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Date:   Monday, December 21, 1998 07:47:41 PM
From:   [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subj:    Media Coverage of Bombing and Bombast

BEHIND THE NEWS COVERAGE OF BOMBING AND BOMBAST

By Norman Solomon


     At the end of a year that has culminated with the
bombardment of Iraq and the impeachment of President Clinton, we
can draw some important conclusions about America's news media.
For instance:

     * Euphemisms are as common as ever in American reporting of
U.S. military actions.

     Typically, on the third night of the bombing, CNN's
Christiane Amanpour repeatedly told viewers that Baghdad was
having a "dramatic" night. When the smoke cleared, she was one of
many journalists who spoke of "collateral damage" without
mentioning dead Iraqi civilians.

     * The U.S. news media, along with the White House and
Congress, have no moral authority to condemn terrorism.

     During four long nights, while cruise missiles exploded in
Baghdad and other populated areas of Iraq, millions of children
were among those who lay awake wondering if they would survive
till dawn. This terrorism on a grand scale was depicted by major
U.S. media as an exercise in righteousness.

     * When America's war machine roars and America's media
machinery spins, the teeth mesh.

     With few exceptions, news reports portrayed the bombing as
virtuous, even if a bit unpleasant for some Iraqis.

     * After the shooting starts, denunciations of U.S. actions
get little ink or air time.

     Three months ago, the head of the U.N.'s "oil-for-food"
program, Denis Halliday, quit in protest of the sanctions against
Iraq. On Dec. 18, while the missiles were flying, he made a
statement that wasn't fit for inclusion in media coverage: "The
military strikes constitute a futile and short-run irrational
action of desperate men."

     * In the world according to U.S. mass media, the United
Nations is crucial when the U.S. government says it is crucial
and irrelevant when the U.S. government says it is irrelevant.

     In 1991, when the U.N. Security Council authorized the Gulf
War, the American news media elevated the U.N. to the status of
Earth's ultimate arbiter. But in 1998, when the United States was
unable to get Security Council approval for launching missiles
against Iraq, the U.N. was beside the point.

     * More than ever, U.S. policy-makers and media elites agree
that public debate prior to military action is a risk not worth
taking.

     Last February, when CNN joined with Secretary of State
Madeleine Albright and two other top officials to hold a "town
hall" meeting in Columbus, Ohio, their weak arguments for
attacking Iraq met with effective opposition. This time, they
avoided any such mistake -- preferring a mere pantomime of
democracy -- as mass media and officials went through the motions
of open discourse. Likewise, in Congress, substantive debate was
somewhere between muted and non-existent.

     * Media outlets mirror White House efforts to portray a U.S.
military assault as a conflict with one individual despot.

     There was much media enthusiasm for the line that the
attacks would "send a message" to Saddam Hussein. But the bombs
sent the clear message that the U.S. government views civilian
lives as expendable. Rather than impeding the cycles of murderous
violence, Washington has insisted on leading the way.

     * The news media generally confine themselves to the narrow
choices presented by Democratic and Republican leaders.

     Benefitting from a carefully crafted media image, Bill
Clinton has become a great president for Americans who want the
killing sugar-coated and sanitized by liberal piety. Meanwhile,
during the six years of the Clinton administration, harsh
sanctions against Iraq have been responsible for the deaths of
several hundred thousand people in that country.

     * Like the politicians they cover, most American journalists
seem to assume that the United States is the center of the
universe.

     To hear the news media tell it, the recent assault on Iraq
was profoundly significant because of possible impacts on
partisan power struggles inside the Beltway. In sharp contrast,
the people under the bombs were trivial to the punditocracy.

     * In medialand, the anguish of Washington's powerful men is
much more important than the lives of the human beings they are
in the process of killing.

     News coverage prompted Americans to shed tears over
Clinton's impeachment or Rep. Bob Livingston's resignation -- but
not over the suffering of Iraqi people.

     Now, media outlets are awash in drivel about the crying need
for politicians to be nicer to each other.
                            ***
Write to Norman Solomon c/o this newspaper or by electronic mail
at [EMAIL PROTECTED]


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