-Caveat Lector-

>From Counterpunch (headline article, no direct link, so go here:
http://www.counterpunch.org/ ), a long but important article on how the
government manipulates us through the media (also known as the "Fifth
Column" of government).  This is how they do it, folks, and why it's so
hard to wake the average American up.

This is what we're up against.

goldi

February 7, 2003

Bush the Historian: "The Past is Over"

Remembering the "War in the Gulf" on TV

by BEN FEINBERG

Now that a new George Bush has placed himself on the road to military
action against an old Asian enemy, perhaps it is a good time to revisit
the last time that "WAR" was screamed continuously across our television
screens. Back in 1991, the media and the last President Bush rallied the
nation to support Operation Desert Storm by carefully framing the action
in terms of powerful cultural categories, and in the process they took
steps towards reworking the meaning of another key American conflict-the
Vietnam war-and forced critical voices to operate from impossibly weak
positions. Now, as an even more omnipresent television news machine
creates the frameworks to support the destruction of "evil" people and
"terrorist" states in distant lands, this time under the catch phrases
"Countdown: Iraq" and "Target: Iraq" rather than the now nostalgic "War
in the Gulf," those of us who try to disseminate alternatives to mass
violence may be able to learn from the devices that were effectively
used to immobilize us the last time around.

Sometimes the political slants of news providers are as obvious as the
smirks on the faces of Fox News "reporters" or "analysts" as they hector
a Palestinian spokesman or liberal fall guy. One approach to
understanding these biases traces the corporate interests-Disney,
General Electric, etc.-that control media outlets. Another looks at
fabricated stories, such as the great Kuwait Incubator hoax, and direct
military censorship.

But sometimes media biases are more subtle, and may operate
independently from the intentions of individual reporters. News stories
always deploy framing devices (such as the concept of a news "story")
that limit possible interpretations of what happened, privileging some
while making others seem contrary to common sense. In the case of the
first "War in the Gulf," three subtle strategic moves the produced the
Bush administration's view of the first Iraqi war as common sense: 1)
the compartmentalization of various aspects of the war, 2) the
precision/randomness opposition, and 3) intertextuality and the uses of
the story of Vietnam.

political, military, and nationalistic frames

The Bush regime's preferred interpretation of "The War in the Gulf"
contained the elements laid out directly and indirectly by President
Bush and other government spokesmen: the war was a noble and justified
assault by the forces of "good" and "light" (democracy, freedom,
capitalism, progress, the flag, yellow ribbons, America, Christianity)
against the minions of "evil" and "darkness" (aggression, tyranny, the
'Other', Islam, irrationality). Dominant voices emanating from outside
the media industry made a concerted attempt to control the
interpretation of the story, both by limiting (as "gatekeepers") the
flow of information to the media, and by imposing coherent
categorizations on that information. Media representations of the lead
up to the war attacked potentially oppositional interpretations by
consistently separating out political, military, and nationalistic
spheres of control and information. By labeling an event as pertaining
to one of these categories, these producers of news limited the degree
of acceptable debate.

"Politics," in contemporary American culture, implies an argument
between two points of view-pro/con, Republican/Democrat,
Liberal/Conservative, etc. Everyone is theoretically entitled to an
opinion within this frame, and the media typically construct political
stories around two antagonistic voices, although of course even in this
realm "experts" are employed to frame the debate around permissible
issues. The political phase of the Gulf War, in which politicians and
other experts were permitted to question the wisdom of an attack on
Iraq, was declared over after a much-celebrated congressional debate
ended in an endorsement of military action.

Once the "military" phase began, the issues became more technical,
enabling "experts" to usurp a greater degree of authority. The
destruction of Iraq and the deaths of thousands became more palatable
when the debate was framed within the military idiom. Against the
onslaught of uniformed military experts conjured up by CNN and the other
networks to spew meaningless nonsense in an authoritative jargon (from
inside the studio, the presumed source of truth), the voices of dissent
sounded like those of ignorant outsiders who were hopelessly illiterate
in the language of power and prestige. Within the military frame, the
makers of news became generals, and many news broadcasts began with the
image of an elderly, confident white male in a uniform standing in front
of a podium and using every linguistic device at his disposal to enhance
the power of the institution he represented. All other actors were
marginalized.

