasma which resulted in the death of 22 premature babies 9 11 The Washington Post described the origin of the Kuwaiti baby story as follows The Kuwaiti baby story originated with a letter from a senior Kuwaiti public health official that was smuggled out of the country by a European diplomat late last month according to Hudah Bahar an architect who received the letter here in London It was supplemented by information gathered from fleeing Kuwaitis and other sources by Fawzia Sayegh a Kuwaiti pediatrician living here The letter claimed that Iraqi soldiers ordered patients evicted from several hospitals and closed down critical units for treating cancer patients dialysis patients and those suffering from diabetes Bahar and Sayegh said the Iraqis hauled sophisticated equipment such as dialysis machines back to Baghdad part of the haul of cash gold cars and jewelry that is said by Arab banking sources to exceed 2 billion Among the equipment taken were the 22 infant incubator units they said 11 The Washington Post also noted that it was unable to verify the accusations as Iraq did not permit access to the area and had quarantined diplomats 11 On September 5 in another letter to the UN Secretary General Abulhasan reiterated Fowzan s claims writing We are informed by impeccable sources in Kuwait s health institutions that the Iraqi occupation authorities have carried out the following brutal crimes which may be described as crimes against humanity 2 The incubators in maternity hospitals used for children suffering from retarded growth premature children have been removed causing the death of all the children who were under treatment 12 The letter did not state how many babies had died 11 13 The allegations in the letter received widespread media coverage in the following days 14 15 16 17 18 19 That day in an interview with released hostages on NPR s All Things Considered a hostage stated that Iraqi troops were hitting children with the butts of the guns taking infants out of incubators and taking the incubators 20 Reuters also reported they had been told that Iraqi troops took premature babies out of incubators in Kuwait in order to steal the equipment 21 22 On September 9 NPR reported that in a ward for premature infants soldiers had turned off the oxygen on incubators and packed the equipment for shipment to Iraq 23 On September 17 Edward Gnehm Jr the U S ambassador designate to Kuwait told reporters that Kuwaiti health officials told him 22 babies had died when Iraqi troops had stolen their incubators 24 The Los Angeles Times reported that refugees reported that incubators for premature babies were confiscated by Iraqi troops and the babies inside were piled on the floor and left to die 10 25 The San Jose Mercury News also reported the same allegation that day adding that Western diplomats thought this is the kind of thing that some people call genocide and if people wanted to construe it as such it could be cause for some kind of military intervention 26 On September 25 The Washington Post reported that Kuwait City s hospitals are being stripped of incubators 10 27 The president of Citizens for a Free Kuwait wrote to Representative Gus Yatron stating of how he recently learned that the Iraqi leader has ordered that maternity hospital incubators in Kuwait used for treating premature babies be turned off allowing these infants to die of exposure 28 President George H W Bush On September 29 in a meeting between Kuwaiti leader Sheik Jabbar al Ahmed al Sabah and President George H W Bush the exiled emir told the president that Iraqis were going into hospitals taking babies out of incubators and people off life support machines to send the equipment back to Iraq 29 30 In his remarks following the discussion Bush stated that Iraqi aggression has ransacked and pillaged a once peaceful and secure country its population assaulted incarcerated intimidated and even murdered and that Iraq s leaders are trying to wipe an internationally recognized sovereign state a member of the Arab League and the United Nations off the face of the map 31 On September 28 Kuwait s planning minister Sulaiman Mutawa reported that 12 babies had died as a result of incubator looting 32 On September 30 U S News amp World Report reported that it had obtained secret US government cables based on eyewitness accounts that revealed shocking acts of brutality inflicted by the Iraqis against innocent citizens at Kuwaiti hospitals 33 The cables stated that on the sixth day of Iraqi invasion Iraqi soldiers entered the Adan Hospital in Fahaheel looking for hospital equipment to steal and that they unplugged the oxygen to the incubators supporting 22 premature babies and made off with the incubators thus killing the 22 children 33 On October 9 at a Presidential news conference Bush stated I thought General Scowcroft Assistant to the President for National Security Affairs put it very well after the Amir left here And I am very much concerned not just about the physical dismantling but of the brutality that has now been written on by Amnesty International confirming some of the tales told us by the Amir of brutality It s just unbelievable some of the things at least he reflected I mean people on a dialysis machine cut off the machine sent to Baghdad babies in incubators heaved out of the incubators and the incubators themselves sent to Baghdad Now I don t know how many of these tales can be authenticated but I do know that when the Amir was here he was speaking from the heart And after that came Amnesty International who were debriefing many of the people at the border And it s sickening 34 Citizens for a Free Kuwait Edit The Citizens for a Free Kuwait was a public relations committee set up by the Kuwaiti embassy