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Muzzling
a Marine
The Pentagon orders the military spokesman featured in the acclaimed documentary "Control Room" not to talk -- and now he plans to walk. By Scott Lamb June
4, 2004 There's a moment a half-hour into "Control Room," Jehane
Noujaim's widely acclaimed new documentary about the Arab news channel
Al Jazeera and media coverage of the war with Iraq, when U.S. press
officer Lt. Josh Rushing discusses his reaction to the brutal images of
captured and killed American soldiers that Al Jazeera chose to
broadcast in March 2003 -- to the condemnation of Secretary of Defense
Donald Rumsfeld. "The
night they showed the POWs and dead soldiers ... it was powerful,
because Americans won't show those kinds of images," Rushing says. "It
made me sick to my stomach." The viewer then expects him to proceed in
the same vein of patriotic rhetoric he's been using up to this point in
the film -- he is, after all, a Marine -- but instead what follows is
an unexpected, and profoundly moving, observation. The
previous night, Al Jazeera had shown similarly graphic images of Iraqis
killed during a bombing in Basra, and Rushing calls them "equally if
not more horrifying." At the time, though, he admits they hadn't
bothered him as much. "I just saw people on the other side," Rushing
says, "and those people in the Al Jazeera offices must have felt the
way I was feeling that night, and it upset me on a profound level that
I wasn't bothered as much the night before. It makes me hate war." When
first contacted by Salon about Rushing on Thursday, the Pentagon denied
even being aware of the film, much less any order regarding Rushing.
Lt. Col. Jim Cassella at the Pentagon press office said, "I can't
remember us ever telling people not to speak to the press. We have the
principles of information that the secretary of defense has signed
which mandates that we are forthcoming and honest with the American
people. As a matter of policy, we don't go around telling people they
can or can't talk to the press." He
referred Salon to the Marine Corps, but there, too, the first response
was denial that this sort of thing even happens. Capt. Dan McSweeney,
commenting on whether Marines are typically asked not to talk to
reporters, said, "I haven't heard of that going on except under extreme
circumstances; in the middle of an operation, I can see that being the
case." Rushing
is back in the United States and is no longer involved in active
operations, though he is still on active duty and would not speak to
Salon for this story. According
to sources close to the film, the Pentagon first became aware of
Rushing's involvement in the film after filmmaker Noujaim appeared on
an MSNBC show, by which time Rushing had already spoken with several
media outlets, including the Associated Press and the Village Voice. On
MSNBC May 13, Noujaim recounted a story -- not captured in the film,
and one that Rushing also told the Voice -- about some friction between
Rushing and other Marines caused by his closeness to Al Jazeera
reporter Omar Al Issawi, who is also prominently featured in the
documentary. "One
guy told me I better check the name on my uniform, meaning the Marine
Corps," Rushing said to the Voice. |