July 11th, 2008 . by Marty
You’ll recall that in yesterday’s post I was one of the first in the States to point out the Iranian Revolutionary Guard’s hoaxing of a missile photograph. As I predicted, there has been “the slew of inevitable retractions and handwringing coming from the US media.” And as I further suggested yesterday, there are now a mountain of second-day stories milking the doctored-photo angle to show that the Iranians have overblown their whole missile program.
This is exactly what I was afraid of. There were very talented photo editors at newspapers across the country - to say nothing of AFP/Getty and AP - who I’m quite certain had their doubts about the veracity of the photo and let it slip into their pages, knowing that they could always blame Iran and the Revolutionary Guards if the photo turned out to be fake. I know a lot of bloggers in Israel and the US are claiming credit for being the first to ‘out’ the photo. But they bicker over that credit at their own peril.
The photo was so obviously fake (insert ‘it doesn’t take a rocket scientist to figure this out’ joke here), I’m quite certain that at least 5% of the people who saw it worldwide figured there was something wrong with it the moment they saw it. The real question is why more people didn’t notice it right away - particularly the ones whose jobs it is to notice fake photographs going into their newspapers.
(I’m wrapped up in something now, but I’ll have Jimmy add appropriate links later today.)
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July 10th, 2008 . by Marty

Did you wake up this morning and see this top picture in your local paper? If you live in Los Angeles, New York, Chicago, or watch MSNBC, you did. Attributed to Iran’s Revolutionary Guards (apparently, the new Reuters as a source of photojournalism), the picture was obviously doctored (AP just released the second picture). It’s clear that the smoke patterns of the missile in the middle were clumsily copied from those on the right. Video of the same event showed that only three missiles fired simultaneously (anyone with a hint of military experience knows that the odds of getting four missiles to fire simultaneously enough for a photo-op are slim). The Israeli media have already picked up on the story, but let’s wait for the slew of inevitable retractions and handwringing coming from the US media who ran the photos. (unless they did it on purpose, just to give a second-day story to how the Revolutionary Guard are a threat to the international photoshop industry. It’s hard to see a photo editor not catching this obvious deceit in about five seconds.) Either way, it will be a distraction from the very real threat posed by Iran. If you live in Tel Aviv, it won’t matter if you get hit by three or four missiles.
Of course, maybe it was someone at AP who put out the fake? If what they say is now true and Sepah News (the Revolutionary Guards) put out the second photo, then it does beg the question of who doctored the first. I’m sure that there are already spunky young bloggers hot the trail of this hoax.
Update: Photorants just posted a great piece on the controversy wherein he quotes the New York Times as saying:
As news spread across the world of Iran’s provocative missile tests, so did an image of four missiles heading skyward in unison. Unfortunately, it appeared to contain one too many missiles, a fact that had not emerged before the photo appeared on the front pages of The Los Angeles Times, The Financial Times, The Chicago Tribune and several other newspapers as well as on BBC News, MSNBC, Yahoo! News, NYTimes.com and many other major news Web sites.
I find it hard to believe that not a single photo editor at the LATimes, NYTimes, Chicago Trib, etc. noticed the doctored photo.
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June 11th, 2008 . by Marty
Do I think that the US and Israel will attack Iran before George Bush leaves office? Yes. Iran has become a thorn in too many sides. It meddles in the affairs of other countries. It is the only country bold enough to use the Holocaust as a card in its political feuds with Israel and the West.
Iran trains, funds and arms Hamas in Israel’s south and Hezbollah in Israel’s north. Understand. It is not just Israel and the US who have beef with Iran. Sunni and Christian Lebanese are none too happy about having a Persian trained Shia militia running wild across their country. While non-fundamentalist Palestinians are none too happy about having religious fanatics, trained, funded and armed by far away Iran, grind their earthly lives into a living hell. And then there are Iran’s neighbors, our petrol allies in the Gulf, from Arabia to the Emirates, Sunni and Arab, who fear and detest Shia Persian Iran even more than we or the Israelis.
So in the event of an attack, Iran will surely find itself alone, with no friends or sympathizers save leftist Americans and weak-willed Europeans. Iran chose this path of confrontation. It was not thrust on her. I guess we’ll have to wait and see how all this plays out.
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