.
By Julie Lévesque
“One of the most 
pervasive trends in 21st century western culture has become somewhat of an 
obsession in America. It’s called “Hollywood history”, where the corporate 
studio machines in Los Angeles spend hundreds of millions of dollars in order to 
craft and precisely tailor historical events to suit the prevailing political 
paradigm.” (Patrick Henningsen, 
Hollywood History: CIA Sponsored “Zero Dark Thirty”, Oscar for “Best Propaganda 
Picture”)
 
Black Hawk Dawn, Zero Dark Thirty and Argo, those are only a few major recent 
productions showing how today’s movie industry promotes US foreign policy. But 
the motion picture has been used for propaganda since the beginning of the 20th 
century and Hollywood’s cooperation with the Department of Defense, the CIA and 
other government agencies is no modern trend.
With Michelle Obama awarding Ben Affleck’s 
Argo the Oscar for best 
movie, the industry showed how close it is to Washington. According to Soraya 
Sepahpour-Ulrich, 
Argo is a propaganda film concealing the ugly truth 
about the Iranian hostage crisis and designed to prepare the American public for 
an upcoming confrontation with Iran:
Foreign policy observers have long known that 
Hollywood reflects and promotes U.S. policies (in turn, is determined by Israel 
and its supporters).   This fact was made public when Michelle Obama announced 
an Oscar win for “Argo” – a highly propagandist, anti-Iran  film.  Amidst the 
glitter and excitement, Hollywood and White House reveal their pact and send out 
their message in time for the upcoming talks surrounding Iran’s nuclear program 
[...]
Hollywood has a long history of promoting US 
policies.   In 1917, when the United States entered World War I, President 
Woodrow Wilson’s Committee on Public Information (CPI) enlisted the aid of 
America ’s film industry to make training films and features supporting the 
‘cause’.  George Creel, Chairman of the CPI believed that the movies had a role 
in “carrying the gospel of Americanism to every corner of the globe.”
The pact grew stronger during World War II […] 
Hollywood ’s contribution was to provide propaganda. After the war, Washington 
reciprocated by using subsidies, special provisions in the Marshall Plan, and 
general clout to pry open resistant European film markets […]
As Hollywood and the White House eagerly embrace 
“Argo” and its propagandist message, they shamelessly and deliberately conceal a 
crucial aspect of this “historical” event.  The glitter buries the all too 
important fact that the Iranian students who took over the U.S. Embassy in 
Tehran , proceeded to reveal Israel ’s dark secret to the world.  Documents 
classified as “SECRET” revealed LAKAM’s activities.  Initiated in 1960, LAKAM 
was an Israeli network assigned to economic espionage in the U.S. assigned to 
“the collection of scientific intelligence in the U.S. for Israel ’s defense 
industry” (Soraya Sepahpour-Ulrich
Oscar to Hollywood’s “Argo”: And the Winners are … the Pentagon and the Israel 
Lobby)
 
For a real account of the Iranian hostage crisis, a CIA covert operation, 
Global Research recommends reading Harry V. Martin’s article published in 1995:
The Real Iranian Hostage Story from the Files of Fara Mansoor:
Fara Mansoor is a fugitive. No, he hasn’t broken 
any laws in the United States. His crime is the truth. What he has to say and 
the documents he carries are equivalent to a death warrant for him, Mansoor is 
an Iranian who was part of the “establishment” in Iran long before the 1979 
hostage taking. Mansoor’s records actually discount the alleged “October 
Surprise” theory that the Ronald Reagan-George Bush team paid the Iranians not 
to release 52 American hostages until after the November 1980 Presidential 
elections [...]
With thousands of documents to support his 
position, Mansoor says that the “hostage crisis” was a political “management 
tool” created by the pro-Bush faction of the CIA, and implemented through an a 
priori Alliance with Khomeini’s Islamic Fundamentalists.” He says the purpose 
was twofold:
Zero Dark Thirty is another great silver screen propaganda piece 
which spurred outrage earlier this year. It exploits the horrific events of 9/11 
to present torture as an effective and necessary evil
:
Zero Dark Thirty is disturbing for two reasons. 
First and foremost, it leaves the viewer with the erroneous impression that 
torture helped the CIA find bin Laden’s hiding place in Pakistan. Secondarily, 
it ignores both the illegality and immorality of using torture as an 
interrogation tool.
The thriller opens with the words “based on 
first-hand accounts of actual events.” After showing footage of the horrific 
9/11 attacks, it moves into a graphic and lengthy depiction of torture. The 
detainee “Ammar” is subjected to waterboarding, stress positions, sleep 
deprivation, and confined in a small box. Responding to the torture, he divulges 
the name of the courier who ultimately leads the CIA to bin Laden’s location and 
assassination. It may be good theater, but it is inaccurate and misleading. 
(Marjorie Cohn,
“Zero Dark Thirty”: Torturing the Facts)
 
