Iraq, the Press and the Election
by
Tom Engelhardt
and Michael Massing
by Tom Engelhardt and
Michael Massing
Along
with Jack Shafer of Slate, Michael Massing was one of the
first media critics to take on our imperial press for the shameful
way it caved to the Bush administration in covering the run-up to
the invasion of Iraq. He did so in two devastating critiques in
the New York Review of Books. They added up to little short
of an indictment of the work of the New York Times and the
Washington Post in particular. The first of these pieces
must be considered at least in part responsible for the fact that,
last May 26, the editors of the Times finally felt called
upon to publish a
relatively weak mea culpa about the paper's Iraq reporting that
named no names and was tucked away on an inside page, and then for
the
far stronger piece published four days later by the paper's
forthright public editor Daniel Okrent. In Massing's latest essay
below, he considers how coverage of the war affected the election
or rather why the war didn't prove as decisive as might have
been expected in the voting booth.
There can be little question that the administration's Iraq disaster
chased the President to the polls on November 2; that, put another
way, a ragtag group of insurgents who, 18 months ago, weren't even
on the administration's radar screen, actually threatened to deprive
him of a second term in office. There can also be little question
that the war in Iraq, along with the various administration lies
and misdemeanors that got us there, was a significant factor in
mobilizing an anti-Bush electoral movement of striking scope. Why
exactly the costs of the war didn't penetrate further into George
Bush's America and what role the media may have had in blunting
the war's significance are questions Massing now takes up. His piece
represents perhaps the opening salvo in a longer-term discussion.
Massing's previous critiques of pre-war and wartime coverage have
been collected in a tiny paperback, Now
They Tell Us, The American Press and Iraq. (A version of
the book's introduction by Orville Schell – Why
the Press Failed has already been posted at Tomdispatch.)
Massing's latest piece appears below thanks to the kind permission
of the editors of the New York
Review of Books. (It will appear in the December 16 issue
of that magazine.) ~ Tom
Iraq,
the Press and the Election
By
Michael Massing
In the end, the war in Iraq did not have the decisive impact on
the election that many had expected. In the weeks before the vote
there were the massacre of forty-nine Iraqi police trainees; a deadly
attack inside the previously impenetrable Green Zone in Baghdad;
the refusal by an army unit to carry out a supply mission on the
grounds that it was too dangerous; the explosion of several car
bombs at a ceremony where soldiers were handing out candy, killing
dozens of children; the abduction of contractors, journalists, and
aid workers, including the director of the CARE office in Baghdad;
the release of a report holding the highest reaches of the Pentagon
and the military responsible for the abuses at Abu Ghraib; a report
by President Bush's hand-picked investigator confirming that Iraq
had long ago lost its ability to produce weapons of mass destruction;
and the spread of the insurgency to every corner of the country,
bringing reconstruction to a virtual halt. All of this, in the end,
counted for less to voters (if the exit polls are to be believed)
than such issues as whether homosexuals should be allowed to marry
and whether discarded embryos should be used for stem cell research.
How did this happen? In many ways, George Bush's victory seems to
have confirmed the fact that large numbers of voters in America
today are very conservative, dominated by strong attachments to
God, country, and the traditional family. At the same time, it's
not clear to what extent the public was aware of just how bad things
had gotten in Iraq. For while there was much informative reporting
on the war, a number of factors combined to shield Americans from
its most brutal realities. A look at these factors can help to understand
some neglected aspects of George Bush's victory.
1.
Toward the end of September, Farnaz Fassihi, a correspondent for
the Wall Street Journal in Baghdad, sent
an e-mail to forty friends describing her working conditions
in Iraq. Fassihi had been sending out such messages on a regular
basis, but this one seethed with anger and frustration. "Being a
foreign correspondent in Baghdad these days," she wrote, "is like
being under virtual house arrest.... I avoid going to people's homes
and never walk in the streets. I can't go grocery shopping any more,
can't eat in restaurants, can't strike a conversation with strangers,
can't look for stories, can't drive in any thing but a full armored
car, can't go to scenes of breaking news, can't be stuck in traffic,
can't speak English outside, can't take a road trip, can't say I'm
an American, can't linger at checkpoints, can't be curious about
what people are saying, doing, feeling. And can't and can't." Citing
the fall of Falluja, the revolt of Moqtada al-Sadr, and the spread
of the insurgency to every part of the country, Fassihi declared
that "despite President Bush's rosy assessments, Iraq remains a
disaster. If under Saddam it was a 'potential' threat, under the
Americans it has been transformed to 'imminent and active threat,'
a foreign policy failure bound to haunt the United States for decades
to come.... The genie of terrorism, chaos and mayhem has been unleashed
onto this country as a result of American mistakes and it can't
be put back into a bottle."