The media accommodated to the military frame in several ways. Newspapers
and television presented summaries of the war in the form of sports box
scores (casualties, POWs, missions flown, first downs). The merging of
the genres of sports and news has rhetorical implications in both the
military and, as I shall discuss below, the nationalistic frames. When
discussing a sports event, one typically asks, "Which team will win?
Why? What strategies will give my team a better chance? " And one
expects answers from insiders-coaches and ex-players. One does not ask
whether the game should be played. The sports metaphor allowed the
routinization of the unusual events of war, and human suffering was
transferred to the more impersonal summarizing of statistics and
advantages. It is in this context that we should observe the
announcement of the first U.S. ground casualties in the Battle of
Khafji, at the end of a long list of destroyed and damaged equipment.
The manipulation of figures, of pluses and minuses, hid the loss of
human life behind the rhetoric of victory and defeat.

But even though the military categorization privileged the generals and
other official figures, the news also bombarded us with images of
normal, everyday Americans who encouraged us with their opinions. These
stories fall under the parallel "nationalist" frame. Under the sign of
the national, debate is limited even more severely. The politicians
signified their passage to appropriate civilian roles at the outbreak of
the war when they gathered in front of flags and evoked the timeworn
signals of nationalism: unity, rallying around the President,
patriotism, the special "American" character.

The language of nationalism requires constant expressions of unity
against dangerous internal and external others. In the context of the
nationalist frame, anti-war voices are automatically excluded as
un-American and thus illegitimate. Instead of creating the American
public in the political framework of (limited) debate, the media
overwhelmingly promoted the loaded, nationalistic theme. This is
especially apparent in the selection of "typical" Americans interviewed
and in the coverage of pro- and anti-war demonstrations. Although over
40% of the American soldiers in the Persian Gulf were Black or Hispanic
and over 50% of Americans now live in metropolitan areas with a
population over one million, the spokespeople presented on television
corresponded overwhelmingly to the hegemonic version of the model
American; they were white, rural, and conservative. A reporter for CBS
went on a trip to find out what America thought of the war.
Significantly, his "America" was spatially located along Interstate 45,
which runs from North Dakota south to Texas, and reproduced the
ideological notion that equates the (not coincidentally, politically
conservative) geographical center of America with the national soul.
Given this construction of the "American," voices became un-American to
the extent that they differed from the standard. While the military and
other conventional discourses presented themselves from studios, as
experts draped with other trappings of hierarchical authority, the
authority of nationalist discourse emerges because it is placed in the
voices of "normal" Americans. Viewers were encouraged to identify with
these models and to emulate them in voicing their own opinions,
particularly when they stated the dominant position in a more emotional
lexicon, like the gruff Idaho man who demanded that, "We kick his ass."
These selected, typical Americans presented a unified picture of
acceptable American reactions to the war as seen on TV. By presenting
voices that were selected and controlled as if they were autonomous, the
networks encouraged the penetration of a single viewpoint that wears the
mask of unfiltered public opinion.

The world of sports, always ready to enter into a wider nationalist
role, was activated to its full extent. Athletes of all kinds wore
American flags or yellow ribbons on their uniforms-one Italian college
basketball player who refused was drummed off his team and out of the
country-and the Super Bowl, one of the nation's largest theatrical
rituals, was turned into a celebration of patriotism. ABC and the other
authors of the Super Bowl carefully orchestrated the event to align all
of the prestige and attitudes of sport with the war effort; the half
time ceremonies involved a lengthy but uninformative news report from
Peter Jennings. This news report was not necessary to inform the public
about some vital movement in the war-this was not its function. Rather,
the presence of Jennings' report in the middle of the Super Bowl linked
the war and the nation with the values of sport, signaling that,
"whatever our differences, we are on the same team, and when the chips
are down and there is no tomorrow we do what the coach tells us and give
110%.