described by The Times News as a Washington D C based committee comprised of concerned Kuwaitis and Americans 35 36 Though the committee occupied embassy office space they were to be working independently of the embassy 35 Hill amp Knowlton Edit In 1990 after being approached by a Kuwaiti expatriate in New York Hill amp Knowlton took on Citizens for a Free Kuwait 37 The objective of the national campaign was to raise awareness in the United States about the dangers posed by Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein to Kuwait 37 Hill amp Knowlton conducted a 1 million study to determine the best way to win support for strong action 38 H amp K had the Wirthington Group conduct focus groups to determine the best strategy that would influence public opinion 39 The study found that an emphasis on atrocities particularly the incubator story was the most effective 39 Hill amp Knowlton is estimated to have been given as much as 12 million by the Kuwaitis for their public relations campaign 40 Congressional Human Rights Foundation Edit The Congressional Human Rights Foundation is a non governmental organization that investigates human rights abuse It was headed by Democratic U S Representative Tom Lantos and Republican Representative John Porter and rented space in Hill amp Knowlton s Washington headquarters at a 3000 reduced rate 41 U S government involvement EditSome scholars claim the U S government and the White House knew nothing others claim that the U S knew and was complicit German historian Andreas Elter de stated The work of the US advertising agency for the Kuwaiti carried the signature of the White House in a certain way President Bush was briefed by Fuller on every single step Whether he also gave his personal consent for the baby story however cannot be proven What remains however is that close personal contacts existed between the US government and an agency that had demonstrably given birth to lies The same agency was even directly employed by the US government in another context 42 Testimony EditOn October 10 1990 Nayirah was the last to testify at the Caucus In her oral testimony which lasted 4 minutes 43 she stated Mr Chairman and members of the committee my name is Nayirah and I just came out of Kuwait My mother and I were in Kuwait on August 2nd for a peaceful summer holiday My older sister had a baby on July 29th and we wanted to spend some time in Kuwait with her I only pray that none of my 10th grade classmates had a summer vacation like I did I may have wished sometimes that I can be an adult that I could grow up quickly What I saw happening to the children of Kuwait and to my country has changed my life forever has changed the life of all Kuwaitis young and old mere children or more My sister with my five day old nephew traveled across the desert to safety There is no milk available for the baby in Kuwait They barely escaped when their car was stuck in the desert sand and help came from Saudi Arabia I stayed behind and wanted to do something for my country The second week after invasion I volunteered at the AlIdar phonetic rendering Hospital with 12 other women who wanted to help as well I was the youngest volunteer The other women were from 20 to 30 years old While I was there I saw the Iraqi soldiers come into the hospital with guns They took the babies out of the incubators took the incubators and left the children to die on the cold floor It was horrifying I could not help but think of my nephew who was born premature and might have died that day as well After I left the hospital some of my friends and I distributed flyers condemning the Iraqi invasion until we were warned we might be killed if the Iraqis saw us The Iraqis have destroyed everything in Kuwait They stripped the supermarkets of food the pharmacies of medicine the factories of medical supplies ransacked their houses and tortured neighbors and friends I saw and talked to a friend of mine after his torture and release by the Iraqis He is 22 but he looked as though he could have been an old man The Iraqis dunked his head into a swimming pool until he almost drowned They pulled out his fingernails and then played sic electric shocks to sensitive private parts of his body He was lucky to survive If an Iraqi soldier is found dead in the neighborhood they burn to the ground all the houses in the general vicinity and would not let firefighters come until the only ash and rubble was left The Iraqis were making fun of President Bush and verbally and physically abusing my family and me on our way out of Kuwait We only did so because life in Kuwait became unbearable They have forced us to hide burn or destroy everything identifying our country and our government I want to emphasize that Kuwait is our mother and the Emir our father We repeated this on the roofs of our houses in Kuwait until the Iraqis began shooting at us and we shall repeat it again I am glad I am 15 old enough to remember Kuwait before Saddam Hussein destroyed it and young enough to rebuild itThank you 43 Although Nayirah did not specify how many babies were in the incubators in her oral testimony in the written testimony distributed by Hill and Knowlton it read While I was there I saw the Iraqi soldiers come into the hospital with guns and go into the room where 15 babies were in incubators 44 The testimony was not given under oath citation needed Representative John Porter co chairman of the caucus remarked that in his eight years of service on the caucus he had never heard such brutality and inhumanity and sadism 45 Nayirah s testimony was described as the most dramatic 45 Hill amp Knowlton Edit It is unclear how much of Nayirah s testimony was coached Though the firm was supposed to provide only stylistic