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Looking for Unbiased War News?

AlexisKai asks: "With the forecast for tomorrow being sunny with a 90% chance of airstrikes, the US government will be clamping down on unpatriotic stories and the rest will be self-censored by the major media anyway. Where are Slashdot readers planning to look for reliable, disinterested reports as events in Iraq unfold?"

10 of 423 comments (clear)

  1. The Best you'll find by tpearson · · Score: 5, Informative

    the best source I've been able to find is Guerrilla News Network (gnn.tv)

  2. 'Reliable, disinterested reports'... by DuckDuckBOOM! · · Score: 4, Informative

    Ain't no such animal. Imho the closest thing online is BBCi and that's where I'll be spending my bandwidth over the next (hopefully very) few weeks.

    --
    Life is like surrealism: if you have to have it explained to you, you can't afford it.
  3. I would suggest cbc.ca by Tim_F · · Score: 5, Informative

    Canada is not participating in the attack against Iraq and therefore any news reported out of Canada will be unbiased. CBC is the Canadian government owned national broadcaster. Click here for a direct link.

    1. Re:I would suggest cbc.ca by TC+(WC) · · Score: 4, Informative

      Heh heh, a socialist leaning, pacifist country's primary governmentally owned channel will be unbiased?

      Hmm... The CBC is obviously not unbiased, nothing is, but they aren't particularly biased toward the government. I've always liked how they publish all their journalistic standards, how they pay sources, conflict of interest stuff and that sort of information in an easy to find place: http://cbc.radio-canada.ca/htmen/policies/journali stic/index.htm

    2. Re:I would suggest cbc.ca by Screaming+Lunatic · · Score: 4, Informative
      Yup. Gonna have to ditto on that one.

      CBC chose not to "embed" reporters in the warzone and instead decided to focus on other angles. A pretty good choice since what they would be able to report would have been strictly limited by the military and CNN, FOX, NBC, would be reporting the same thing anyway.

      My other choices are the BBC and Google News since it surveys US newscasters.

      Don't forget CBC Radio. http://www.rcinet.ca/

  4. Re:PARTLY corrupt? by Bastian · · Score: 4, Informative

    Shoot, take a course in Latin America's history and the idea that the government of the U.S. is partily corrupt will seem like a gross understatement.

    The U.S. government's foreign policy is in no way dictated or influenced by the opinions or needs of American citizens (or any other world citizen, for that matter) or moral imperatives. U.S. foreign policy decisions are made entirely on the basis of economic interest, Cold War style paranoia, or both.

    & a quick look at the financial profiles of Bush & a large number of Congress members makes it fairly obvious that U.S. politics has reached a state where lawmakers and U.S. government leaders don't really even need to be bribed by interest groups, they can bribe themselves. For example, Bush's oil-industry stock is going to skyrocket if the U.S. can take control of the Iraqi oil fields for a multitude of reasons. On the domestic side of things, that same oil-industry stock portfolio also discourages him from enacting good environmental policies such as a push for more fuel-efficient automobiles or programs to encourage the development of the United States's public transportation infrastructure.

  5. Pentegon TARGETS independent reporters by SomethingOrOther · · Score: 4, Informative

    ALL news will be censored since the pentegon have said unauthoriesd satellie broadcasts (including those from journalists) will be targets. Read this from Kate Adie. (Kate Adie is a BBC reporter who covered the last gulf war and is regared very highly in the UK)

    If the US blocks all outside broardcasts we can only wait until after the war to see anything like the truth. Censorship sucks.

    --
    Anyone quoted by a reporter knows how little they understand
    Don't believe what you read is the truth.
  6. Re:Source? by WIAKywbfatw · · Score: 4, Informative

    Kate Adie is probably one of the most experienced and well-respected war reporters in the world. She has an outstanding reputation, earned the hard way by telling it how it is, and not necessarily by telling it by how certain Western governments would have you believe.

    She's covered just about every conflict - major and minor - of the last 20 years, and she didn't make it this long by being dumb, so when she says that unathorised transmissions are considered to be legitimate targets by the US forces, it's because she's been told so, and having been told so she double-checked with her sources to verify what she was reporting was accurate.