It should be noted that the interpretive categorization of an event as
military or nationalist does not necessarily imply a pro-war stance.
These categories do not carry an inherent content or ideological
position but are themselves contestable, and many of the first anti-war
protestors attempted to appropriate nationalist symbols and slogans such
as the flag and "supporting our troops" and to infuse them with an
oppositional meaning. But in the context of the Gulf war, these
categories seemed weighted, by their history and the unequal power of
those who employ them, towards a certain interpretation. As the Kansas
farm-boy interviewed on CBS affirmed, "You can't support the troops and
not support what they're doing." Indeed, the very efforts of protestors
to employ these same categories testified to the power of the dominant
construction and the desperate condition of the opposition.

Dissenters and protesters-ordinary citizens who try to position
themselves as organized, autonomous agents and not passive "men on the
street"-fall into an anomalous position. Protestors are not legitimate
"political" actors-these are elected officials. Their collective and
independent action separates them from the cheerleading role assigned to
the nationalist frame. And their lack of political or military
credentials exclude them from the studios where experts make strategic
and tactical pronouncements under the military frame. Some stories may
treat them sympathetically-as a valued, albeit quirky and confused, sign
of our "democratic freedoms"-but dissenters are never part of "us" who
are represented by "ordinary (not political) Americans" or the experts
who provide models of reasonable opinion from the studio. Cable News'
coverage of this year's massive January 18 protests demonstrates the
continuing marginalization of the roles of protesters. Fox News morning
panel of experts mentioned the protests in a joking tone, acknowledging
their impressive size only to laugh at the "incoherence" of their
message, as demonstrated through placards like "US out of Iraq and San
Fransisco." The smiles on the "experts" faces immediately faded as they
turned to serious, real news made by congressmen, the UN inspectors, and
members of the administration. MSNBC opened a discussion of the protests
by asking this question: "Protesters: Unamerican or a good example of
the freedoms our soldiers are getting ready to go to war to defend?" In
other words, should we deal with dissenters as dangerous transgressors
of the hegemonic categories for understanding the war, or should we
incorporate them into these categories as harmless "examples" of
American freedoms? In either case, the protestors remain a "they"; we
are not invited to identify with their critical position, and they are
not invited to join the talk radio hosts and other pundits whose answers
reflect "real American" opinion.

precision and chaos, pristine and grotesque, culture and nature

Television news produced the story of the war in terms of an opposition
between precision and chaos, encouraging the interpretation of this
narrative through the mechanism of already circulating cultural
categories. Both the military and the media consistently described the
American war effort through the poetic language of precision. All the
networks ran effusive special reports on the high tech weapons in the
U.S. arsenal. All spokesmen emphasized the accuracy of these weapons,
which were said to strike their military targets unerringly. The
military briefers showed videos, which the networks aired and reaired,
purporting to show American weapons going through doors and down
chimneys. But despite the extensive media coverage of these high tech
weapons systems, the so-called smart bombs comprised a small percentage
of the explosives dropped on Iraq and Kuwait.