help 46 it was reported that H amp K provided witnesses wrote testimony and coached the witnesses for effectiveness 47 Reactions EditNayirah s testimony was widely publicized 48 Hill amp Knowlton which had filmed the hearing sent out a video news release to MediaLink a firm which served about 700 television stations in the United States 49 That night portions of the testimony aired on ABC s Nightline and NBC Nightly News reaching an estimated audience between 35 and 53 million Americans 47 49 Seven senators cited Nayirah s testimony in their speeches backing the use of force Note 1 President George Bush repeated the story at least ten times in the following weeks 52 Her testimony helped to stir American opinion in favor of participation in the Gulf War 53 Initial response Edit On January 13 1991 the Sunday Times reported that a Dr Ali Al Huwail could vouch for 92 deaths 54 Iraq denied the allegations On October 16 Iraqi information minister Latif Nassif al Jassem told the Iraqi News Agency that now you Bush are using what he Sheikh Jaber told you to make Congress ratify the budget which is in the red because of your policies adding that you as the president of a superpower have to weigh words carefully and not act as a clown who repeats what he is told 55 In a visit to Kuwait on October 21 1990 by journalists who were escorted by Iraqi information ministry officials doctors at a Kuwaiti maternity facility denied the incubator allegations 56 In the visit the Iraqi head of the Kuwaiti health department Abdul Rahman Mohammad al Ugeily said that Baghdad had sent 1 000 doctors and other medical to staff to help run Kuwait s 14 hospitals and health centres following the invasion 56 Martin and MacArthur Edit A little reportorial investigation would have done a great service to the democratic process John MacArthur 57 On March 15 1991 John Martin an ABC reporter reported that patients including premature babies did die when many of Kuwait s nurses and doctors stopped working or fled the country and discovered that Iraqi troops almost certainly had not stolen hospital incubators and left hundreds of Kuwaiti babies to die 4 On January 6 1992 The New York Times published an op ed piece by John MacArthur entitled Remember Nayirah Witness for Kuwait 57 MacArthur discovered that Nayirah was the daughter of the Kuwaiti Ambassador to the U S Saud Nasir al Sabah 57 MacArthur noted that the incubator story seriously distorted the American debate about whether to support military action and questioned whether their Representatives Lantos and Porter special relationship with Hill and Knowlton should prompt a Congressional investigation to find out if their actions merely constituted an obvious conflict of interest or worse if they knew who the tearful Nayirah really was in October 1990 57 The story earned MacArthur the Monthly Journalism Award from The Washington Monthly in April 1992 and the Mencken Award in 1993 44 58 Hill amp Knowlton Edit We disseminated information in a void as a basis for Americans to form opinions Frank Mankiewicz Vice Chairman Hill amp Knowlton 59 60 On January 15 1992 the CEO of Hill amp Knowlton Thomas E Eidson responded to the concerns raised by MacArthur in a letter to the editor to The New York Times 61 Eidson stated that at no time has this firm collaborated with anyone to produce knowingly deceptive testimony asserting that the firm had no reason to question her veracity when she testified following her escape from Kuwait 61 The letter explained that Nayirah s charge that Iraqi soldiers removed newborn babies from incubators was corroborated by Dr Ibraheem Behbehani head of the Red Crescent before the United Nations Security Council and that the media was not permitted back inside Kuwait until after the liberation so there was no way to verify the stories of refugees like her 61 Eidson concluded that Nayirah s credibility should no more be questioned than if she had been a doctor or teacher and the company s work with the Kuwaitis was consistent with firm s standards stating that the public interest was fairly served 61 In August 1992 Howard Paster replaced Robert K Gray as the general manager of the Washington office in order to clean up the firm s image 62 63 Critics contended that Hill amp Knowlton had concocted a fake popular movement Citizens for a Free Kuwait and subsequently used questionable evidence and suspect witnesses to influence public opinion and policy in the United States and the UN 60 64 65 Hill amp Knowlton s actions taken on behalf of Citizens for a Free Kuwait together with those of other major clients including Bank of Credit and Commerce International the Church of Scientology and an anti abortion campaign by Catholic bishops raised ethical concerns among public relations professionals 66 The concerns though not new were more vigorous than previous ones due to the prominence of the issues 37 Tom Lantos Edit Hold on to your hats The grand campaign to rewrite the history of the Persian Gulf war is on Tom Lantos response to MacArthur 67 While Lantos was a close friend of Bush at the time as well as a co chair of the Congressional Human Rights Foundation he failed to notify Bush of his position within the Nayirah case or of her true identity In an interview Lantos stated that he had concealed Nayirah s identity at the request of her father in order to protect her family and friends 53 Lantos denied any allegations of wrongdoing arguing that The media happened to focus on her If she hadn t testified they would have focused on something else 53 Lantos also stated that The notion that any of the witnesses brought to the caucus through the Kuwaiti Embassy would not be credible did not cross my mind I have no basis for assuming that her story