    I find it far more plausible to believe that the Pentagon was trying to spin this story back their way than to believe that Adie misrepresented the facts - either intentionally or unintentionally.

    Besides, I've heard the same story being reported by several other news sources and agencies. I find it hard to believe that they've all got it wrong.

    Please, let's not make the truth any more a casualty of this war/invasion than it already is.

    --

    "Accept that some days you are the pigeon, and some days you are the statue." - David Brent, Wernham Hogg
  7. Unbiased War News? by Captain+Large+Face · · Score: 5, Informative

    I recommend looking to The Onion. It is, after all, America's Finest News Source.

    In all seriousness, I shall probably be checking the BBC's web site regularly (News Ticker (Win32) | RSS), as well as buying a decent newspaper for greater depth and insight.

    Of course, for those committed to both sides of the argument, I recommend visiting Al-Jazeera with the use of a Arabic-English translator. Apparently, Al-Jazeera will soon be launching an English language service (e.g. the end of March).

  8. Re:WILL attack un-authorised sat links: See this l by JGski · · Score: 5, Informative
    HARMs are pretty smart. Shrikes aren't slouchs. Both are compable of differentiating fairly subtle differences in rf spectral signatures.

    In a past life I was one of the guys who tested these puppies (Shrikes, HARMS, Cruise Missles, Mavericks, Smart Bomb guidance systems, etc.) at China Lake NWC. For Shrikes and HARMS we would setup dozens of "threat" simulators, each with slightly different modulation (CW, PRF, PW, jitter, spread codes, etc.) to simulate particular makes and models of radar, and each at different location to simulate real life deployment. You don't want to be near any source that is on a target signal profile list. One of my other duties included measuring the distance between the boresite and the missle's impact crater after a test. Often enough my simulators were damaged or destroyed by inert warheads alone :-). Let's just say the 100-hour 1st Gulf War wasn't much of a surprise - China Lake has geography a lot like Kuwait and Iraq.

    It's certainly possible to discriminate targets well enough to avoid targetting TV satellite uplinks. It's even possible that journalist's military-supplied uplinks are provided with known spread code signals that are put on an avoid list. A warning and insistence on "equipment registration" may be CYA - unless they know the equipment's signature, there's still a small chance of a "mishap". However, unless they choose to target TV stations it would still probably be pretty safe (How many TV broadcasters does Iraq really have? Ah, maybe one? Compared to simply being shot by accident?) The spectral signatures of analog or digital TV are pretty different from radar (even spread spectrum radar).

    <OffTopicWarning KarmaLock="disabled">

    Despite my experience with this stuff, I'm still against this war and the facile justifications pathetically provided for it. If you don't see a patriot described above, you need to get your head examined!

    This war is about extension of the Monroe Doctrine to the entire world and Manifest Destiny as a world hyperpower. It's spelled out on the PNAC web site. Note the founders include Rumsfeld, Wolfowitz and other major hawks in the Bush Adminstration. Also note that the entire obsession with regime change and axis of evil predates 9-11 back to when Clinton was approached by PNAC with essentially the same Iraq/Axis of Evil plan. Clinton rejected it. Bush has embraced it. Linkage between Al Qaida and Iraq? Machiavelian fiction, nothing more. Weapons of Mass Destruction (worked on those too ;-| )? Doesn't add up in the context of post-War Iraqi infrastructure and economics, and especially not with forged documentery evidence provided by the US and UK intelligence agencies.

    Creating a hegemon might not even seem so bad if you happen to be an American, but this type of foreign policy is certain to be mirrored in domestic policy: the beginning is Patriot I, Patriot II, TIA, CAPP and other recent laws and proposals.

    For those who have read Linked, consider what a Bose-Einstein condensation of a geopolitical social network is in comparison to what it is for an economic social network. Consider that one of the desires of PNAC is to assure that the relationship between the US and each other country shall be stronger than the relationships between any pair of countries. What social network topology is that? Can you say: "All Roads Lead to Washington".

    There are many active and reserve duty officers with similar concerns. I recently gave a speech about this subject where an officer I know, who is now serving in the Middle East, was in attendence. I was concerned about his reaction - these are scary ideas most people would prefer to ignore - but he approached me after the speech and was my stron