At the same time that the American war was shrouded in high-tech
precision, the Iraqi war effort was represented as containing all of the
dangerous and unpredictable traits of the "other." The SCUD missiles
came randomly; nobody knew when or where they would hit or whether they
would carry conventional or chemical warheads. The Iraqis transgressed
the boundaries of what was defined as "proper" military action, an
attribute which referred back to their violation of international
borders which was the ostensible cause of the United States
intervention. The comments made by "experts" after the oil spills
initially attributed to Iraq were typical of this construction of Iraq
as transgressing boundaries. The oil not only violated international
borders; it also crossed over the line between the military and
environmental spheres of influence. The confrontation between the U.S.
Patriot missiles and the Iraqi SCUDs was promoted as a symbol for the
conflict as a whole. The Patriot, with its nationalist name, represented
high-tech precision and the defense of innocents; the ominously titled,
vaguely obscene SCUDs represented random destruction that violates
national boundaries and the military/non-military distinction. This
weapon was denied a place inside the legitimate arsenal. Unlike the U.S.
missiles and bombs that struck "targets," the SCUD, according to Dan
Rather, was a "terrorist" weapon with no intelligible military value.
This construction of the war encountered its toughest test when a U.S.
bomb entered an Iraqi shelter and killed 500 civilians. Here, it
appeared, the Americans were responsible for violating their own
boundary between military and civilian spheres. But the generals'
explanation for the atrocity still enabled the event to be categorized
according to the successful scheme; the shelter was a military target,
General Kelly insisted, and the Iraqis were blamed for, in effect,
violating our pristine high-tech military space with their grotesque
dead bodies.

The emphasis on this dichotomy between precision and chaos served
several functions. First of all, at the corporate level, the powers that
control the networks are motivated towards promoting their other
business interests. General Electric, the owner of NBC, also is involved
in the manufacture of weapons, and members of the boards of directors of
CBS and ABC are also members of the boards of directors of many other
corporations. One of the motivations for the war could have been the
need to garner support for continuing the high level of military
spending after the close of the Cold War. The glorification of precision
weapons by the media contributes to the network executives' own
financial interests and helps to combat the perceptions that military
spending is wasteful and the weapons are inefficient or do not work.

On a wider level, this construction of the war contributes to the scheme
of classifying, ordering, and incorporating possible conceptions of
reality into distinct, bounded units. An oppositional representation of
the war, on the other hand, would most likely stress the grotesque
aspects which contradict the pure and bounded high tech images that
poetically invoke the ideal of precision; particularly, it would present
images of dead and wounded bodies vividly transgressing their own limits
and contradicting the abstract language of the machines with the
inescapable concrete reality of flesh. The military demonstrated its
awareness of the power of these images by taking steps to keep cameramen
away from the casualties; during a previous (practice) war, the Panama
invasion of 1989, American soldiers reportedly shot and killed a Spanish
photographer who would not stop taking pictures of the corpses produced
by U.S. bombing.

But besides limiting the possibilities for the production of this
subversive grotesque version, the media reduced its strength by
incorporating it at the low end of an established hierarchy. Disorder
and its associated critique of the war were associated with Iraq and the
practices of the enemy. The chaotic blurring of boundaries and
hierarchies was given a firmly bounded location in a scheme of fixed
hierarchy and the American forces remained clean and unbloodied while
the Iraqis became associated with the oil splattered birds and burned
children that dampen the enthusiasm of all but the most virulent
advocates of war.

The strategically constructed opposition between the precise and clearly
bounded American weaponry and the chaotic and grotesque Iraqis was also
made to correspond to another frequently deployed device; the opposition
between nature and culture. There are no inherent values that can be
attached to this trope; at any given moment nature can be made to
signify "good" and culture "bad" and vice versa. In an article published
in 1988, Robert Karl Manoff analyzed an ABC story that associated SDI
with nature in its positive aspect in the form of a "bucolic campus" and
"the promise of a new Eden, free of technological sin, in which SDI will
supersede the Satanic engines of modern war." The alignment of high-tech
military innovations with nature against a destructive slightly more
primitive "technology" corresponds, as Manoff demonstrates, to the
master narrative of the Reagan presidency, which revolved around a
moral, nontechnical discourse.

