“It’s War Inc. all over again,” wrote Dave Zirin, sports editor for The Nation. “No voices calling for peace. No voices critical of empire. Just establishment media and current and former Pentagon officials who feed off the trillion-dollar war machine.”

News networks demonstrated their eagerness to present an uncritical view of the Trump administration’s reasoning for the airstrike, which came days after the president, without evidence, accused Iran of orchestrating an attack at the U.S. Embassy in Baghdad.

CNBC‘s declaration that the U.S. had “just [taken] out the world’s number one bad guy” was condemned as “journalistic malpractice” by writer Kelsey Atherton.

Philadelphia Inquirer columnist Will Bunch wrote about the contrast between the Trump administration’s sudden escalation in Iran and the run-up to George W. Bush’s 2003 invasion of iraq—prior to which the president, his top advisers, and other conservative commentators spent more than a year insisting the U.S. military should defeat Saddam Hussein.

Trump ordered the airstrike that killed Soleimani before “99 percent” of Americans had even heard of the official, wrote Bunch.

“Within minutes, the same people who brought us the endless wars in Iraq, Afghanistan and elsewhere suddenly showed up on TV to declare [Soleimani] was the worst person in the world,” he tweeted.

“Where is the speech to the American people that lays out to the everyday citizen 1) who was Soleimani 2) what are his crimes against the U.S. 3) how does killing him make us safer 4) what is our plan for the messy aftermath?” Bunch asked, calling the administration’s unilateral move without lawmakers’ knowledge—much less congressional approval—”imperialistic and authoritarian.”

Filmmaker and activist Michael Moore added that with a steady stream of commentary from Fleischer, Rove, Pompeo, and other conservatives clamoring to move ahead with war in Iran, Americans will be “trained to hate” Soleimani by the end of the week—even if they had never heard of him before Thursday night.

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