Fassihi's e-mail soon ended up on the Internet, where it quickly
spread, giving readers a vivid and unvarnished look at what it was
like to live in the world's most dangerous capital. Somehow, Fassihi,
in her informal message, had managed to capture the lurid nature
of life in Iraq in a way that conventional reporting, with all its
qualifiers and distancing, could not.
Other US correspondents in Baghdad were startled at the attention
her e-mail received. "All of us felt that we'd been writing that
story," one journalist told me. "Everyone was marveling and asking
what were we doing wrong if that information came as a surprise
to the American public." Reporters rushed to file their own first-person
accounts. Writing in the "Week in Review," for instance, New
York Times reporter
Dexter Filkins observed that "in the writing of this essay,
a three-hour affair, two rockets and three mortar shells have landed
close enough to shake the walls of our house. The door to my balcony
opens onto an Iraqi social club, and the roar from the blasts set
the Iraqis into a panic, their screams audible above the Arabic
music wafting from the speakers."
Interestingly, no such account appeared in the Wall Street Journal.
For Fassihi's criticism of Bush administration policy outraged some
readers, who insisted that she could no longer write about Iraq
with the necessary objectivity. In response, the Journal
announced that Fassihi was going to take a previously scheduled
vacation from Iraq and that this would keep her from writing anything
more about it until after the US election.
Both Fassihi and her editors insisted that this decision was not
a criticism of her, but some detected a pulling back by the Journal,
and an examination of its coverage tends to bear this out. In the
weeks before Fassihi's departure, the paper ran a number of probing
pieces on Iraq. On September 15, for instance, Fassihi and Greg
Jaffe, in a front-page story, described how the steady rise in violence
in Baghdad reflected growing cooperation among Iraq's once highly
fragmented insurgent groups. After Fassihi's e-mail was circulated,
however, such stories almost entirely disappeared from the Journal's
front page, and they were hard to find inside as well. The resulting
vacuum was filled by the Journal's stridently conservative
opinion pages, which every day featured one or more editorials or
columns insisting that the war was going well and that anyone who
felt otherwise was a defeatist liberal uninterested in bringing
democracy to the Middle East.
In one column, Daniel Henninger mentioned several Web sites that
readers interested in learning what was truly going on in Iraq could
consult. I looked up one of them, HealingIraq
.com. It was written by an Iraqi dentist. His most recent posting
began with an apology for the long hiatus since his last filing.
"The daily situation in Baghdad is sadly too depressing to live
through, let alone write about," he lamented. He told of one friend
who had been shot in the stomach while working at an Internet café
when an armed gang sprayed a nearby car belonging to a lawyer who
was pursuing a case they wanted dropped. Another friend, a doctor,
had been kidnapped along with a pharmacist by ten armed men storming
a pharmacy that had supplied medications to the U.S. Army. Their
decapitated bodies were later found outside Baghdad. Such grim reports
were absent from the Journal's opinion pages, and, increasingly,
its news pages. Thus one of the nation's top newspapers became effectively
neutered as a source of reliable information about Iraq.
Meanwhile, pressure was building on other U.S. news organizations
as a result of the visit to the United States of Iraqi Prime Minister
Iyad Allawi in late September. In private, he was not optimistic.
As Peter Boyer reported in
the November 1 New Yorker, Allawi told President Bush
of the conundrum facing him and the coalition that the insurgency
required forceful action, but that any such action could further
alienate the population, thus fueling the insurgency. In public,
however, Allawi joined with Bush in insisting that Iraq was making
progress and in blaming the press for making too much of the negative.
