by Norman Solomon
Dissident Voice
BAGHDAD -- From the 12th floor of the Al-Rashid Hotel, the view
is much like the panorama of any large metropolis. Along wide streets, cars are
in constant motion. The cityscape is filled with tall buildings and residential
neighborhoods. Nothing seems out of the ordinary -- except that if all goes
according to plan, my tax dollars will help to turn much of this city into
hell.
As autumn began, a prominent New York Times
article cited "senior administration officials" eager to sketch out
the plan:
"Officials said that any attack would begin with a
lengthy air campaign led by B-2 bombers armed with 2,000-pound satellite-guided
bombs to knock out Iraqi command and control headquarters and air defenses."
That kind of flat language makes for comfy reading. We
don't need to be disturbed about the specter of war in a faraway place. But
what if the place is not far away?
Looking out at Baghdad's skyline, I think about the terror likely
to descend on this city. For some people underneath the missiles, their last
moments will resemble what happened at the World Trade Center a little more
than a year ago.
Quite appropriately, the media response to 9-11 included horror,
abhorrence and 100 percent condemnation. The power to destroy and kill did not
in the least make it right.
But now, day by day, the power to destroy and kill becomes more
self-justifying as reporters and pundits acclimate to the assumptions of
official Washington.
This has happened before. When war appears on the horizon,
and especially after it begins, a heightened affliction seizes most news
outlets. The media spectacle becomes steady regurgitation of what's being fed
from on high. And right now, the nation's media diet is stuffed with
intensifying righteousness.
War gets attention. But already, with sanctions, the U.S. government
has led a more insidious assault on Iraqi people for more than a decade. How do
we grasp 5,000 children a month dying as a result? The grim statistics, even when
reported and attributed to such sources as U.N. agencies, haven't made much
noise in the media echo chamber.
On a Saturday morning in September 2002, at the Al-Mansour Pediatric
Hospital in Baghdad, mothers sat as usual on bare mattresses next to children
languishing with leukemia and cancer. The youngsters are not getting adequate
chemotherapy; the U.S.-led embargo continues to block some crucial medications.
Walking through the cancer ward, I remembered the response from
then-Secretary of State Madeleine Albright when, during a "60 Minutes"
interview that aired on May 12, 1996, CBS correspondent Lesley
Stahl asked: "We have heard that a half a million children have died. ...
Is the price worth it?" Albright replied: "I think this is a very
hard choice, but the price -- we think the price is worth it."
Easy to say, or accept, when others do the suffering and dying.
Consequences of the sanctions have been ongoing. The State Department
continues to veto some crucial shipments of basic medical supplies to Iraq, including
such items as special centrifuges for blood separation, plasma freezers and
fusion pumps.
After three visits to southern Iraq, most recently in
September, an Austrian physician named Eva-Maria Hobiger says in heartfelt imperfect
English: "By the support of these machines, the life of many sick children
can be saved. It has to be called a crime when innocent and suffering children
are the target of policy."
Now, as with years of sanctions, top officials in Washington
-- making a "very hard choice" for all-out war -- evidently figure
"the price is worth it." Geopolitical talk and strategic analyses
dominate media coverage, while moral dimensions get short shrift.
I doubt that an American would find it easy to look the mothers
and patients in the eyes at the Al-Mansour Pediatric Hospital. And I wonder
what their lives will be like if, as expected, the missiles begin to explode in
Baghdad. I don't want to think about that. It's much easier to stick with
comfortable newspeak about "a lengthy air campaign led by B-2 bombers
armed with 2,000-pound satellite-guided bombs."
Norman Solomon's
latest book is The Habits of Highly Deceptive Media. His syndicated
column focuses on media and politics. Email: mediabeat@igc.org