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The Unbalanced Hawks at the Washington Post
By Russell Mokhiber and Robert Weissman

What is going on at the Washington Post?

We would say that the Post editorial pages have become an outpost of the
Defense Department -- except that there is probably more dissent about
the pending war in Iraq in the Pentagon than there is on the Post
editorial pages.

In February alone, the Post editorialized nine times in favor of war,
the last of those a full two columns of text, arguing against the
considerable critical reader response the page had received for pounding
the drums of war.

Over the six-month period from September through February, the leading
newspaper in the nation's capital has editorialized 26 times in favor of
war. It has sometimes been critical of the Bush administration, it has
sometimes commented on developments in the drive to war without offering
an opinion on the case for war itself, but it has never offered a peep
against military action in Iraq.

The op-ed page, which might offer some balance, has also been heavily
slanted in favor of war.

In February, the Post op-ed page ran 34 columns that took a position on
the war: 24 favored war and 10 were opposed, at least in part. (Another
22 mentioned Iraq, and sometimes were focused exclusively on Iraq, but
didn't clearly take a position for or against the war.)

Over the last four months, the Post has run 46 op-ed pieces favoring the
war, and only 21 opposed.

This constitutes a significant change from September and October, when
the opinion pieces were much more balanced, and even tilted slightly in
favor of peace.

A few words on our methodology: We reviewed every editorial and op-ed
piece in the Post over the last six months that contained the word
"Iraq." We looked at the substance of the articles, and did not
pre-judge based on the author. We categorized as neutral pieces which
mentioned Iraq as an aside, or which discussed the war without taking a
position. For example, an article which assesses how European countries
are responding to U.S. Iraq-related proposals, but does not take a
position on the war itself, is categorized as neutral. Neutral articles
are not included in our tally.

The methodology tends to undercount pro-war columns. We categorized as
neutral articles which we thought presumed a certain position on the
war, but which did not explicitly articulate it. Over the last four
months, there were 17 "neutral" articles which we believe had a pro-war
slant, and only five "neutral" pieces with an anti-war orientation.

Our methodology also tended to overcount pro-peace op-eds. We tallied an
op-ed as pro-peace if it took a position opposing the drive to war on
the issue of the moment -- even if the author made clear that they
favored war on slightly different terms than the President proposed at
the time (for example, if UN authorization was obtained).

Someone else reviewing the Post editorial page might disagree with our
categorization of this or that article. We concede it may be rough
around the edges. But overall, we think other reviewers would agree that
our count is in the ballpark, and tends to underestimate the disparity
between pro- and anti-war pieces.

Moreover, the dramatic quantitative tilt in favor of the war if anything
underplays how pro-war the Post's editorial pages have been.

Among the regular columnists at the Post, those providing pieces that we
considered anti-war include E.J. Dionne, a self-described "doubter" not
opponent of the war, Mary McGrory, who pronounced herself convinced by
Colin Powell's presentation to the United Nations (a position from which
she has backtracked) and Richard Cohen, who actually is pro-war. Only
William Rasberry could be labeled a genuine and consistent opponent of war.

On the other side, the regular pro-war columnists are extraordinarily
harsh and shrill. George Will labeled David Bonior and James McDermott,
two congresspeople who visited Iraq, "American collaborators" with and
"useful idiots" for Saddam. Michael Kelly, in one of his calmer moments,
says no "serious" person can argue the case for peace. Charles
Krauthammer says that those who call for UN authorization of U.S.
military action in Iraq are guilty of a "kind of moral idiocy."

The Post op-ed page has been full of attacks on anti-war protesters.
Richard Cohen has managed to author attacks on John Le Carre, for an
anti-war column he wrote, poets against the war, and Representative
Dennis Kucinich. Cohen joined war-monger Richard Perle in calling
Kucinich a "liar" (or at very least a "fool"), because Kucinich
suggested the war might be motivated in part by a U.S. interest in Iraqi
oil. (Is this really a controversial claim? Pro-war New York Times
columnist Thomas Friedman says that to deny a U.S. war in Iraq is partly
about oil is "laughable.")

