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Politics : Foreign Affairs Discussion Group -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: JohnM who wrote (97966)5/12/2003 10:06:24 AM
From: JohnM  Respond to of 281500
 
Second of two

The Unseen War
By Michael Massing


3.
Even the most internationally minded Western news organizations, however, faced serious problems in covering the war. In Doha, most journalists spent their days shuttling between the Coalition Media Center and their plush five-star hotels. Had the journalists taken the time to look around Qatar itself, they would have witnessed a fascinating political experiment. Though slightly smaller than Connecticut, Qatar sits on enough natural gas to heat every home in America for more than one hundred years, and its emir, Hamad bin Khalifa al-Thani, is trying to use that wealth to create a modern society that he thinks could be a model for the Arab world. During my stay, Qatar took a step toward democracy by holding municipal elections, and among the winners was a woman— one of the first to be elected to public office in the Gulf. In Doha's spotless shopping malls, men in white robes and black headbands line up for Starbucks coffee and Subway sandwiches, an example of the combination of Wahhabi austerity and Western consumerism that is apparent throughout the country.

Few journalists, though, got to see it. Working late into the night to accommodate editors seven time zones away, they got most of their information about the outside world from TV, the Internet, and their colleagues in the field. Talking with them at the media center and the Sheraton and Ritz-Carlton, I found that they were mainly concerned with such military matters as troop deployments, tank formations, and the length of supply lines. Since the journalists were in Doha to cover Centcom, these concerns were natural, but the reporters for the most part seemed unconcerned about the political aspects of the military campaign—for instance, the workings of the Baath Party police; the attitudes of the different parts of his armed forces toward Saddam's dictatorship; the interests and resentments of the various Islamic groups and their leaders.

Part of the difficulty was that the reporters knew very little about the Middle East. Most had come to Doha from bureaus far afield—Washington, Mexico City, Rome, Brussels, Nairobi, Bangkok, Hong Kong. They were unfamiliar with Arab history, the roots of Islamic fundamentalism, the resurgence of Arab nationalism, the changes in the regional balance of power since September 11. Particularly serious was their lack of knowledge of Arabic. They could not talk with Arabic speakers directly, read Arabic newspapers, or watch Arabic news channels.

For American TV networks, the lack of experience in the Middle East reflects a turning away from the world that has been going on for a long time. Tom Fenton of CBS told me that when he joined the network, in 1970, "I was one of three correspondents in the Rome bureau. We had bureaus in Paris, Bonn, Warsaw, Cairo, and Nairobi. Now you can count the number of foreign correspondents on two hands and have three fingers left over. Before, we had stringers all over the world. Now no one can afford that." Even The Washington Post has only a handful of people fluent in Arabic, and only one of them—Anthony Shadid—was stationed inside Iraq. Because of his knowledge of the region and its language he was one of the few US correspondents able to get beneath the surface of life in Baghdad.

Many reporters lacked even the most rudimentary knowledge of Iraqi history and geography. A correspondent for the Los Angeles Times told me of a gung-ho colleague who, embedded with a Marine unit that was racing toward Baghdad, excitedly declared over the phone, "We're about to cross the Ganges!" When he was told that he must mean the Tigris, he said, "Yeah, one of those biblical rivers or other." When I mentioned to a reporter for USA Today how hard it seemed to cover the Middle East without much experience in the region, she was dismissive. "You can read one book, like God Has Ninety-Nine Names, and figure out what's going on here," she said, referring to the 1996 book by Judith Miller. "You can talk to any cabdriver and he'll tell you everything you need to know." As it happens, most of the cab drivers in Doha are from India and Pakistan.

4.
Probably the biggest problem for journalists unfamiliar with the region and its language was their inability to tune in to Arabic-language newscasts. During the first Gulf War, there were no all-news Arabic channels, and Arabs, like everyone else, had to rely on CNN. Now there are five such channels. The newest, the Saudi-backed al-Arabiya, went on the air just weeks before the start of the war. The most important, however, remains al-Jazeera. Even before the war, it had an estimated 35 million viewers; after its start, the number of its subscribers in Europe jumped by 50 percent. If you walk into a working-class café in the Arab world, chances are it will have a TV tuned to al-Jazeera. It has been central in defining how Arabs have seen the war.

For those in the West who get to see it, al-Jazeera remains an enigma. On the one hand, it has run lengthy interviews with US officials like Donald Rumsfeld and Richard Myers; during the war, it stayed with the Pentagon's briefings long after other networks had gotten bored and moved on. Al-Jazeera has offended many Arab governments with its frank coverage of their repressive policies. During the war Iraqi Information Minister Muhammed Saeed al-Sahaf denounced it for "marketing to America."

At the same time, al-Jazeera has aired unedited tapes from Osama bin Laden, and many who followed its reports from Afghanistan during the war there felt it had a decidedly pro-Taliban tilt. It has shown hours of coverage of Palestinian casualties in the West Bank and Gaza and commonly refers to suicide bombers as martyrs. A week into the war in Iraq, it broadcast a tape of US POWs being interrogated and another of dead British soldiers, and it was rebuked for doing so by the brass of both nations.