Fourteen or fifteen of Iraq's eighteen provinces, Allawi asserted,
were "completely safe," and the others had only "pockets of terrorism."
And this threw editors and reporters on the defensive. "At the moment,
there's real sensitivity about the perceived political nature of
every story coming out of Iraq," a Baghdad correspondent for a large
US paper told me in mid-October. "Every story from Iraq is by definition
an assessment as to whether things are going well or badly." In
reality, he said, the situation in Iraq was "a catastrophe,"
a view "almost unanimously" shared by his colleagues. But, he added,
"Editors are hypersensitive about not wanting to appear to be coming
down on one side or the other."
Allawi's visit to the United States was part of an intensive campaign
by the Bush administration to manage the flow of news out of Iraq.
As a matter of policy, any journalist wanting to visit the Green
Zone, that vast swath of Baghdad that is home to US officialdom,
had to be escorted at all times; one could not simply wander around
and chat with people in bars and cafés. The vast world of civilian
contractors of Halliburton's Kellogg, Brown & Root, of Bechtel,
and of all the other private companies responsible for rebuilding
Iraq was completely off-limits; employees of these companies
were informed that they would be fired if they were caught talking
to the press. During the days of the Coalition Provisional Authority,
its administrator, L. Paul Bremer, and the top military commander,
Ricardo Sanchez, gave very few interviews to US correspondents in
Baghdad. They did, however, speak often via satellite with small
newspapers and local TV stations, which were seen as more open and
sympathetic. "The administration has been extremely successful in
going around the filters, of getting their message directly to the
American people without giving interviews to the Baghdad press corps,"
one correspondent said.
The insurgents have done their part as well. In no prior conflict
not in Vietnam, nor in Lebanon, nor in Bosnia have
journalists been singled out for such sustained and violent attack.
According to the Committee to Protect Journalists, thirty-six journalists
have been killed in Iraq since the start of the war nineteen
at the hands of the insurgents. Two French journalists seized in
August remain missing. Until this fall, many journalists at least
felt safe while in their heavily guarded hotels. Then, in October,
Paul Taggart, an American photographer, was seized by four gunmen
after leaving the Hamra Hotel complex, one of the main residences
for Western journalists. He was eventually released, but it was
discovered that the captors had a floor plan of the hotel with the
name of every journalist in every room. Facing such perils, many
correspondents packed up and left.
2.
A number stayed, however, and, at considerable risk, set out to
describe the Iraqi maelstrom. Leading the way were three top U.S.
newspapers the New York Times, the Washington Post,
and the Los Angeles Times backed by, among others,
NPR, Knight Ridder, and the Associated Press. The newspapers, in
particular, seemed driven by a sense that they had somehow let down
their readers during the run-up to the war, that they had not sufficiently
scrutinized the administration's case for war, and they now seemed
determined to make up for it. The New York Times, for one,
maintained a staff of forty to fifty people in Baghdad, including
four or five reporters plus assorted drivers, housekeepers, security
guards, and "fixers," those invaluable interpreter/journalists who
help visiting reporters understand who's who, arrange interviews,
and make sense of it all. With more and more of the country off-limits
to Western reporters, these fixers were increasingly sent out into
the field to find out what was going on, and some emerged as enterprising
reporters in their own right.
In early October, the New York Times's Edward Wong, accompanied
by a fixer and a photographer, spent
a day being guided through the streets of Baghdad's Sadr City
by a mid-level aide to Moqtada al-Sadr. At the time, US warplanes
were pounding the district on a nightly basis, but Wong whose
itinerary included a kebab lunch at the aide's home, a street that
had recently been bombed, and a hospital where the wounded were
being treated found that the strikes were not having their
intended effect. "Loyalty to [Sadr] burns fierce here" in Sadr City,
"a vast slum of 2.2 million people, despite frequent American raids
and almost nightly airstrikes," he wrote on October 3. "The American
military has stepped up its campaign to rout the Mahdi Army, Mr.
Sadr's militia, on its home turf here, to drive him to the bargaining
table. But it is often impossible here to distinguish between civilians
and fighters."