Earlier this year the Golden Globe awards made some analysts criticize 
Hollywood’s dark “celebration of the police state” and argue that the real 
Golden Globe winner  was the military-industrial complex:
Homeland won best TV series, best TV actor and 
actress. It IS a highly entertaining show which actually portrays some of the 
flaws of the MIIC system.
Argo won best movie and best director. It 
glorifies the CIA and Ben Affleck spoke with the highest praise for the CIA.
And best actress went to Jessica Chastain of Zero 
Dark Thirty, a movie that has been vilified for propagandizing the use of 
torture.
***
The Military Industrial Intelligence Complex is 
playing a more and more pervasive role in our lives.  In the next few years 
we’ll be seeing movies that focus on the use of drone technology in police and 
spy work in the USA. We’ve already been seeing movies that show how spies can 
violate every aspect of our privacy– of the most intimate parts of our lives. By 
making movies and TV series that celebrate these cancerous extensions of the 
police state Hollywood and the big studios are normalizing the ideas they 
present us with– lying to the public, routinely creating fraudulent stories as 
covers for what’s really going on. (Rob Kall cited in Washington’s Blog,
The CIA and Other Government Agencies Dominate Movies and Television)
 
All these troublesome Hollywood connections have been examined in an in-depth 
report Global Research published in January 2009:
Lights, Camera… Covert Action: The Deep Politics of Hollywood. The article 
lists a great number of movies in part scripted for propaganda purposes by the 
Defense Department, the CIA and other government agencies. It is interesting to 
note that this year’s Oscar-winning director Ben Affleck cooperated with the CIA 
in 2002 as he starred in 
The Sum of All Fears.
Authors Matthew Alford and Robbie Graham explain that compared to the CIA, 
the Department of Defense “has an ‘open’ but barely publicized relationship with 
Tinsel Town” which, “whilst morally dubious and barely advertised, has at least 
occurred within the public domain.” Alford and Graham cite a 1991 CIA report 
revealing the sprawling influence of the agency, not only in the movie business 
but also in the media where it “has relationships with reporters from every 
major wire service, newspaper, news weekly, and television network in the 
nation.” It was not until 1996 that the CIA announced it “would now openly 
collaborate on Hollywood productions, supposedly in a strictly ‘advisory’ 
capacity”:
The Agency’s decision to work publicly with 
Hollywood was preceded by the 1991 “Task Force Report on Greater CIA Openness,” 
compiled by CIA Director Robert Gates’ newly appointed ‘Openness Task Force,’ 
which secretly debated –ironically– whether the Agency should be less secretive. 
The report acknowledges that the CIA “now has relationships with reporters from 
every major wire service, newspaper, news weekly, and television network in the 
nation,” and the authors of the report note that this helped them “turn some 
‘intelligence failure’ stories into ‘intelligence success’ stories, and has 
contributed to the accuracy of countless others.” It goes on to reveal that the 
CIA has in the past “persuaded reporters to postpone, change, hold, or even 
scrap stories that could have adversely affected national security interests” 
[...]
Espionage novelist Tom Clancy has enjoyed an 
especially close relationship with the CIA. In 1984, Clancy was invited to 
Langley after writing The Hunt for Red October, which was later turned 
into the 1990 film. The Agency invited him again when he was working on Patriot 
Games(1992), and the movie adaptation was, in turn, granted access to 
Langley facilities. More recently,The Sum of All Fears (2002) 
depicted the CIA as tracking down terrorists who detonate a nuclear weapon on US 
soil. For this production, CIA director George Tenet gave the filmmakers a 
personal tour of the Langley HQ; the film’s star, Ben Affleck also consulted 
with Agency analysts, and Chase Brandon served as on-set advisor.
The real reasons for the CIA adopting an 
“advisory” role on all of these productions are thrown into sharp relief by a 
solitary comment from former Associate General Counsel to the CIA, Paul Kelbaugh. 
In 2007, whilst at a College in Virginia, Kelbaugh delivered a lecture on the 
CIA’s relationship with Hollywood, at which a local journalist was present. The 
journalist (who now wishes to remain anonymous) wrote a review of the lecture 
which related Kelbaugh’s discussion of the 2003 thriller 
The Recruit, 
starring Al Pacino. The review noted that, according to Kelbaugh, a CIA agent 
was on set for the duration of the shoot under the guise of a consultant, but 
that his real job was to misdirect the filmmakers, the journalist quoted 
Kelbaugh as saying [...] Kelbaugh emphatically denied having made the public 
statement. (Matthew Alford and Robbie Graham,
Lights, Camera… Covert Action: The Deep Politics of Hollywood)
 
During the Cold War the CIA’s Psychological Strategy Board (PSB) agent Luigi 
G. Luraschi was a Paramount executive. He “had secured the agreement of several 
casting directors to subtly plant ‘well dressed negroes’ into films, including 
‘a dignified negro butler’ who has lines ‘indicating he is a free man’”. The 
purpose of these changes was “to hamper the Soviets’ ability to exploit its 
enemy’s poor record in race relations and served to create a peculiarly anodyne 
impression of America, which was, at that time, still mired in an era of racial 
segregation.” (
Ibid.)
The latest award-winning movie productions show that the Manichean view of 
the world put forward by the US foreign policy agenda has not changed since the 
Cold War. The Hollywood-CIA alliance is alive and well and still portrays 
America as the “leader of the free world” fighting “evil” around the world:
The interlocking of Hollywood and national 
security apparatuses remains as tight as ever: ex-CIA agent Bob Baer told us, 
“There’s a symbiosis between the CIA and Hollywood” […] Baer’s claims are given 
weight by the Sun Valley meetings, annual get-togethers in Idaho’s Sun Valley in 
which several hundred of the biggest names in American media –including every 
major Hollywood studio executive– convene to discuss collective media strategy 
for the coming year. (Ibid.)
http://www.globalresearch.ca/screen-propaganda-hollywood-and-the-cia/5324589
 
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