A visit to al-Jazeera's central studios is instructive. Built with a $140 million grant from the emir of Qatar, they are as advanced as any Western network's, with a sleek, airy newsroom in which a wall of monitors shows satellite feeds from around the world. On its staff are people of eighteen nationalities, including displaced Palestinians and Lebanese Christians. Some of the men wear sports shirts and slacks, the women jeans and sandals. Jihad Ballout, al-Jazeera's new press spokesman, appears in a leather jacket, smokes Gitanes, and drives a BMW convertible. But here, too, are women in traditional black robes and men in traditional white ones; among the latter is the channel's chairman, Sheik Hamad bin Thamer al-Thani, a member of Qatar's royal family.

In fact, as I learned in Doha, al-Jazeera's staff has two main factions. One, the Islamists, subscribe to a form of religion-based Arab nationalism, which strongly opposes Western culture and Western political power. The other, the secularists, are drawn to liberalism and modernism, and some have close contacts in Europe. The two groups are engaged in a struggle for power. Riad Kahwaji, the Middle East bureau chief of Defense News, told me that he thought the dispute within al-Jazeera reflected "a broader struggle within the Arab world." Before the collapse of the Soviet Union, he said, political opinion in the Arab world could, very roughly speaking, be seen as divided between the "traditional left," often secular, and the "traditional right," sometimes religious. With the Soviet collapse, however, the left largely disappeared, as it did in Egypt, and the vacuum was increasingly filled by hard-line Islamists. Governments, forced to respond, have themselves more and more adopted Islamist positions. As a result, the region's politics have become saturated with religion. "This has had an influence on everything—especially the media," Kahwaji said. "And al-Jazeera is no exception."

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

As I learned from people familiar with the station, there is little doubt that the Islamists and those vehemently opposed to the West have the upper hand. And this was certainly borne out when, helped by Arabic translators, I watched the channel. Occasionally there appeared a moderate Arab expressing hopes for a democratic Iraq. Mostly, though, I heard expressions of anti-Western Arab nationalism. Much was made of a pro-Saddam demonstration in Mosul. Saudi scientists urged Arabs to protest the war. Iraqi citizens were shown rejoicing at the destruction of an American tank. Usually, the coalition was referred to as an invading or occupying force, with hardly any indication that it was also opposing a particularly cruel dictatorship.

Several times an hour, we saw footage of civilian casualties. Al-Jazeera took us to hospital wards to show us screaming children, women in pain, men without limbs. The camera lingered on stumps, head wounds, and tubes inserted in nostrils and chests. On gurneys in hallways lay bodies bandaged, bloodied, and burned. Doctors and nurses described how they were being overwhelmed by casualties and how they lacked the supplies needed to treat them. (As Tim Judah wrote in these pages, many of the casualties were in fact military.[*])

On al-Jazeera, then, the war was seen mainly through the plight of its victims, while the brutality of the Baathists and their horrifying methods were hardly mentioned. And other Arabic newscasts did not look much different. Al-Arabiya, which is casting itself as a moderate alternative to al-Jazeera, also heavily featured civilian casualties. In doing so, both channels reflect popular sentiment in the region. "The overwhelming majority of the Arab world does not believe the US invasion is legitimate," Riad Kahwaji observed. "They regard the US presence in Iraq as an illegal occupation." In short, the war has helped to solidify Islamist tendencies in the Middle East, and this development has been reflected in—and reinforced by —the Arab press and television.

5.
To me, the war as shown on al-Jazeera seemed one-sided; its coverage would have benefited from more reports on Saddam's crimes and the opposition to him from the Shiite majority and from many other elements in the population. Yet Western television programs seemed to tilt in the opposite direction, showing a war of liberation without victims. The more than five hundred reporters embedded with military units provided some unforgettable glimpses of the war, but remarkably few showed war's real-life effects, i.e., people getting killed and maimed.

Consider, for example, the day on which US troops made their initial raid inside Baghdad. The fighting was so intense that, according to Centcom, between two thousand and three thousand Iraqi soldiers died. Yet, on TV, I didn't see a single one of them. On MSNBC, the anchor announced that its live video feed was being put on five-second delay so that images deemed too "disturbing" could be weeded out. On CNN the only casualty I saw was when Walter Rodgers and his crew found an Iraqi soldier lying wounded on the side of the road. A CNN security officer who had some medical training stopped to help the man while US Army medics were summoned. This made for dramatic TV, and it showed the type of casualties CNN apparently thought appropriate for broadcast—those assisted by compassionate Americans.

In Qatar, the International Herald Tribune comes with a locally produced insert, The Daily Star, and it was revealing to compare the two. Here, for instance, are some of the headlines that appeared in the Herald Tribune on April 7:

RECOGNIZING THE VICTORY: HOW WILL US KNOW WHEN IT HAS WON THE WAR IN IRAQ?