After Prime Minister Allawi asserted that most of Iraq was safe,
the
Washington Post's Rajiv Chandrasekaran seeking
a statistical measure got hold of the daily security reports
of Kroll, a private firm working for the US government. These reports
showed that Iraq was suffering an average of seventy attacks a day
by insurgents, up from the forty to fifty that had occurred before
the handover of political authority in late June. What is more,
the reports showed, the attacks were occurring not only in the Sunni
Triangle but in every province of Iraq. "In number and scope," Chandrasekaran
wrote on the Post's front page, "the attacks compiled in
the Kroll reports suggest a broad and intensifying campaign of insurgent
violence that contrasts sharply with assessments by Bush administration
officials and Iraq's interim prime minister that the instability
is contained [in] small pockets of the country." (Since he wrote,
the number of attacks has increased to more than one hundred a day.)
In the face of Bush administration efforts to portray the Iraqi
insurgency as made up exclusively of foreign fighters led by the
Jordanian-born terrorist Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, several US news organizations
offered a more nuanced look. The
AP's Jim Krane, for instance, reported in early October that
the insurgents seemed to consist of four main groups, including
not only "hardcore fighters" aligned with Zarqawi but also conservative
Iraqis seeking to install an Islamic theocracy, Moqtada al-Sadr's
Mahdi Army, and "Iraqi nationalists fighting to reclaim secular
power lost when Saddam Hussein was deposed in April 2003." This
last group, Krane wrote, was the largest. In other US wars, he noted,
"the enemy was clear." In Iraq, "the disorganized insurgency has
no single commander, no political wing and no dominant group." As
a result, "US troops can't settle on a single approach" to the fighting.
In Washington, too, the press uncovered many significant stories
about US policy in Iraq. In one five-day period (October 22 to October
26), the Washington Post's front page featured stories on
- a poll
showing that US-backed political figures were losing ground to
religious leaders;
- how the
war in Iraq had diverted energy and attention from the fight against
al-Qaeda;
- how the
CIA was secretly moving detainees out of Iraq a "serious
breach" of the Geneva Conventions; and
- administration
plans to ask for an additional $70 billion to fund the wars in
Iraq and Afghanistan.
The biggest bombshell, though, came
on October 25, when the Times, in a two-column story
on its front page, reported that nearly 380 tons of high-grade explosives
had disappeared from a bunker south of Baghdad, and that this had
likely occurred after the US invasion. The story was quickly seized
on by John Kerry, who for the remaining days of the campaign cited
it as further evidence of the administration's mishandling of Iraq.
On the day before the election, CNN analyst William Schneider said
that the missing-explosives story seemed to be an "important" factor
in a last-minute turning of the polls away from Bush.
3.
In the end, of course, the voters did not so turn. And leaving aside
any possible problems with the polls themselves, it's clear that
all those stories in the Times and the Post, and the
discussion they generated, did not have the impact on the public
that Schneider and many others had predicted. Understanding why
requires a look at some of the constraints under which reporters
at even the most aggressive papers worked. Just as reporters confronted
physical no-go zones into which they could not venture, they also
faced journalistic ones posing many perils.
Civilian casualties was one. Getting at this posed a number of obstacles
for journalists, the most obvious being the lack of reliable figures.
The US military does not offer information about civilian casualties,
and the estimates by private groups vary wildly. At the conservative
end, Iraq Body Count,
which offers on its Web site a running total based on news reports,
places the number of civilian dead from military combat at between
14,300 and 16,500. At the upper end, a team of public health researchers
from Johns Hopkins University, using mortality estimates from both
before and after the war, has estimated that 100,000 civilians have
died either directly or indirectly as a result of the war. This
finding, published by the
British medical journal The Lancet in late October, was
questioned by many other groups, including Human Rights Watch, which
said that the real figure was probably much lower but still unacceptably
high.
Amid such conflicting estimates, journalists unable to visit
most of the sites where civilian deaths occur have been exceedingly
cautious. A correspondent for a major U.S. paper described for me
the dilemma he faced in a place like Falluja (this was before the
current U.S. offensive). His paper, he said, has an Iraqi staffer
in the city, and after each US bombing he would go to the scene
and report back that a certain number of civilians had died. "But,"
the correspondent said, "I want to see it myself." He elaborated:
"If you get a press release from the US military saying it dropped
four five-hundred-pound bombs on insurgents in Fallujah, and we
know from our people that twelve people were killed, and they say
it was Zarqawi's men, we'll print what they say that it was
Zarqawi. Al-Jazeera and al-Arabiya every night run interviews with
hospital directors, who say a man, his wife, and their three children
were killed. The U.S. military says that the director's been threatened.
