American reporters would shudder to think
that they harbor class prejudice — but they do
Ever since the American-led
invasion of Iraq last year, when hundreds of journalists were embedded
with military units, people in media circles
have been debating whether journalists lose their professional detachment
under such circumstances and begin to identify too closely with the troops
they are covering. A journalist I met recently in Iraq told me that
whenever he returns from a stint with the military, he gets a string of
queries from journalism professors, wanting to know if embedded
journalists have become, in effect, "whores" of the armed
forces.
Having spent much of the past
two years embedded with U.S. military units around the world, I find such
fears to be a case of class prejudice. As with many forms of prejudice,
the perpetrators are only vaguely aware of it. if at all.
Even with the embed phenomenon
the media still manifest a far more intimate —
one might say incestuous — relationship with politicians, international
diplomats, businesspeople, academics, and humanitarian-relief workers than
with the U.S. military. Given that all these groups push various political
agendas, it is fair to ask why embedding has struck a raw nerve.
The common denominator among
the non-military groups is that they derive from the same elevated social
and economic strata of their societies. Even relief workers are often
young people from well-off families, motivated by idealism and a desire
for adventure. An American journalist would most likely find it easier to
strike up a conversation with a relief worker from another Western country
than with a U.S. Marine or soldier, especially if that Marine or soldier
were a noncommissioned officer. This is not necessarily because the
journalist and the relief worker share a liberal outlook; a
neoconservative pundit would fare no better with the NCO, for example. The
NCO is part of another America — an America that the media
elite is blind to and alienated from.
I am not talking about the
poor. The media establishment has always been
solicitous of the poor, and through much fine reporting over the years has
become intimately familiar with them. I am talking about the working class
and slightly above: that vast, forgotten multitude of Americans,
especially between the two cosmopolitan coasts, with whom journalists in
major media markets now have fewer and fewer
opportunities to engage in a sustained, meaningful way except by embedding
with the military.
The U.S. military —
particularly at the level of NCOs, who are the guardians of its culture
and traditions — is a world of beer, cigarettes, instant coffee, and
chewing tobacco. It is composed of people who hunt, drive pickups, use
profanity as an element of ordinary speech and yet have a simple, sure,
demonstrative belief in the Almighty. Though this is by and large a
politically conservative world, neoconservatives might not feel
particularly comfortable in it. Some neocons, who have taken democracy and
turned it into an ideological ism, wouldn't sit well with Army and Marine
civil-affairs and psyops officers who pay lip service to new democratic
governing councils in Iraq and then go behind their backs to work with
traditional sheikhs. The meat-and-potatoes military is about
practicalities: it does whatever is necessary to, say, restore stability
in Iraq and Afghanistan. In Afghanistan, Army Special Forces work
regularly with undemocratic warlords and tribal militias, and see no
contradiction with their own larger belief in democracy. Arguing over
abstractions and refining differences between realism and idealism is the
luxury of a well-to-do theory class.
The military is an
unpretentious environment in which, for instance, the word
"folks" is commonly used for people both good and bad. When,
after 9/11, President George W. Bush drew snickers from some writers for
his reference to al-Qaeda terrorists as "those folks," it was an
indication not of Bush's poor speech habits but of the regional and class
prejudices afflicting the media establishment.
The starkly differing
attitudes toward Bush that one encounters within the media
and the military go to the heart of this class divide. You may not get
much of a sense of it at the Pentagon, or at military academies such as
West Point and Annapolis. The Pentagon is about as indicative of the rest
of the military as Washington is of the rest of America; West Point and
Annapolis are about as indicative of U.S. military schools as Harvard and
Yale are of colleges and universities across the heartland. To know what
soldiers, Marines, and other uniformed Americans think, visit the housing
for young NCOs at a base such as Camp Lejeune, North Carolina; Fort
Campbell, Kentucky; Camp Pendleton, California; or Fort Hood, Texas. Visit
the Army Sergeants-Major Academy in El Paso, Texas, or the Army and Marine
infantry schools at Fort Benning, Georgia, and Twenty-nine Palms,
California. Visit U.S. barracks and military chow halls around the world.
NCOs in these places
appreciate President Bush, whatever his manifold weaknesses, for
subjective cultural reasons. His voice is a clear, simple one that speaks
of a clash between good and evil, between good guys and bad guys. Bush
talks like a believer; he is unabashedly Christian. He says openly that it
is all right to kill the enemy, which goes a long way with military
fighting units. One Air Force master sergeant told me, "I reject the
notion that Bush is inarticulate. He is more articulate than Clinton. When
Bush says something, he's clear enough that you argue about whether you
agree with him or not. When Clinton talks, you argue over what he really
meant."