FOR US SOLDIERS, THERAPY HELPS EASE BATTLE STRESS

HOPE FOR MISSING GIs GIVES WAY TO SADNESS

RESCUED US PRIVATE REUNITED WITH FAMILY

That same day, The Daily Star carried a front-page story headlined, IRAQI HOSPITALS OFFER SNAPSHOT OF HORROR. It began with the ordeal of Ali Ismail Abbas, the twelve-year-old Baghdad boy who lost his family and both his arms in a US missile attack. It went on to describe how the staff at the hospital he'd been brought to "were overwhelmed by the sharp rise in casualties since American troops moved north to Baghdad Thursday and intensified their aerial assault." I found hardly any mention of this in the Herald Tribune on that day.

Such differences, I was told in Doha, reflect not only the widespread opposition to the war in the Middle East but also the fact that people there have much greater tolerance for graphic images than do those in the United States. American movies feature scenes of people being blown up and gunned down; American TV programs show women being slashed and men being shot in the face. But television executives believe that when it comes to real war, Americans cannot bear to see bullet-ridden bodies and headless corpses. If they were shown, moreover, the effect might be to weaken support for the war. In the case of Iraq, the conflict Americans saw was highly sanitized, with laser-guided weapons slamming into their intended targets with great precision. We observed this from afar, usually in pictures taken from bombers thousands of feet above their target, or in images of clouds of black smoke rising hundreds of yards away. Spared exposure to the victims of war, Americans had little idea of its human costs.

Next year, al-Jazeera plans to begin broadcasting in English. The images it shows may come as a shock to many Americans. In view of what they are usually shown, such a shock seems needed.

—April 30, 2003
Notes
[*] See "The Fall of Baghdad," The New York Review, May 15, 2003.



To: JohnM who wrote (97966)5/12/2003 10:53:50 AM
From: carranza2  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 281500
 
Never, ever trust the media, regardless of the source. I know you have a special place in your heart for Sy Hersh, whom you consider the purest of the pure. However, this article did a terrific job of highlighting his errors and, in my opinion, his lack of journalistic integrity.

Message 18924078

The most egregious recent example is highlighted in the current issue of The Atlantic Magazine. It deals with the apparent falsehood of the Mohammed Al-Dura. You might recall it, the alleged shooting of a child by an Israel troop who were guarding a settlement while he was protected by his father. The shooting has captured Islamic imagination like nothing else proving, for all time, the fact that Israelis are monsters.

Unfortunately, it's a story in search of facts. Someone took a forensic look at the evidence and concluded that it was impossible for the Israelis to have shot the child. A lot of very odd things about the incident as well, such as the fact tht the child was supposedly shot in the early afternoon. Videos of the funeral, which supposedly took place later that afternoon, show shadows consistent with a noon or late morning funeral.

The clear implication of the story is that the shooting was staged. It probably was. Try to convince a die-hard Islamist. There is a terrific aversion to any kind of truth in the Islamic parts of the ME.

This is a pretty good place to start looking at the issue:

cfxweb.net

The Beeb was incredibly biased, CNN was biased, Fox was biased......Al-Jazeera was a joke.

The only way to get to what might be the semblance of the truth is to look at all of them with a jaundiced eye and distill the truth from the reports as best one can.



To: JohnM who wrote (97966)5/12/2003 12:20:33 PM
From: Nadine Carroll  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 281500
 
How anybody (who doesn't work for the Beeb) can say that the BBC's coverage is most reliable is astounding. I listened to the BBC radio all through the Iraqi war, and they were unable to tell me that the coalition forces were winning. They were always sure that the casualties were serious setbacks, that the quagmire was right around the corner. The day that the minders failed to show up for work seemed to take the BBC correspondents quite by surprise.

They covered their asses quickly in the recap of the war, of course. But getting war coverage so consistently wrong would seem to me to be a major black mark against any organization's reliability. Did you read Rod Liddle's piece

Why is the BBC So Scared of the Truth?
spectator.co.uk

Where did this political correctness come from, and why is it swallowed and then spat out so unquestioningly? It’s a sort of terror of the truth, arrogant in its assumptions because it believes ‘ordinary’ people cannot cope with the truth and need it either sweetened or altered entirely.

You could see it at work during the war in Iraq. Now, I was opposed to the war but I was aware that the military campaign was carried out with devastatingly brilliant precision and speed. And yet, watching television — Channel 4 or the BBC or, for that matter, Sky — there seemed a determination to present at every juncture the worst-case scenario as if the war, because it was inherently ‘immoral’, could not therefore possibly be expedited with success. Maybe it is just my imagination, but I seem to remember being told, every night, that the prospect which awaited our troops was a ‘quagmire’ of ‘hand-to-hand street fighting’. Where’s the quagmire, huh? Where are the fights? I don’t object to the speculation; just the one-sided nature of the speculation — as if it were in some way indecent to have someone suggest that the war would be over by the end of next week and very few people would be killed.


Now, Rod Liddle is on the left himself, and is an old hand in British media. This isn't some slam from a neocon. This is a lament about institutionalized political correctness run amok. And the trouble with political correctness is, it is a self-inflicted blinker system - those who share in it, cannot see it to remove it.