I don't know. It's very frustrating because we can't go in. You're
left with 'he said/she said.'" Here, then, is another of those journalistic
conventions the need for "balance" that deters papers
from getting at one of the war's most disturbing dimensions.
Needless to say, the insurgents themselves have ruthlessly killed
many civilians, in attacks that often target them. An admirable
bid to weigh all this was made by Nancy
Youssef of Knight Ridder. Youssef learned that the Iraqi Health
Ministry had since early April been gathering statistics on civilian
casualties from hospitals in fifteen of Iraq's eighteen provinces.
Youssef obtained the numbers through September 19 and totaled them
up. The number of dead came to 3,487, of which 328 were women and
children. Another 13,720 Iraqis had been injured. Hospital officials
believed that most of the dead were civilians, and Youssef, analyzing
the circumstances of their death, was able to see a pattern, which
she described in her lead: "Operations by US and multinational forces
and Iraqi police are killing twice as many Iraqis most of
them civilians as attacks by insurgents." Iraqi officials,
she added, "said the statistics proved that US airstrikes intended
for insurgents also were killing large numbers of innocent civilians.
Some say these casualties are undermining popular acceptance of
the American-backed interim government."
After Youssef's report appeared, other news organizations began
clamoring for similar numbers. Within days, the interim government
ordered the Health Ministry to stop issuing them. The silence again
set in.
4.
The gingerly approach to civilian casualties in the U.S. press is
part of a much larger hole in the coverage, one concerning the day-to-day
nature of the U.S. occupation. Most of the soldiers in Iraq are
young men who can't speak Arabic and who have rarely traveled outside
the United States, and they have suddenly been set down in a hostile
environment in which they face constant attack. They are equipped
with powerful weapons and have authority over a dark-skinned people
with alien customs. The result is constant friction, often leading
to chronic abuses that, while not as glaring as those associated
with Abu Ghraib, are no less corrosive in their effect on local
sentiment.
One journalist who has seen this firsthand is Nir Rosen. A twenty-seven-year-old
American freelance reporter, Rosen speaks Arabic (a rare skill among
Western reporters in Iraq), has a dark complexion (allowing him
to mix more easily with Iraqis), and prefers when in Iraq to hang
out with locals rather than with other journalists. (In the late
spring, he managed to get inside Falluja at a time when it was a
death trap for Western reporters; he described his chilling findings
in
the July 5 issue of The New Yorker.) Seeing Iraq from
the perspective of the Iraqis, Rosen got a glimpse of how persistently
and routinely American actions alienated them. "People have to wait
three hours in a traffic jam because a US army convoy is going by,"
he notes. "Guns are pointed at you wherever you go. People are constantly
shouting at you. Concrete walls are everywhere. Violence is everywhere."
In October 2003, Rosen spent two weeks embedded with a US Army unit
near the Syrian border. In sweeps through neighborhoods, he said,
the Americans used Israeli-style tactics making mass arrests
in the hope that one or two of those scooped up will have something
useful for them. "They'll hold them for ten hours in a truck without
food or water," he told me. "And 90 percent of them are innocent."
Writing
of his experience in Reason magazine, Rosen described how a
unit he accompanied on a raid broke down the door of a house of
a man they suspected of dealing in arms. When the man, named Ayoub,
did not immediately respond to their orders, they shot him with
nonlethal bullets. "The floor of the house was covered with his
blood," Rosen wrote. "He was dragged into a room and interrogated
forcefully as his family was pushed back against their garden's
fence." Ayoub's frail mother, he continued, pleaded with the interrogating
soldier to spare her son's life, protesting his innocence: "He pushed
her to the grass along with Ayoub's four girls and two boys, all
small, and his wife. They squatted barefoot, screaming, their eyes
wide open in terror, clutching one another as soldiers emerged with
bags full of documents, photo albums and two compact discs with
Saddam Hussein and his cronies on the cover. These CDs, called The
Crimes of Saddam, are common on every Iraqi street and, as their
title suggests, they were not made by Saddam supporters. But the
soldiers couldn't read Arabic and saw only the picture of Saddam,
which was proof enough of guilt. Ayoub was brought out and pushed
on to the truck." After holding Ayoub for several hours in a detention
center, the soldiers determined that he was innocent, and they later
let him go.