Neither Le Carre, the poets, nor Kucinich has been given space on the
Post op-ed page.

Indeed, virtually no one who could be considered part of the peace
movement has been given space. The only exceptions: A column by Hank
Perritt, then a Democratic congressional candidate from Illinois,
appeared in September. Morton Halperin argued the case for containment
over war in February. And Reverend Bob Edgar, a former member of
Congress who now heads the National Council of Churches, a key mover in
the anti-war movement, was permitted a short piece that appeared in the
week between Christmas and New Year's, when readership and attention to
serious issues is at a lowpoint.

Edgar only was given the slot after editorial page editor Fred Hiatt, in
an op-ed, characterized the anti-war movement, and Edgar by name, as
"Saddam's lawyers."

Does this shockingly one-sided treatment on the Post editorial pages of
the major issue of the day matter?

It matters a lot.

The Washington Post and the New York Times are the two papers that most
fundamentally set the boundaries for legitimate opinion in Washington,
D.C. The extraordinary tilt for war in the Post editorial pages in the
last four months makes it harder for officialdom in Washington and the
Establishment generally to speak out against war.

Everyone who might be characterized as an "insider" in the
political-military-corporate establishment knows there are major
internal divisions on the prospect of war among elder statesmen, retired
military brass and present-day corporate CEOs. There are many reasons
those voices are inhibited from speaking out, but the Post's extremist
editorial pages are certainly a real contributor.

The failure to give a prominent platform to anti-war voices has also
worked to soften the debate among the citizenry. It's no answer to say a
vibrant anti-war movement, reliant on the Internet, its own
communications channels and dissenting voices in other major media
outlets, has sprung up. Sending out an e-mail missive is not exactly the
same thing as publishing an op-ed in the Washington Post.

The Post editorial page editors have failed to fulfill their duty to
democracy. The heavy slant on the editorial pages, the extreme pro-war
rhetoric offset only by hedging and uncertain war critics, and the
scurrilous attacks on the anti-war movement to which minimal response
has been permitted -- all have undermined rather than fueled a robust
national debate.

At this point, there is no real way for the Post to rectify its
wrongdoing. It could start to mitigate the effect by immediately making
a conscious effort to solicit and publish a disproportionately high
number of pro-peace op-eds, and to let the peace movement occasionally
speak for itself, especially since the paper's regular columnists so
savagely and repeatedly attack it.

Unfortunately, the drive to war, which the Post editorial pages have
helped fuel, may not stop in Iraq. There is good reason to believe that
a war with Iraq will be followed by calls from the hawks at the Post and
around the administration for more military action, against some other
target. Will the paper's editorial page editors find a better way to
achieve balance in advance of the next military buildup? Or are the
paper's editorial pages now simply devoted to the Permanent War Campaign?


Russell Mokhiber is editor of the Washington, D.C.-based Corporate Crime
Reporter. Robert Weissman is editor of the Washington, D.C.-based
Multinational Monitor, http://www.multinationalmonitor.org. They are
co-authors of Corporate Predators: The Hunt for MegaProfits and the
Attack on Democracy (Monroe, Maine: Common Courage Press; 
http://www.corporatepredators.org).

(c) Russell Mokhiber and Robert Weissman

This article is posted at: http://lists.essential.org/pipermail/corp-focus/=
2003/000147.html
_______________________________________________

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DECLARATION & DISCLAIMER
==========
CTRL is a discussion & informational exchange list. Proselytizing propagandic
screeds are unwelcomed. Substance—not soap-boxing—please!  These are
sordid matters and 'conspiracy theory'—with its many half-truths, mis-
directions and outright frauds—is used politically by different groups with
major and minor effects spread throughout the spectrum of time and thought.
That being said, CTRLgives no endorsement to the validity of posts, and
always suggests to readers; be wary of what you read. CTRL gives no
credence to Holocaust denial and nazi's need not apply.

Let us please be civil and as always, Caveat Lector.
========================================================================
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