is not true but the point goes beyond that If one hypothesizes that the woman s story is fictitious from A to Z that in no way diminishes the avalanche of human rights violations 53 In a letter to the editor to The New York Times on Jan 27 1992 entitled Kuwaiti Gave Consistent Account of Atrocities Tom Lantos responded to MacArthur s allegations He wrote that Mr MacArthur s deceptive article serves only the cynics who seek to rewrite the history of the Persian Gulf war noting the article s sinister innuendo suggests that the girl was not even in Kuwait at the time of the Iraqi invasion and that the whole gruesome incident was a diabolical plot by an American public relations firm 67 Lantos wrote that the fact that Nayirah was the daughter of the Ambassador of Kuwait made her a more credible witness and that her relationship to the Ambassador and Government enhanced her credibility 67 He also noted that her account was consistent with the information we received from other witnesses with hundreds of other atrocity stories from Kuwait carried by media around the globe and consistent with reports by independent human rights organizations such as Amnesty International who also testified at our hearing and subsequently published accounts similar to Nayirah s 67 Lantos concluded that given the countless cases of verified Iraqi human rights violations it was unnecessary and counterproductive to invent atrocities 67 Lantos also rejected the allegations of a special relationship between the caucus and Hill amp Knowlton stating that caucus activities are held without regard to whether these countries are represented by any law firm or public relations firm 67 In a subsequent letter to The New York Times MacArthur pointed out that the testimony had been retracted 68 Ambassador Sabah Edit The ambassador has stated that his daughter had witnessed the atrocities she described and that her presence in Kuwait could be verified by the United States Embassy in Kuwait 53 He also stated If I wanted to lie or if we wanted to lie if we wanted to exaggerate I wouldn t use my daughter to do so I could easily buy other people to do it 69 Lauri Fitz Pegado Edit This section of a biography of a living person does not include any references or sources Please help by adding reliable sources Contentious material about living people that is unsourced or poorly sourced must be removed immediately Find sources Nayirah testimony news newspapers books scholar JSTOR November 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Pegado was the acting Vice President of Hill amp Knowlton at the time of Nayirah s Testimony It was later confirmed within the Kuwaitis investigation that Pegado was responsible for coaching Nayirah in what was proven to be her false testimony Other Edit The campaign has been described by critics as corrupt deceptive and unethical Some charge that it was used to spread false or exaggerated tales of Iraqi atrocities 40 70 71 Lantos was criticized for his withholding the information 72 Investigations EditHuman Rights Watch Edit In 1992 the human rights organization Middle East Watch a division of Human Rights Watch published the results of their investigation of the incubator story Its director Andrew Whitley told the press While it is true that the Iraqis targeted hospitals there is no truth to the charge which was central to the war propaganda effort that they stole incubators and callously removed babies allowing them to die on the floor The stories were manufactured from germs of truth by people outside the country who should have known better One investigator Aziz Abu Hamad interviewed doctors in the hospital where Nayirah claimed she witnessed Iraqi soldiers pull 15 infants from incubators and leave them to die The Independent reported The doctors told him the maternity ward had 25 to 30 incubators None was taken by the Iraqis and no babies were taken from them 73 Amnesty International Edit Amnesty International initially supported the story but later issued a retraction 74 75 It stated that it found no reliable evidence that Iraqi forces had caused the deaths of babies by removing them or ordering their removal from incubators 76 Kroll Report Edit Kuwaiti officials do not discuss the matter with the press 44 In order to respond to these charges the Kuwaiti government hired Kroll Associates to undertake an independent investigation of the incubator story The Kroll investigation lasted nine weeks and conducted over 250 interviews The interviews with Nayirah revealed that her original testimony was wildly distorted at best she told Kroll that she had actually seen only one baby outside its incubator for no more than a moment She also told Kroll that she was never a volunteer at the hospital and had in fact only stopped by for a few minutes 77 Aftermath EditIn fact nearly everyone involved in peddling the tale of the unplugged babies from Amnesty International to Kuwaiti doctors has sprinted away from it Newsday 78 Following the end of the war Reuters reported that Iraq returned 98 truckloads of medical equipment stolen from Kuwait including two of the baby incubators Abdul Rahim al Zeid an assistant under secretary at the Kuwaiti Public Health Ministry said that by returning the incubators the Iraqis had unwittingly provided proof that they took them 79 Kuwait s chief ambulance officer Abdul Reda Abbas stated that We think the Iraqis might have returned the incubators by mistake 79 Following the revelation of Nayirah s identity there was a public outrage that the information had been withheld 80 Scholarly commentary EditIn the end the question was not whether H amp K effectively altered public opinion but whether the combined efforts of America s own government foreign