http://www.dailycal.org/article.php?id=14662
Journalists Spar Over Media Coverage of War With Iraq
BY Joey Coburn and Betty Yu
Contributing Writers
Friday, March 19, 2004
In a heated hour-long debate at Zellerbach Hall last night, six leading
international journalists found media coverage of the war in Iraq lacking a
sufficiently critical eye.
The discussion capped a three-day conference that brought together dozens of
international journalists to take a second look at the media’s approach to the
Iraq war.
“This has been the most shameful era of American media. The media has been
sucker-punched completely by this administration,” said Robert Scheer,
syndicated columnist of the Los Angeles Times and a visiting professor at the UC
Berkeley Graduate School of Journalism.
Scheer’s remark sparked a round of applause of a strongly anti-war audience
whose boos and hisses punctuated the event.
What stood out as the biggest blunder to several panelists was that the media
was not aggressive enough in challenging President Bush’s assertion that
Saddam Hussein harbored weapons of mass destruction.
“We failed the American public by being insufficiently critical about elements
of the administration’s plan to go to war,” said John Burns, The New York
Times Baghdad Bureau chief who phoned in from Iraq.
Journalists could have examined Iran or Pakistan, countries also suspected of
developing stockpiles of weapons of mass destruction, said Maher Abdallah Ahmad,
a correspondent for Al Jazeera.
However, other panelists questioned whether more could be done given the
restraints on access and poor intelligence.
“Every television agency and intelligence service didn’t know what was
happening,” said moderator Loren Jenkins, senior foreign editor for National
Public Radio. “Maybe intelligence services of the world aren’t what
they’re cracked up to be. If they can’t get it right, the government can’t
get it right and then the media can’t get it right.”
Along with tight controls on the media, the repressive environment of Iraq
created fear among Iraqis to share their opinions of the war with journalists,
said Lindsey Hilsum, a diplomatic correspondent for a British TV network.
Although many Iraqis told her they wanted the war to happen, she could not
report on their sentiments because she feared for their safety and for her own
as well.
Nearly one year from the invasion, much still remains to be investigated and
reported to the public, Ahmad said.
“The Americans still do not know what is happening in Iraq,” he said.
“Does anyone here know how many Iraqis were killed in the war?”
Still, for all of the stories that could have been pursued, Jenkins said the
media is an easy scapegoat.
“Everyone needs to keep in mind: don’t oversimplify and castigate the media
as responsible for every ill that happens,” Jenkins said.
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Postmortem: Iraq war media coverage dazzled but it also obscured
By Jeffery Kahn, NewsCenter | 18 March 2004
http://www.berkeley.edu/news/media/releases/2004/03/18_iraqmedia.shtml
Amr Al-Mounaiery, Abu Dhabi TV correspondent: "After this war, I realized
that we in the media are the soldiers of politics. Not the military soldiers. I
am proud that Abu Dhabi TV showed all sides, everything. You can see CNN showed
only part of the war – their favorite part. They didn't show any of the
anti-American rallies or the civilian casualties. They just showed crowds
welcoming American soldiers and clapping hands. It is selective journalism –
like Saddam did ... This was the Arabic way. Now we are switching roads and we
wonder: Where is America? Where is the American dream? Freedom of expression,
where is that?"
– Excerpt from "Embedded: The Media at War in Iraq – an oral
history" by Bill Katovsky and Timothy Carlson
BERKELEY – Patriotism is never stronger or more vital than in times of war. As
seekers of truth and guardians of open debate, how do reporters deal with the
compromising force of wartime patriotism? How did the U.S media do in covering
the Iraq war?
Based on a two-hour panel discussion – one small part of this week's Media at
War Conference at UC Berkeley – truth does not inevitably have to be a
casualty of war. But the pressure on journalists to abandon the everyday
practice of showing all sides and many perspectives is immense.
Lt. Col. Rick Long
For the media, access to the battlefield and to the troops was critical to
telling the story of the war. Just as the media was gearing up to fight for this
access, the Bush Administration and the military announced they would allow
reporters to "embed" with soldiers in the field. More than 700
journalists signed up and were embedded during what turned out to be a
three-week ground war. Media At War panel member Lt. Col. Rick Long, the former
head of media relations for the U.S. Marine Corps, managed the media boot camp
in Quantico, Virginia, which prepared journalists for their war assignments.
Why did the military decide to embed journalists with the troops? Long was
candid.
