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Is Our Media Covering its Errors or Covering Them Up? |
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by Danny Schechter (No verified email address) |
16 Aug 2004
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In short, most of our media, with the exception, perhaps, of excellent reporting by Knight Ridder and some exemplary dissenting journalists, still largely support the war including the governmentâs rationalizations and narrative. (âSupportâ can be measured in what is covered and what is not, what experts we hear from and which we do not, and how many thoughtful Iraqiâs themselves make it into our news.)
These larger media failures have still not been admitted, much less debated. Thatâs why the term âweapons of mass deceptionâ still applies to our media coverage of a war that is at war with the truth. |
As more mainstream media outlets admit their failures in covering the Iraq War, a question must be asked: are we seeing a real coming to grips with the media role that helped âsell the warâ to the American public? Or could these recent mea culpas be something more insidious, more like what the CIA used to call a âlimited hang out?â That phrase translates as âyou concede a little to hide a lot.â
As the author of a book and maker of a film on Iraq war coverage, I am delighted to see some acknowledgement of errors and omissions on the part of media outlets that, when it really counted, become transmission belts for unsubstantiated government claims and pro-war propaganda.
It does give media critics some faith in the capacity of media outlets to acknowledge wrong doing, correct mistakes and admit they drank the Administrationâs Kool Aid. Bear in mind that many of these same outlets were often arrogant and self-righteous at the time, impervious to critics who were treated largely as lepers in denial about real threats and the need for preemptive war. It has taken a long time for these admissions to surface, alas, well after they can do any good in terms of influencing policy.
In fact some prominent politicians including a presidential candidate are saying in effect, that none of this matters, that, knowing what they know, they would still have supported the war even if all of its rationalizations were invented and/or deliberately deceptive.
To this day, they wonât let the facts get in the way of a politically popular opinion.
That may be because the emerging media debate remains narrowly focused, avoiding deeper questions about the mediaâs performance.
Last week when I was asked to appear on a national TV news program to take part in a panel, on these issues I was told that we would talking about the pre-war coverage of WMDs. That call came, predictably, after the Washington Post carried a story second guessing its coverage focusing entirely on the run-up to the war. Once again TV producers were following a newspaperâs lead
Post Media critic Howard Kurtz reported that a story in his paper challenging the evidence on Iraqâs weapon stockpiles, "ran into stiff resistance from the paper's editors.'' The Postâs Managing Editor Bob Woodward, author of two insider books largely positive about President Bust admitted, "We did our job but we didn't do enough, and I blame myself mightily for not pushing harder.''
In his story, Kurtz intimated that the Postâs performance was understandable since its chief competitor, The New York Times, was just as bad. He took a subtle swipe at the Times, noting, âThe New York Times ran an editor's note last month saying the paper's aggressive reporting on WMDs was ânot as rigorous as it should have beenâ and overplayed stories with âdire claims about Iraq,â adding: âEditors at several levels who should have been challenging reporters and pressing for more skepticism were perhaps too intent on rushing scoops into the paper.â"
In an apparent response, the Times last week cast a skeptical âours was better than yours eye,â on the Post expose noting: âFor all of its contrition, Mr. Kurtz's article does not represent an official statement on behalf of The Post. In an interview yesterday, Steve Coll, the paper's managing editor, said that the idea for the article had been Mr. Kurtz's, and that he and Mr. Downie had recused themselves from editing it. "We did not make a determination from our offices that we needed to commission an investigation into these issues,'' Mr. Coll saidâ
There you have it, no investigation needed. None!
To contrast his paperâs efforts, Jacques Steinberg of the Times explained âThe New York Times published a 1,220-word article in which the newspaper's editors acknowledged that in the run-up to war they had not been skeptical enough about articles that depended "at least in part on information from a circle of Iraqi informants, defectors and exiles bent on 'regime change' in Iraq whose credibility has come under increasing public debate.''
So here we have the Times using its news columns to put down the Post. But both papers and most of the TV coverage is guilty of far more than what has so been conceded. Complicity and collusion are two words that come to mind. As the conscience of the Senate Robert Byrd put it on CNN last week, âThe media fell for the war hook, line and sinker.â
A real investigation of the media role would probe deeper questions not only about the run-up to the war but the ongoing coverage up to the present day.
Is the conflict in Iraq being covered well? Whatâs missing and why?
First, why did we stage a pre-emptive war in the first place? What was the real agenda? Do we know to this day and is the media investigating. On August l0, y former war commander Tommy Franks said in an a talk only covered by the Jewish Telegraphic Agencyâand not picked up by major media:
âThe reason we could not afford to give up time is because we wanted the water infrastructure to remain in place,â Franks said Monday at the National Press Club. âWe wanted the oil infrastructure in Iraq to remain in place. We did not want to subject ourselves and Israel to the potential consequence of a long-range missile being fired into Tel Aviv or Jerusalemâ
How much media time and energy was spent investigating this Israel connection to this war? How much on military preparedness or the âplanâ that got is into Baghdad quickly and then stirred a hornets nest of resistance that plunged the country into chaos.? How many of our media experts, pundits, experts, prognosticators and Mensa Men predicted us or prepared us for what was to happen next and the war we have not wonâand may never?
Second, What about the real conduct of the US military operations, the less than âpinpointâ bombing that took out the infrastructure including electricity, the widespread civilian casualties, the use of cluster bombs, napalm like fire bombs, and weapons hardened with radioactive depleted uranium? What about the privatization of the warâwho is getting what and why?
Third, what about systematic war crimes and human rights abuses---the atrocities in Abu Grab prison were known as early as June 2003 but only exposed in April 2004. How could we justify the bombing of civilians in Falujah and, just last week, in Najav? How is it that outlets in other countries can report on Iraqi protests against US military practices in Iraq and ours cannot? Why did Mr. Murdochâs newspaper âThe Australianâ call U.S. military operations in Najav a âslaughterâ while our media focused on a raid on a dissident clericâs home.
In short, most of our media, with the exception, perhaps, of excellent reporting by Knight Ridder and some exemplary dissenting journalists, still largely support the war including the governmentâs rationalizations and narrative. (âSupportâ can be measured in what is covered and what is not, what experts we hear from and which we do not, and how many thoughtful Iraqiâs themselves make it into our news.)
These larger media failures have still not been admitted, much less debated. Thatâs why the term âweapons of mass deceptionâ still applies to our media coverage of a war that is at war with the truth.
News Dissector Danny Schechter authored âEmbedded Weapons of Mass Deceptionâ on media failures (Prometheus Books and ColdType.net) and is finishing an independent film, WMD, that brings the story up to date. (www.embeddedwmd.com) |
Copyright by the author. All rights reserved. |