interests and private PR and lobbying campaigns drowned out decent and rational unemotional debate The power house Robert Keith Gray and the selling of access and influence in Washington 81 The content presentation distribution effectiveness and purpose of Nayirah s testimony have been the subject of multiple public relations studies In his book Strategic Maneuvering in Argumentative Discourse Frans H van Eemeren stating that visual messages which accompany verbal argumentation can be so drastic that rational argumentation becomes almost impossible described Nayirah s story as an argumentum ad misericordiam 82 In the paper The Hill amp Knowlton Cases A Brief on the Controversy by Susanne A Roschwalb the author noted that as H amp K was a British firm what effect did British concerns such as the possible collapse of its financial institutions if the Kuwaiti currency the dinar became worthless have on Hill amp Knowlton s efforts 83 Ted Rowse in his article Kuwaitgate killing of Kuwaiti babies by Iraqi soldiers exaggerated in The Washington Monthly noted that Most reporters having apparently been burned by Hill amp Knowlton s handiwork in spreading the original Nayirah story without checking it out seem to prefer to let the story fade away passively falling once again for the company s public relations guile 44 John R MacArthur who authored Second Front Censorship and Propaganda in the Gulf War has noted that at the time it was the most sophisticated and expensive PR campaign ever run in the U S by a foreign government 70 See also EditForeign interventions by the United States American imperialism House of Al Sabah To Sell a War Wag the Dog Gulf of Tonkin incident Live From Baghdad Jumana Hanna Saddam Hussein s alleged shredder Atrocity propagandaNotes Edit This was viewed as important since the January 10 1991 authorization to use force passed by only 5 senate votes 50 51 References Edit Regan Tom 2002 09 06 When contemplating war beware of babies in incubators Christian Science Monitor Retrieved October 31 2013 Morris Al 2009 Civilisation Hijacked Rescuing Jesus from Christianity and the human spirit From Bondage ISBN 978 1440182426 Cockburn Alexander 1991 02 07 Alexander Cockburn reviews An American Life by Ronald Reagan LRB 7 February 1991 London Review of Books lrb co uk p 9 Retrieved September 23 2014 a b Fowler p 22 Healey John 28 January 1991 Amnesty Responds to President Bush The Heights No 1 Retrieved 26 May 2015 U S Evacuates 171 From Iraq Kuwait Women Who Made It Out Recount Tales Of Terror St Louis Post Dispatch September 8 1990 p 1A Cindy of San Francisco who declined to be identified further said Iraqis are beating people bombing and shooting They are taking all hospital equipment babies out of incubators Life support systems are turned off They are even removing traffic lights The Iraqis are beating Kuwaitis torturing them knifing them beating them cutting their ears off if they are caught resisting or are with the Kuwaiti army or police she said a b United Nations Security Council masthead documentLetter Dated 2 September 1990 From The Permanent Representative Of Kuwait To The United Nations Addressed To The Secretary General S 21694 September 3 1990 Leff Lisa September 11 1990 Weary wary evacuees bring tales of horror The Washington Post The evacuees told of soldiers looting office buildings schools and hospitals for air conditioners computers blackboards desks and even infant incubators and radiation equipment They described food shortages that afflicted soldiers as well as civilians and random acts of violence a b Beeston Nicholas September 5 1990 A battle ground to test Saddam Iraq invasion of Kuwait The Times London England a b c Rendall p 24 a b c d Frankel Glenn September 10 1990 Iraq Kuwait Waging an Old Fashioned War of Propaganda The Washington Post Archived from the original on November 5 2012 Retrieved March 15 2011 subscription required United Nations Security Council masthead documentLetter Dated 5 September 1990 From The Permanent Representative Of Kuwait To The United Nations Addressed To The Secretary General S 21713 September 5 1990 Walton p 771 Kuwait says seizure of hospital equipment caused many deaths Reuters News September 6 1992 Iraq equipment removal killed patients Kuwait Reuters News September 6 1992 Kuwaiti says Iraq plundered hospitals Charlotte Observer North Carolina Associated Press September 7 1990 p A16 Official Hospitalized in Kuwait are left to die Chicago Tribune Associated Press September 7 1990 p 12 Persian Gulf crisis More about the Mideast Houston Chronicle September 7 1990 p A18 Kuwait Says Iraq Plundered Hospitals The San Francisco Chronicle Associated Press September 7 1990 p A21 Released Hostages Tell of Kuwait Terror All Things Considered Transcription of broadcast NPR September 7 1990 Total destruction everywhere cars wrecked burned people thrown out of cars on the street you re driving down they just throw people over the street They re hitting children with the butts of the guns taking infants out of incubators and taking the incubators Kuwait offers to help cover mideast costs contributions should offset U S liability Newport News Virginia September 8 1990 Cindy who refused to give her last name and another woman who identified herself only as Rudi told the Reuters news agency that Iraqi troops took premature babies out of incubators in Kuwait in order to steal the equipment Tamayo Juan O September 8 1990 Iraqi hostage horror It smelled of death Austin American Statesman p A1 Weekend Edition Sunday News Transcription of broadcast NPR September 9 1990 Time is running out said one a pediatrician She said in the last few days the Iraqi troops had looted a local hospital In a ward for premature infants soldiers