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Introspective
Media Not in the Cards
by
Norman Solomon
May
8, 2003
A
new poll tells us that -- by a two-to-one margin – Americans "use clearly
positive words in their descriptions of the president." The Pew Research
Center, releasing a nationwide survey on May 7, declared "there is little
doubt ... that the war in Iraq has improved the president's image" in the
United States.
Such
assessments stand in sharp contrast to views of George W. Bush overseas. In
mid-March, the Pew center put out survey results showing that "U.S.
favorability ratings have plummeted in the past six months" -- not only in
"countries actively opposing war" but also in "countries that
are part of the 'coalition of the willing.'"
So,
why do most Americans seem at least somewhat positive about Bush, while the
figures indicating a "favorable view of the U.S." are low in one
country after another -- only 48 percent in Britain, 31 percent in France, 28
percent in Russia, 25 percent in Germany, 14 percent in Spain and 12 percent in
Turkey? In large measure, the answer can be summed up with one word: media.
Overall,
the American news media do a great job of telling us how wonderful top U.S.
leaders are as they direct Uncle Sam's stride across the planet. The contrast
with evil-doers -- especially on our TV sets -- could hardly be more plain.
Meticulous
researchers at the media watch group FAIR (where I'm an associate) recently
pointed out that U.S. news outlets "have been quick to declare the U.S.
war against Iraq a success, but in-depth investigative reporting about the
war's likely health and environmental consequences has been scarce."
During
the war, the London-based Guardian has reported, the Pentagon dropped 1,500
cluster bombs -- horrific weaponry that fires small pieces of metal, which
slice through human bodies. Unexploded cluster bombs are now detonating, sometimes
in the hands of Iraqi children. And, as it did during the first Gulf War, this
spring the U.S. government fortified some munitions with depleted uranium,
which leaves fine-particle radioactive dust that has been linked to cancer and
birth defects.
Those
are important stories, known to many news watchers on several continents. But
not in the United States. Searching the comprehensive Nexis media database
through May 5, the FAIR researchers found that "there have been no
in-depth reports about cluster bombs on ABC, CBS or NBC's nightly news programs
since the start of the war." Those news shows provided just "a few
passing mentions of cluster bombs."
The
network evening news programs did even worse on DU reportage. "Since the
beginning of the year," FAIR discovered, "the words 'depleted uranium'
have not been uttered once on ABC 'World News Tonight,' 'CBS Evening News' or
'NBC Nightly News,' according to Nexis."
Meanwhile,
the deck of cards featuring 52 Iraqi villains – with Saddam Hussein as Ace of
Spades -- became one of the great PR innovations of the war on Iraq. By coincidence,
on the same day that FAIR completed its research, five "Army intelligence
specialists" – who designed the cards -- stepped forward to take a bow in
Washington.
A
spokesperson for Central Command said that there was "no word on the cards
helping find anyone." But the Pentagon's deck has turned out to be a
stroke of media genius. It tapped into the American public's appetite for fun
ways to identify bad guys who'll be hunted down.
News
media keep encouraging us to believe that leaders in the United States are cut
from entirely different cloth than the Iraqi thugs on the most-wanted cards.
But I don't think so. In some respects, the terrible choices made by those men
and women are more explainable than ones that are routine in U.S. politics.
Many
of the Baath Party operatives had good reason to fear for their lives -- and
the lives of their loved ones -- if they ran afoul of Saddam. In contrast, many
politicians and appointed officials in Washington have gone along with lethal policies
merely because of fear that dissent might cost them prestige or power. Why
denounce the use of cluster bombs or depleted uranium and risk losing a top
post in Washington? Why take a moral position against a war after it starts,
and risk losing the next election?
A
deck of cards might be printed someday featuring the faces of certain high
officials in the Republican and Democratic parties of the United States. Of
course, there'd be no occupiers around to enforce any dragnet. And, in the
absence of independent-minded news media, the cards would need extensive
annotations on the back to explain the human costs of decisions made by those
officials.
Norman Solomon is Executive
Director of the Institute for Public Accuracy (www.accuracy.org) and a
syndicated columnist. His latest book is Target Iraq: What the News Media
Didn’t Tell You (Context Books, 2003) with Reese Erlich. For an excerpt and
other information, go to: www.contextbooks.com/new.html#target.
Email: mediabeat@igc.org