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Politics : Stop the War! -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: epicure who wrote (4220)3/27/2003 10:17:10 PM
From: Ron  Respond to of 21614
 
MEDIA WAR: OBSESSED WITH TACTICS AND TECHNOLOGY
By Norman Solomon

Two months ago, when I wandered through a large market near the
center of Baghdad, the day seemed like any other and no other. A vibrant
pulse of humanity throbbed in the shops and on the streets. Meanwhile, a
fuse was burning; lit in Washington, it would explode here.

Now, with American troops near Baghdad, the media fixations are
largely tactical. "A week of airstrikes, including the most concentrated
precision hits in U.S. military history, has left tons of rubble and deep
craters at hundreds of government buildings and military facilities around
Iraq but has yielded little sign of a weakening in the regimes will to
resist," the Washington Post reported on March 26.

Shrewd tactics and superlative technology were supposed to do the
grisly trick. But military difficulties have set off warning bells inside
the U.S. media echo chamber. In contrast, humanitarian calamities are
often rendered as PR problems, whether the subject is the cutoff of water
in Basra or the missiles that kill noncombatants in Baghdad: The main
concern is apt to be that extensive suffering and death among civilians
would make the "coalition of the willing" look bad.

But in spite of all the public-relations efforts on behalf of this
invasion, the military forces of Washington and London remain a coalition
for the killing of Iraqi people who get in the way of the righteous
juggernaut. Despite the prevalent media fixations, the great moral
questions about this war have not been settled -- on the contrary, they
intensify with each passing day -- no matter what gets onto TV screens and
front pages.

When U.S. missiles exploded at Iraqi government broadcast facilities
Wednesday morning, it was a move to silence a regime that had been gaining
ground in the propaganda struggle. Throughout the months of faux
"diplomacy" and the first days of invading Iraq, the governments led by
George W. Bush and Tony Blair had managed to do the nearly impossible --
make themselves look even more mendacious than the bloody dictator Saddam
Hussein.

On the home front, most U.S. news outlets are worshiping the nations
high-tech arsenal. It was routine the other day when the Washington Post
printed a large color diagram under the headline "A Rugged Bird."
Unrelated to ornithology, the diagram annotated key features of the AH-64
Apache -- not a bird but a helicopter that excels as a killing machine.

We're supposed to adore the Pentagons prowess; the deadlier the
better. Transfixed with tactical maneuvers and overall strategies inside
Iraq, media outlets rarely mention that this entire war by the U.S.
government and its British accomplice is a flagrant violation of
international law. Only days before the United States launched the attack,
U.N. Secretary General Kofi Annan said that the invasion -- lacking a new
Security Council resolution to authorize it -- would violate the U.N.
Charter.

In the capital city of the world's only superpower, the Post is
cheering on the slaughter. "Ultimately the monument that matters will be
victory and a sustained commitment to a rebuilt Iraq," the newspaper
concluded. Its assessment came in an editorial that mentioned the pain --
but not the anger -- of family members grieving the loss of Kendall D.
Waters-Bey, a Marine from Baltimore who died soon after the war began.

The Post's editorial quoted the bereaved father as saying that "the
word sorrow cannot fill my pain." But the editorial did not include a
word of the response from the dead mans oldest sister, Michelle Waters,
who faulted the U.S. government for starting the war and said: "Its all
for nothing. That war could have been prevented. Now, were out of a
brother. Bush is not out of a brother. We are."

The Baltimore Sun reported that Michelle Waters spoke those words "in
the living room of the family home, tears running down her cheeks."

A week into this war, CNN's White House correspondent John King was
in sync with many other journalists as he noted criticisms of the
administrations "war strategy." The media anxiety level has been rising,
but the voiced concerns are overwhelmingly about tactics. A military
triumph may not be so easy after all.
j
Today, I took another look at quotations that Id jotted at
meetings with Iraqi officials during visits to Baghdad last fall and
winter. (The quotes are included in "Target Iraq: What the News Media
Didnt Tell You," a book I co-authored with foreign correspondent Reese
Erlich.)

In mid-September, the elderly speaker of Iraqs national assembly,
Saadoun Hammadi, told our delegation of Americans: "The U.S.
administration is now speaking war. We are not going to turn the other
cheek. We are going to fight. Not only our armed forces will fight. Our
people will fight."

Three months later, at a Dec. 14 meeting, Iraqs deputy prime
minister Tariq Aziz said: "Hundreds of thousands of people are going to
die, including Americans -- because if they want to take over oil in
Iraq, they have to fight for it, not by missiles and by airplanes ...
they have to bring troops and fight the Iraqi people and the Iraqi army.
And that will be costly."

The fuse lit in Washington is now burning in Baghdad. Our tax
dollars are incinerating Iraqi troops and civilians.

No matter how long this war takes, it is profoundly wrong.