Rosen believes that such encounters are common. The American soldiers
he saw "treat everybody as the enemy," he said, adding that they
can be very abusive and violent. "If you're a boy and see soldiers
beating the shit out of your father, how can you not hate the Americans?"
He added: "Why doesn't anybody write about this in the New York
Times or the Washington Post? The AP always has people
embedded why don't they write about it?"
One reason, he suggests, is that embedded journalists who write
negatively about the US military find themselves "blacklisted."
It happened to Rosen: a series of stories he wrote for Asia Times
about his experience while embedded elicited an angry letter from
the commander and the public affairs officer of the unit he accompanied,
and he has not been allowed to become embedded since. Other correspondents
told me of similar experiences.
Another reason why news organizations don't write about such matters
is suggested in the recently released DVD version of Michael Moore's
movie Fahrenheit
9/11. It contains as an added feature an interview with
Urban Hamid, a Swedish journalist who in late 2003 accompanied an
American platoon on a raid in Samarra. Hamid's experience was similar
to Nir Rosen's, with the difference that he caught his on tape.
In it, we see soldiers using an armored personnel carrier to break
down the gates of a house. We see the soldiers rush in with their
rifles pointed ahead, and terrified women rushing out. An elderly
man on crutches is rousted up and a plastic bag is placed over his
head. The soldiers go through the family documents, trying to determine
if this man is connected with the insurgency, but because they don't
speak Arabic they can't really tell. Nonetheless, they take him
to a detention center, where he joins dozens of others, their heads
all sheathed in plastic. Celebrating the arrests, the soldiers take
pictures of one another with their "trophies." One soldier admits
that he's surprised they didn't find more weapons. "The sad thing
for these guys is that we'll probably let them go because their
names don't match up," he says.
In the interview, Hamid says he asked many Iraqis if they'd heard
of things like this, and they all told him "of course." "It's preposterous,"
he says, "to think there is any way you win somebody's hearts and
minds by imposing such a criminal and horrible policy." Hamid says
that he tried to sell his tape to "mainstream media." First he approached
the "Swedish media" but got no response. He then approached the
"American media," with the same result. "It's obvious," he says,
"that the mainstream media exercise some kind of self-censorship
in which people know that this is a hot potato and don't touch it,
because you're going to get burned."
5.
Is self-censorship among US news organizations as widespread as
Hamid says? The group he's referring to, of course, is television
news, and it's here that most Americans get their news. For six
weeks before the election I watched as much TV news as I could,
constantly switching from one station to another.
Viewing the newscasts of the traditional networks ABC, CBS,
and NBC I was surprised at how critical of Bush policy they
could be. When Prime Minister Allawi claimed that fifteen of Iraq's
eighteen provinces were fit for elections, Charles Gibson on ABC's
World News Tonight asked Pentagon correspondent Martha Raddatz
if this was true. "I can give you a two-word answer from a military
commander I spoke to today," Raddatz replied. "He said, ‘no way.'
And one other commander said, ‘Maybe nine, ten, of the eighteen,
and that's being generous.'" On many nights, the networks aired
"mayhem reels" out of Iraq, two minutes' worth of cars afire, blood
stains on payments, bodies being carried from rubble. In addition
to relaying scoops from the daily press, the networks broke some
stories of their own. On the Sunday before the election, for instance,
60 Minutes ran a hard-hitting segment about a unit of the
Oregon National Guard in Iraq that lacked such basic equipment as
the armored plating needed to protect soldiers in Humvees from roadside
bombs. Such reports appeared often enough to reinforce longstanding
conservative complaints that the networks are inherently "liberal."