had turned off the oxygen on incubators she said and packed the equipment for shipment to Iraq Dr Fawzi al Said said the report came to her by the hospital attendants who had buried the dead infants Iraq tightens its grip on Kuwait Dayton Daily News Ohio September 29 1990 pp 6A The U S ambassador designate to Kuwait Edward Gnehm Jr told reporters Monday that Kuwaiti health officials told him 22 babies born prematurely died when Iraqi troops removed them from incubators they stole Gnehm has been named to replace current ambassador Nathaniel Howell who is holed up inside the U S Embassy in Kuwait Murphy Kim September 17 1990 Kuwaitis bolt for border amid reports of atrocities Los Angeles Times p 1A Western officials said that they are still investigating reports of atrocities in Kuwait and added that many appeared to be well documented and supported by enough eyewitness accounts that they could be considered true In one case refugees reported that incubators for premature babies were confiscated by Iraqi troops and the babies inside were piled on the floor and left to die Air Cutoff of Iraq Gains U N Support Kuwaiti Refugees Spill Across Border San Jose Mercury News California September 17 1990 p 1A In one case refugees reported that incubators for premature babies were confiscated by Iraqi troops and the babies inside were piled on the floor and left to die This is the kind of thing that some people call genocide and if people wanted to construe it as such it could be cause for some kind of military intervention said a Western diplomat in close contact with the Kuwaitis Hoagland Jim September 25 1990 End Saddam s Reign of Terror The Washington Post p a23 But while dissidents have been making such arguments Saddam s actions in Kuwait show that he is not interested in compromise or in leaving Kuwait on any terms He has begun to depopulate Kuwait as he once did with Kurdistan and to send in Iraqis with phony new citizenship documents Based on Saddam s bloodstained track record it is almost certain that the young Kuwaiti men being grabbed at the border and elsewhere in Kuwait are being sent to Iraq to die American refugees and others report that Kuwait City s hospitals are being stripped of incubators and any other supplies that can be sent to Baghdad leaving babies and infirm patients to die ld give sanctions and negotiations a chance so he can avoid the costs of attacking Iraq s occupation forces is not enough That does not stay Saddam s ruthless hand Hall Lawrence Suffer the Children Summit must herald a new era in lives of our endangered young The Star Ledger Newark New Jersey The president of Citizens for a Free Kuwait recently wrote Rep Gus Yatron D Pa decrying the brutality of this madman Nothing points to the ruthlessness of Saddam Hussein more poignantly than his unmerciful misuse of the very young His manipulation of political opponents through the abuse of their children is sadly a well documented fact We recently learned that the Iraqi leader has ordered that maternity hospital incubators in Kuwait used for treating premature babies be turned off allowing these infants to die of exposure he wrote Iraq plunders Kuwait US warns war closer The Gulf crisis The Sun Herald Sydney Australia September 30 1990 p 8 The emir told Bush of Iraqis going into hospitals taking babies out of incubators and people off life support machines to send the equipment back to Iraq Raum Tom Iraqi provocation Emir s tales of Iraqi atrocities in Kuwait may spur U S military response Philadelphia Daily News Associated Press Remarks Following Discussions With Amir Jabir al Ahmad al Jabir Al Sabah of Kuwait September 28 1990 Iraqi aggression has ransacked and pillaged a once peaceful and secure country its population assaulted incarcerated intimidated and even murdered Iraq s leaders are trying to wipe an internationally recognized sovereign state a member of the Arab League and the United Nations off the face of the map Spiegelman Arthur September 28 1990 Its leaders in exile Kuwait plans for the day of freedom Reuters News He said that Iraqi troops were plundering his country removing even the rides and merry go around from a children s amusement park They went into a hospital and took babies from incubators Twelve babies died so they could send the incubators to Baghdad a b Gergen David September 30 1990 The barbarities of Saddam Hussein In Kuwait 22 babies died when invaders stole their incubators U S News amp World Report p A16 Secret U S government cables obtained by U S News amp World Report reveal shocking acts of brutality inflicted by the Iraqis against innocent citizens at Kuwaiti hospitals The cables are based on eyewitness accounts from Kuwaiti doctors and others traumatized by what they have seen Among their allegations On the sixth day of their invasion Iraqi soldiers reportedly entered the Adan Hospital in Fahaheel looking for hospital equipment to steal They unplugged the oxygen to the incubators supporting 22 premature babies and made off with the incubators All 22 children died The President s News Conference The American Presidency Project October 9 1990 a b Deparle Jason 3 September 1990 THE MEDIA BUSINESS Gulf Crisis Starts a Costly Fight for Good Press The New York Times p 31 Kuwaitis loan jets to transport troops The Times News Associated Press August 28 1990 p 5 a b c Roschbwalb p 268 Rowse Aruther E October 18 1992 Teary Testimony to Push America Toward War The San Francisco Chronicle p 9 Z1 a b Andersen p 170 a b The Washington Post July 8 1992 Jury Says 3 Took Kuwaiti Money To Promote War Sun Sentinel Archived from the original on 7 April 2019 Retrieved November 7 2017 Deception on Capitol Hill The New York Times January 15 1992 p A20 Elter Andreas Die