1. World problems
  2. Deception by government

Deception by government

  • Government lying
  • Deliberate lying by government officials
  • Misrepresentation of facts by national leaders
  • Deliberate distortion of official news and information
  • Official over-reporting and under-reporting
  • Government duplicity
  • Perjury by government agents
  • Susceptibility of electorate to government repetition of untruths
  • Intellectual dishonesty in government
  • Government insincerity
  • Contradictions in official statements

Nature

The use or alteration of intelligence reports, the creation of misinformation, and the use of unconfirmed information for the purposed of beginning or continuing an unpopular or potentially unpopular policy, of maintaining power in government or of insuring a public image, such as being a great statesman.

Incidence

Governmental lying is a continuous phenomena. Almost every month there is an exposure. It may be in South America (Chile, Argentina), Southeast Asia (Vietnam, the Philippines), South Africa, India, or anywhere that governments are under pressure. Some instances of governmental deception have achieved great notoriety. Hitler's dictum that "a lie thrice repeated becomes a truth" was put into practice during the regime of the Third Reich. The intelligence apparatus of the former USSR had a bureau of disinformation, and counterparts exists for domestic purposes. The Non-aggression Pact of Stalin and Hitler was one of many misrepresentations of the two leaders. In the USA there have been Watergate (concerning President Nixon's falsehoods), and earlier misrepresentations concerning the conflict in Vietnam. In the UK, the Belgrano affair and the 1985 national coal strike have occasioned allegations of misrepresentation or lying.

A striking example is provided by a Chinese satellite which crashed into the sea off Peru in October 1993. A few days previously, monitors in the USA and elsewhere detected its descent from orbit, although the Chinese denied that they had lost control of it, even hours before it crashed. They affirmed that any satellite which crashed at that time could not be theirs. Another example is the discovery in 1994 that the South African government had lied concerning its collaboration with Israel on nuclear development, notably with regard to the exchange of 600 tons of uranium in exchange for 30 grams of tritium.

In the UK in 1993 it was acknowledged that the government had deliberately misled critics of human rights violations in East Timor to believe that it was endeavouring to negotiate access by the International Red Cross to the territory although it had already decided that this would be counter-productive to its relationships with Indonesia and had no intention of doing so. The government was also obliged to acknowledge that it had falsely denied the existence of any contacts with the IRA regarding the future of Northern Ireland. This deception was then compounded by falsification of reports on the actual contacts.

In both the USA and the UK the consequences of covertly arming Iraq prior to the Gulf War have led to major investigations of deception within government and the manner in which efforts were subsequently made to deny any such deception.

Claim

If before Watergate and the Vietnam war, political manipulation was an occasionally recognized, by the 1990s it was widely accepted that politicians do not merely lie on occasion, they are proverbial liars.

Counter-claim

Vital objectives in the national interest require a measure of deception to succeed in the face of powerful obstacles. Negotiations must be carried on that are best left hidden from public view; bargains must be struck that simply cannot be comprehended by a politically unsophisticated electorate. A certain amount of illusion is needed in order for public servants to be effective. Announcing the devaluation of a currency in advance could produce a destabilizing call on banks and unfair profits for speculators. To tell the truth that preparations for war were actually in place could undermine their effectiveness. Every government, therefore, has to deceive people to some extent in order to lead them.

Broader

Deception
Presentable

Narrower

Beneficial lying
Yet to rate

Aggravates

Disinformation
Presentable

Aggravated by

Related

Strategy

Lying
Excellent
Using duplicity
Yet to rate
Contradicting
Yet to rate

Value

Lie
Yet to rate
Susceptibility
Yet to rate
Contradiction
Yet to rate
Dishonesty
Yet to rate
Distortion
Yet to rate
Insincerity
Yet to rate
Deception
Yet to rate
Duplicity
Yet to rate

Reference

SDG

Sustainable Development Goal #16: Peace and Justice Strong Institutions

Metadata

Database
World problems
Type
(D) Detailed problems
Subject
  • Communication » Censorship
  • Communication » News
  • Government » Diplomacy
  • Government » Government
  • Government » Officials
  • Government » Politics
  • Information » Information
  • Research, standards » Experimental
  • Social activity » Intellectual work
  • Societal problems » Distortion
  • Content quality
    Presentable
     Presentable
    Language
    English
    Last update
    Sep 26, 2022