Yet even these "liberal" outlets had strict limits on what they
would show. On September 12, for instance, a group of American soldiers
patrolling Haifa Street, a dangerous avenue in central Baghdad,
came under fire. Another group of soldiers in two Bradley fighting
vehicles came to rescue them. They did, but one of the vehicles
had to be abandoned, and a jubilant crowd quickly gathered around
it. A banner from a group associated with Zarqawi was produced and
placed on the vehicle. Arab TV crews arrived to record the event.
At one point, two US helicopters showed up and made several passes
over the vehicle. With the crowd fully visible, one of the helicopters
launched a barrage of rockets and machine-gun rounds. The vehicle
was destroyed, and thirteen people were killed. Among them was Mazen
al-Tumeizi, a Palestinian producer for the al-Arabiya network who
was doing a TV report in front of the Bradley. Hit while on camera,
his blood spattering the lens, Tumeizi doubled over and screamed
that he was dying.
The video of Tumeizi's death was shown repeatedly on al-Arabiya
and other Arabic-language networks. On American TV, it aired very
briefly on NBC and CNN, then disappeared. On most other networks,
it appeared not at all. Here was a dramatic piece of footage depicting
in raw fashion the human toll of the fighting in Iraq, yet American
TV producers apparently feared that if they gave it too much time,
they would, in Urban Hamid's phrase, get burned. (I still have not
heard of a single instance in which the killing of an American in
Iraq has been shown on American TV.)
This fear seems especially apparent on cable news. Given the sheer
number of hours CNN, MSNBC, and Fox have to fill, it's remarkable
how little of substance and imagination one sees here. CNN still
bills itself as "the most trusted name in news," but one wonders
among whom. Its breakfast-time show, American Morning, offers
a truly vapid mix of bromides and forced bonhomie. In mid-October,
with a grinding war and bruising electoral campaign underway, the
show spent a week in Chicago, providing one long, breathless promo
for the city. Every hour or so, correspondent Brent Sadler would
produce an update from Baghdad. For the most part, he offered rip-and-read
versions of U.S. press releases, with constant references to "precision
strikes" aimed at "terrorist targets" and "Zarqawi safehouses."
Not once did I see Sadler make even a stab at an independent assessment.
For analysis, CNN leaned heavily on safe, establishment-friendly
voices, including many of the same retired military officers who
appeared in the run-up to the war. On October 15, for instance,
former General George Joulwan discussed with Wolf Blitzer the need
for Americans to do a better job of explaining to Muslims how much
they'd done for them over the years. Blitzer agreed: "I don't think
a lot of Muslims understand that over the past fifteen years, every
time the U.S. has gone to war, whether in Kuwait, or Somalia, or
Kosovo, or Bosnia, or Afghanistan or Iraq, it's to help Muslims."
Joulwan: "We've saved tens of thousands of them. We need to understand
that, and so do our Muslim friends."
Thankfully, not everything on CNN descended to this level. The network's
reporting on the election in Afghanistan was crisp and informative,
thanks largely to Christiane Amanpour's sharp reports. Aaron Brown's
nightly show, while often slow-paced, offered a sober look at serious
issues. And occasionally a truly stellar bit of reporting poked
through, as when Jane Arraf, breaking loose from her embed with
a US unit laying siege to Samarra, found that many of the claims
she'd been fed were untrue. "The US said more than one hundred insurgents
were killed, but residents saw it differently," Arraf reported.
The signs of destruction all around her, she stated that "it was
hard to find anyone who believes any of the people in hospitals
are insurgents."
Rare on CNN, such reports are almost entirely absent from Fox News.
The channel continues to insist that it is "fair and balanced,"
but hardly anyone takes this seriously anymore. Still, I was not
prepared for just how blatant and pervasive its bias was. This was
apparent throughout the presidential campaign, with George Bush
forever portrayed as resolute, principled, and plainspoken, and
John Kerry as equivocating, elitist, and French.
The slant was evident in the coverage of the war as well. Whenever
news about Iraq came on, the urgent words "War on Terror" appeared
on the screen, thus helping to frame the war exactly as the President
did. "Did the President and his administration take their eye off
the ball in the war on terror?" Brit Hume asked one night. For an
answer, Hume spoke with Richard Miniter, the author of Shadow
War: The Untold Story of How Bush Is Winning the War on Terror.