Kriegsverkaufer Geschichte der US Propaganda 1917 2005 Frankfurt a M Suhrkamp 2005 p 241 quoted in Anton Andreas amp Schink Alan 2019 Review of Michael Butter 2018 Nothing is as it seems About conspiracy theories In Journal of Anomalistics Volume 19 2019 p 471 486 a b CSPAN Video Recording a b c d Rowse Kuwaitgate killing of Kuwaiti babies by Iraqi soldiers exaggerated a b Brosnan James W October 11 1990 Witenesses describe atrocities by Iraqis The Commercial Appeal Pratt p 288 a b Sriramesh p 864 Walton p 772 a b Rowse How to build support for war Walton p 772 Eemeren p 70 Walton p 771 a b c d e Krauss Clifford January 12 1992 CONGRESSMAN SAYS GIRL WAS CREDIBLE The New York Times Alderson Andrew Wavell Stuart January 13 1991 Paradise lost The full story of Iraq s violation of Kuwait Gulf Crisis Sunday Times Iraq rejects U S charges of atrocities Reuters News October 16 1990 a b Doctors deny babies killed in Iraqi invasion Reuters News October 21 1990 a b c d Arthur John January 6 1992 Remember Nayirah Witness for Kuwait The New York Times MacArthur John R Harper s Magazine Retrieved March 16 2011 Bennett p 131 a b Gilboa p 9 a b c d P R Firm Had No Reason to Question Kuwaiti s Testimony The New York Times January 17 1992 Roschwalb p 273 Lee Gary August 28 1992 Troubled Public Relations Firm Names New Washington Manager Paster Replaces Gray Who Retains Title as Chairman of the Board The Washington Post p A24 Trento p 381 Grunig pp 137 138 Roschbwalb p 267 a b c d e f Kuwaiti Gave Consistent Account of Atrocities The New York Times January 27 1992 p A20 MacArthur John January 27 1992 Kuwaiti Gave Consistent Account of Atrocities Retracted Testimony The New York Times Stauber p 143 a b Weiss Tara March 15 2001 NPR insists funding doesn t influence news The Hartford Courant Hebert James July 14 2003 Always consider the source if you can identify it Copley News Service It was a corrupt unethical thing to be doing Broom says of the incident and Hill and Knowlton s role in it Deception on Capitol Hill The New York Times January 15 1992 Leonard Doyle Iraqi Baby Atrocity is Revealed as Myth The Independent 12 January 1992 p 11 INCUBATOR STORY NEEDED VERIFICATION Sun Sentinel Jan 21 1992 subscription required Koenig Robert L January 9 1992 Testimony Of Kuwaiti Envoy s Child Assailed St Louis Post Dispatch p 1C Priest Dana January 7 1992 Legislator to Probe Allegations of Iraqi Atrocities Accuser Identified as Daughter of Kuwait Ambassador to U S The Washington Post subscription required Ted Rowse Kuwaitgate killing of Kuwaiti babies by Iraqi soldiers exaggerated Washington Monthly September 1992 Dwyer Jim July 3 1992 Desert Mirage Of Dead Babies Long Island New York subscription required a b Brough David September 6 1992 IRAQ RETURNS STOLEN INCUBATORS TO KUWAIT Reuters Richissin Todd October 17 2001 Media finds war access denied Coverage Journalists are bristling at the Pentagon s tightening control on what they re allowed to see subscription required Qtd in Trento p 389 Eemeren pp 70 71 Roschwalb p 272 Journals Edit Bishop Ed April 2003 Not so ancient history St Louis Journalism Review Cull Nicholas J Fall 2006 The Perfect War US Public Diplomacy and International Broadcasting During Desert Shield and Desert Storm 1990 1991 Transnational Broadcasting Studies Archived from the original on 2011 04 05 Retrieved 2011 03 18 Fowler Giles Fedler Fred 1991 A Farewell to Truth Lies Rumors and Propaganda as the Press Goes to War Florida Communication Journal 22 1 22 34 ISSN 1050 3366 Gilboa Eytan 2001 Diplomacy in the media age Three models of uses and effects Diplomacy amp Statecraft 12 2 1 28 doi 10 1080 09592290108406201 ISSN 0959 2296 Grunig James E Summer 1993 Public relations and international affairs effects ethics and responsibility Journal of International Affairs 47 1 137 162 ISSN 0022 197X subscription required Mundy Alicia September October 1992 Is the press any match for powerhouse P R Columbia Journalism Review Archived from the original on October 31 2007 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint unfit URL link Pratt C 1994 Hill amp Knowlton s two ethical dilemmas Public Relations Review 20 3 277 294 doi 10 1016 0363 8111 94 90041 8 ISSN 0363 8111 Rendall Steve Hart Peter Hollar Julie January February 2006 20 Stories That Made a Difference Extra 19 1 23 28 ISSN 0895 2310 Roschwalb S 1994 The Hill amp Knowlton cases A brief on the controversy Public Relations Review 20 3 267 276 doi 10 1016 0363 8111 94 90040 X ISSN 0363 8111 Rowse Ted September 1992 Kuwaitgate killing of Kuwaiti babies by Iraqi soldiers exaggerated The Washington Monthly Rowse Arthur E September October 1992 How to build support for war Columbia Journalism Review Archived from the original on April 20 2008 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint unfit URL link Walton Douglas 1995 Appeal to pity A case study of theargumentum ad misericordiam PDF Argumentation 9 5 769 784 doi 10 1007 BF00744757 ISSN 0920 427X S2CID 18245372 Nayirah s Testimony C SPAN Retrieved October 17 2017 How PR Sold the War in the Persian Gulf PR Watch PR Watch Retrieved 2013 07 05 Gulf War ground offensive begins History A amp E Tevelvision Networks Deception on Capitol Hill The New York Times January 15 1992 Books Edit Andersen Robin 2006 A century of media a century of war Peter Lang pp 170 172 ISBN 978 0 8204 7893 7 Baillargeon Normand January 4 2008 A short course in intellectual self defense Seven Stories Press ISBN 978 1 58322 765 7 Barra Ximena de la Buono Richard Alan Dello 2009 Latin America after the neoliberal debacle another region is possible Rowman amp Littlefield Publishers ISBN 978 0 7425 6605 7 Bennett W Lance Paletz David L 1994 Taken by storm the media public opinion and U S foreign