Bush, from an elite East Coast
family, connects with sergeants and corporals in the same visceral, almost
tribal way that I saw Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin, a
sophisticated European Jew who relaxed to the music of Chopin, connect
with the tough, working-class Oriental Jews of Israel's slums and
development towns a quarter century ago. The Oriental Jews, like American
NCOs, were looking not for subtlety or complexity but for clarity. How
deeply does this man believe? Will he fight to the finish?
In a recent article in The
National Interest., Samuel Huntington, of Harvard University, writes about
the divide in American society between the elites, who are cosmopolitans,
and the mass of citizens, who are nationalists. The media
and the armed forces, respectively, are poster children for these two
categories. The world of the media is just as
easily defined as that of the military. Journalists are increasingly
global citizens. If they themselves do not have European and other foreign
passports, their spouses, friends, and acquaintances increasingly do.
Whereas the South and the adjacent Bible Belt of the southern Midwest and
the Great Plains dominate the military, and the only New Yorkers and
Bostonians one is likely to meet in the barracks are from workingclass
areas, heavily Irish and Hispanic, the urban Northeast, with its frequent
air connections to Europe, is where the media
cluster. Whereas the military is a lower-middle-class world in which a
too-prominent sense of self is frowned on, the journalistic world too
often represents the ultimate me, me, me culture of today's international
elite.
The military and the media
occupy distinct cultural and economic layers. For the military this
doesn't really present a problem. Its culture is appropriate to its task,
which is to defend the homeland, through the violent use of force if
necessary. The troops who do this require nationalism more than they do
cosmopolitanism, though a bit more of the latter would certainly be
healthy. They also require a religious spirit that is both martial and
compassionate, a requirement that the Old Testament orientation of
southern evangelicalism satisfies nicely. The soldiers I have met harbor
no particular resentments. They are middle-class in their minds, whether
or not they are in reality; the military offers a telling demonstration
that class resentment is mainly an obsession of the elite.
But the media
do have a problem. They are supposed to explain what is happening in a
diverse world, which is difficult to do if journalists all hail from the
same social and economic background. The media
establishment may claim eclectic origins, but whether a journalist grew up
in New York or Hong Kong or Mexico City matters less than you might think
if in any case he is affluent and well educated: the New Yorker will have
more in common with his colleagues from Asia or Latin America than he will
with someone from a working-class background in Allentown, Pennsylvania.
To deny that this is an issue
for the media is to deny a basic truth of
writing: though journalists assume the mantle of professional objectivity,
a writer brings his entire life experience to bear on every story and
situation. A journalist may seek different points of view, but he shapes
and portrays those viewpoints from only one angle of vision: his own.
The blue-collar element that
once kept print journalism honest has been gone for some time. Journalists
of an earlier era may have been less professional, but they were better
connected with the rest of the country. The mannered intrigues of the
well-heeled Washington and New York media world
have come to resemble those of the exclusive Manhattan society that Edith
Wharton chronicled a hundred years ago.
How many members of this world
really know people in the active-duty military or the National Guard? The
East Coast media's social circle is much more
likely to include aging sixties protesters than Vietnam veterans. Of
course there are exceptions to all of this, but exceptions don't cut it.
Yes, the editorial boards of
prestigious newspapers regularly invite top military brass up to their
offices, and a contingent of colonels are always studying at Harvard's
Kennedy School of Government and similar places. Furthermore, the military
correspondents of the major newspapers are in a category by themselves in
terms of considerable expertise and well-rooted personal relationships
with military men and women. But such cross-fertilization does not go very
deep in the larger scheme of things. Besides, generals and colonels are
not really what the military is about.
So although some journalism
professors may worry that military embedding is subverting the media,
I would argue the contrary. The Columbia Journalism Review recently ran an
article about the worrisome gap between a wealthy media
establishment and ordinary working Americans. One solution is embedding,
which offers the media perhaps their last, best
chance to reconnect with much of the society they claim to be a part of.
In the military world an
overly prominent sense of self is frowned on; in the journalistic world
it's too often me, me, me.
~~~~~~~~
By Robert D. Kaplan
Robert D. Kaplan is the author
of Warrior Politics: Why Leadership Demands a Pagan Ethos (2001). He is
writing a series of articles about American troops in far-flung parts of
the world.