No bias there. After the Washington Times reported the discovery
in Iraq of a computer disk belonging to a Baath Party official that
contained data showing the layout of six schools in the United States,
Fox asked, "Can your school be a potential terrorist target?" This
time, Fox turned to Jeffrey Beatty, a former Delta Force commander
who, it so happens, runs an antiterrorist consulting firm. In fact,
Beatty said, schools are potential terrorist targets, and they had
better take precautionary measures now. On The O'Reilly
Factor, the central question for weeks was "Should CBS fire
Dan Rather?" Bill O'Reilly spent far more time dissecting Rather's
mistakes at CBS than he did analyzing Bush's deeds in Iraq.
And that's how Fox wants it. The most striking feature of its coverage
of the war in Iraq was, in fact, its lack of coverage. A
good example occurred on the Saturday before the election. That
morning, the US military announced that eight Marines had been killed
and nine others wounded in attacks in the Sunni Triangle. It was
the highest US death toll in nearly seven months. After reading
the news on the Web, I tuned in to Fox's 11 AM news summary. It
made no mention of the dead Marines. The next hour was taken up
by a feverish program on hot stock picks. Then came the noon newscast.
After spending ten minutes on the Osama bin Laden tape, the presidential
campaign, and the tight race in Ohio, it finally got around to informing
viewers of the Marines' deaths. It then spent all of twenty seconds
on them. As it turned out, that Saturday was a particularly bloody
day in Iraq, with a series of bombings, mortar attacks, and ambushes
throughout the country. Viewers of Fox, however, saw little of it.
This formula has proved very popular. The O'Reilly Factor
is currently the top-rated cable news show, and Fox's prime-time
audience is on average twice as large as CNN's. That audience still
trails far behind that of the traditional networks, but Fox has
much more time to fill, and it does it with programming that is
far more overtly ideological than anything else on TV. Its constant
plugging of Bush, its persistent jabs at Kerry, its relentless insistence
that Iraq is part of the war on terror and that both wars are going
well all have had their effect. According to election-day
exit polls, 55 percent of voters regarded the Iraq war as part of
the war on terrorism, as opposed to 42 percent who saw it as separate.
And 81 percent of the former voted for George Bush.
In
some ways, the coverage of the war featured a battle as fierce as
the political one between Democrats and Republicans, with the "red"
medium of Fox slugging it out with the "blue" outlets of the Times
and the Post, CBS and ABC. CNN seemed somewhere in between,
careening wildly between an adherence to traditional news values
on the one hand and a surrender to the titillating, overheated,
nationalistic fare of contemporary cable on the other. In the end,
CNN influenced by Fox's success seemed firmly in the
latter camp. It offered the superficiality of Fox without any of
its conviction. This hollowing out of CNN was, in a sense, an enormous
victory for the Bush campaign. Overall, in analyzing the reasons
for Bush's triumph, the impact of Fox News should not be overlooked.
Now,
with President Bush preparing for a second term, what can we expect
from the press in Iraq? The initial signs, from Falluja, are not
encouraging. Even allowing for the constraints imposed by embedding,
much of the press seemed unduly accepting of US claims, uncritically
repeating commanders' assertions about the huge numbers of insurgents
killed while underplaying the devastation in the city. And little
attention was paid to the estimated 200,000 residents said to have
fled Falluja in anticipation of the fighting. Amid US claims that
the city had been "liberated," these refugees seemed invisible.
But, in light of the coverage in recent months, this should have
come as no surprise.
November
23, 2004
Tom Engelhardt [send him
mail] is editor of TomDispatch.com,
a project of the Nation
Institute. He
is the author of several books, including The
Last Days of Publishing: A Novel and The
End of Victory Culture. Michael Massing, a contributing editor
of the Columbia Journalism Review, writes frequently on the press
and foreign affairs. He is the author of Now
They Tell Us, The American Press and Iraq, based on his articles
on press coverage of the Iraq war in The
New York Review of Books. This article will appear in the
December 16 issue of that magazine.
Copyright
© 2004 Michael Massing
Tom
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