policy in the Gulf War University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0 226 04259 6 Bivens Rena Kim October 2008 The Road to War Manufacturing Public Opinion in Support of U S Foreign Policy Goals GRIN Verlag ISBN 978 3 640 17931 2 Carpenter Ted Galen 1995 The captive press foreign policy crises and the First Amendment Cato Institute p 192 ISBN 978 1 882577 22 4 Doorley John Garcia Helio Fred October 20 2006 Reputation management the key to successful public relations and corporate communication Taylor amp Francis ISBN 978 0 415 97470 7 Eemeren Frans H van 2009 Examining Argumentation in Context Fifteen Studies on Strategic Maneuvering John Benjamins Publishing Company pp 70 71 ISBN 978 90 272 1118 7 Effarah Jamil E September 2007 Think Palestine to Unlock Us Israelis and Arabs Conflicts AuthorHouse p 240 ISBN 978 1 4343 3252 3 Ewen Stuart October 22 1998 PR a social history of spin Basic Books ISBN 978 0 465 06179 2 Foerstel Herbert N June 2001 From Watergate to Monicagate ten controversies in modern journalism and media Greenwood Publishing Group pp 51 52 ISBN 978 0 313 31163 5 Frenay Robert March 30 2006 Pulse the coming age of systems and machines inspired by living things Macmillan pp 412 413 ISBN 978 0 374 11327 8 Gardner Lloyd C March 2 2010 The Long Road to Baghdad A History of U S Foreign Policy from the 1970s to the Present The New Press ISBN 978 1 59558 476 2 Grandin Greg 2007 Empire s Workshop Latin America the United States and the Rise of the New Imperialism Macmillan ISBN 978 0 8050 8323 1 Jaco Charles January 1 2002 The complete idiot s guide to the Gulf War Penguin ISBN 978 0 02 864324 3 Jamieson Kathleen Hall Waldman Paul June 21 2004 The press effect politicians journalists and the stories that shape the political world Oxford University Press US p 19 ISBN 978 0 19 517329 1 Knightley Phillip 2004 The first casualty the war correspondent as hero and myth maker from the Crimea to Iraq JHU Press ISBN 978 0 8018 8030 8 Loehr Davidson October 11 2005 America fascism and God sermons from a heretical preacher Chelsea Green Publishing ISBN 978 1 931498 93 7 Maass Peter August 10 2010 Crude World The Violent Twilight of Oil Random House Digital Inc ISBN 978 1 4000 7545 4 MacArthur John R 2004 Second front censorship and propaganda in the 1991 Gulf War University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 24231 9 Manheim Jarol B January 2 1994 Strategic public diplomacy and American foreign policy the evolution of influence Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 508738 3 Marlin Randal 2002 Propaganda and the ethics of persuasion Broadview Press ISBN 978 1 55111 376 0 McCusker Gerry March 2006 Propaganda Truth is the first casualty of PR War Public Relations Disasters Talespin Inside Stories and Lessons Learnt Kogan Page Publishers pp 196 198 ISBN 978 0 7494 4572 0 McPherson James Brian 2006 Journalism at the end of the American century 1965 present Greenwood Publishing Group ISBN 978 0 313 31780 4 Miller Karen S 1999 The voice of business Hill amp Knowlton and postwar public relations UNC Press Books pp 182 183 ISBN 978 0 8078 2439 9 Muller Kulmann Thomas November 2007 Propaganda and Censorship in Gulf War I GRIN Verlag pp 6 7 ISBN 978 3 638 78145 9 Phillips Kevin P September 6 2004 American dynasty aristocracy fortune and the politics of deceit in the house of Bush Penguin p 309 ISBN 978 0 14 303431 5 Rossi Melissa L November 29 2005 What every American should know about who s really running the world the people corporations and organizations that control our future Penguin ISBN 978 0 452 28615 3 Spragens William C 1995 Electronic magazines soft news programs on network television Greenwood Publishing Group p 51 ISBN 978 0 275 94155 0 Sriramesh Krishnamurthy January 10 2009 The global public relations handbook theory research and practice Taylor amp Francis pp 864 865 ISBN 978 0 415 99513 9 Stauber John Clyde Rampton Sheldon 1995 Toxic sludge is good for you lies damn lies and the public relations industry Common Courage Press ISBN 978 1 56751 060 7 Trento Susan B October 1992 The power house Robert Keith Gray and the selling of access and influence in Washington St Martin s Press ISBN 978 0 312 08319 9 Unger Craig March 16 2004 House of Bush house of Saud the secret relationship between the world s two most powerful dynasties Simon and Schuster ISBN 978 0 7432 5337 6 Walton Douglas N June 1997 The Nayirah Case Appeal to pity Argumentum ad misericordiam SUNY Press ISBN 978 0 7914 3461 1 Winkler Carol 2006 In the name of terrorism presidents on political violence in the post World War II era SUNY Press ISBN 978 0 7914 6617 9 Willis Jim Willis William James 2007 The media effect how the news influences politics and government Greenwood Publishing Group p 3 ISBN 978 0 275 99496 9 Winter James P 1992 Common cents media portrayal of the Gulf War and other events Black Rose Books Ltd p 25 ISBN 978 1 895431 24 7 Foundation for Public Relations Research and Education U S 1997 Public relations review JAI Press External links EditBrian Eno Lessons in how to lie about Iraq The Observer August 17 2003 Ameen Izzadeen Lies damn lies and war Daily Mirror of Sri Lanka 2001 no more precise date provided archive org mirror Retrieved 18 December 2006 Phillip Knightley The disinformation campaign The Guardian October 4 2001 Maggie O Kane This time I m scared The Guardian December 5 2002 Alexander Cockburn Truth or Propaganda Radio interview with Geoff Pevere on Canadian Broadcasting Corporation Prime Time originally broadcast December 14 1992 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Nayirah testimony amp oldid 1121670141, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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