"Frankly, our job is to win the war. Part of that is information warfare.
So we are going to attempt to dominate the information environment."
Embedding journalists honorably served that end, said Long.
While noting that the practice dated back at least a century, Long said the
military believed it was a bit of a gamble. The colonel said he had gone out
even farther on a limb, advocating that embedded reporters be given access to
classified war planning sessions, even though publication or word-of-mouth
spread of this information would have endangered the lives of American soldiers.
At first, said Long, his superiors considered this to be sheer lunacy. But the
proposal came to pass.
Some soldiers and officers were leery of being teamed with embedded reporters.
Long said he talked to a number of these soldiers. Look, he told them, you
believe in what you are doing, you are proud of it, and you are serving your
country. Long counseled the wary to think of the experience as sort of like high
school. "Just be yourself and maybe people will like you."
So, from the military's viewpoint, how did it work out?
"Overall," said Long, "we were very happy with the outcome."
Todd Gitlin
Panelists Todd Gitlin, a professor of Journalism and Sociology at Columbia
University and former UC Berkeley Sociology professor, said some of his
colleagues consider him "soft on embeds." Gitlin said the military and
the media do not necessarily have irreconcilable interests. But, he allowed,
"Embeddedness has a built-in swerve toward propaganda … because an
embedded reporter is on the team." A reporter shares the risk and is
dependent on the soldiers he is traveling with for his very life. The desire to
write negative stories about them, said Gitlin, is quite diminished.
Even for a reporter riding in a tank with American soldiers, any casualties
inflicted by the crew usually occur off screen and out of sight. The result,
said Gitlin, is that the point of view of the reporter approximates the view of
the government's own camera. War reporting becomes a travelogue.
He likened some war coverage – particularly that practiced by television –
to a televised sporting event. Rather than journalism, it becomes entertainment.
When the primary motive of media institutions becomes audience share, then these
institutions "seek a rapture of attention" in order to procure as many
eyeballs as possible. This, said Gitlin, conflicts with "a journalistic
duty not to please," but rather to shake the safe assumptions of their
audience.
Barbie Zelizer
Looking through a different lens, Barbie Zelizer, a professor at both the
University of Southern California's Annenberg School of Communication and the
University of Pennsylvania, offered a related critique of print journalism.
Zelizer focused on the use of photographs, many of which she pronounced to be
both visually dazzling and journalistically inappropriate.
During times of war, newspapers make much more extensive use of photographs,
said Zelizer, publishing more photos than normal, giving them greater
prominence, displaying them larger and using more color photos. One example: The
New York Times more than doubled its usual number of photos during the war.
Photos have explicit subject matter but they also have suggestive power, and
they should be more widely recognized as reporting, contended Zelizer. A statue
of Saddam Hussein being pulled off its pedestal by a crowd tells a story, a
visual story of a toppled ruler. But, said Zelizer, that powerful image also
seemed to symbolize what was happening in the hearts and minds of the Iraqi
people. Such inferences are inevitable, and she said, they are questionable
—especially when a wider view shows that the crowds are minimal, and it is
American soldiers actually doing the toppling.
Using a slide projector, Zelizer displayed a portfolio of exquisitely composed
photos that had appeared in the nation's newspapers, many of them stunning works
of art. For instance, there was the shot of a handful of Iraqis against a desert
backdrop with the dusty sky glowing a luminescent orange. The photo was placed
in the newspaper above a group of battle stories. Such images are artistic,
dramatic, even beautiful, but not newsworthy, argued Zelizer. In effect, she
said, they use eye-popping color to dazzle, and end up masking the darkness of
death.
How did the war images published by the media "function," asked
Zelizer. Often, she said, they served patriotic and not journalistic purposes.
The prevalence of these beautiful images provided a prism of patriotism and
thus, she said, became tools of public consensus that facilitated U.S. military
and political ends.
Did the patriotic instinct that arises during time of war compromise the media's
coverage and obscure our view of the war in Iraq? The Media at War panel – a
forum sponsored by the UC Berkeley Graduate School of Journalism, Berkeley's
Human Right Center, and the Office of Chancellor – shed light on the dilemma
faced by a U.S. war correspondent, but ultimately it was left with a question
from the audience that nobody on the panel really could answer.
How, asked a woman, do you train citizens to be informed and to learn about what
is going on in the world?
For the media attempting to cover a war and for a nation striving to understand
it, there is only one course, said the panel. They must share a passion for
seeking out the truth.