To some extent, this alignment was continued in the Persian Gulf
narrative, as the realm of the "super high-tech" emerges as the
protector of nature against the destructive, uncontrolled pollution
spilling out of the smoky Iraqi machinery. But the media is not limited
in any way in its use of this opposition. In some stories the United
States was portrayed as the defenders of purity and nature pitted
against a sinful technology, but in other stories the Americans
represented an advanced culture at war with the chaotic forces of
nature. This second construction was mobilized, for example, in the
stories that described Saddam Hussein as "crafty" or decried the
"animalistic atrocities" allegedly committed by Iraqi soldiers in
Kuwait. George Bush and his spokespeople were not interested primarily
in establishing a coherent ideological position, but in continually
deploying images that resonate with powerful cultural categories-a task
that necessarily involves the construction of contradictory statements.

remaking Vietnam

News stories always refer to other stories, including fiction and
non-fiction. The Persian Gulf story constantly evoked other narratives
and codes with origins at various distances from the current event; the
portrayal of the celebrations of the happy little Kuwaiti people after
the destruction of the evil witch by American air power seems to refer
as much to The Wizard of Oz as anything else. But there is one story in
particular that remained in the background of every statement or image
to come out of the Gulf War. That story, of course, was Vietnam.

America's last great war had become a great national story, like the
Wild West or the Alamo. Great national stories serve as shorthand tools
to encapuslate dominant ideologies, but they are also too big to be the
property of a single group or ideology, and they are always open to
competing, subversive versions. Vietnam had emerged in the 70's and 80's
as the one of the culture's most conflicted terrains for contesting
interpretations. The war was universally represented through the images
of chaos and tragedy and the idea that the war signified a great
national mistake, but these images and ideas themselves still allowed
for debate; as Rambo took on Apocalypse Now and Reagan incorporated
Rambo. The Persian Gulf War provided an opportunity for the dominant
forces to launch an all out effort to fix the meaning of Vietnam in an
authoritative manner.

This was accomplished (though not completely) through the same
categorizations that I discussed earlier; the war was transferred from
the political frame to the realm of the military and the nationalist.
"No More Vietnams" had been mobilized in the 70's and 80's by the
liberal opposition as a tool against military intervention, particularly
in El Salvador and Nicaragua. In this context, the slogan referred to an
essentially mistaken foreign policy and indexed an anti-military
political position. The same slogan was appropriated, in context of the
War in the Gulf, by the government and military-Bush, Quayle,
Schwarzkopf, and the rest of the posse brought out the sign of Vietnam
in many speeches and briefings-but its meaning was drastically altered
to resonate with the aims of the war against Iraq.

The problems of Vietnam, according to the authoritative version, were
threefold. The first set of problems were military; the strategy of the
Vietnam War was flawed because "the troops were forced to fight with one
hand tied behind their back." This new war, the corollary of this
suggestion asserts, avoided that error by committing a massive immediate
attack. The second set of problems involved the lack of support given to
the war effort by the American public. The new war could contrast with
the failure of Vietnam if the nation united under the great banner of
patriotism. The third aspect of this dominant memory blamed the lack of
public support, in part, on the media, which was remembered as having
overly reported the negative and grotesque aspects of the war and thus
turned public support against it. This construction of the past
justified the tight controls placed on the press; it also placed the
media in the position of needing to correct its past "errors" by
constructing its practice in the Persian Gulf in contrast to this
perception of Vietnam-and do everything possible to bolster popular
support for the war and avoid grotesque images.

The one critique of Vietnam that is missing from this construction, of
course, is political. The leaders of that era were absolved from all
blame except in the technical field of military strategy. Dissenters
were blamed for the war's failure; the new authoritative meaning
assigned to Vietnam by the government and most elements of the media
demands that the new war be approached through demonstrations of unity
and loyalty, that so-called political issues be downplayed and that all
decisions be left to the appropriate "experts" in military uniforms. The
image of Vietnam aided the establishment of a hegemonic interpretation
of the new war, and the Gulf conflict, in turn, provided the opportunity
to seize upon the "great national story" of Vietnam. This
interpretation, powerful though it may be, still faces opposition, and
new challenges will arise in the future. But for now, the ideological
mobilization of the Gulf War on TV has restored the moral integrity of
Vietnam-a recent Mel Gibson version of Vietnam called "We were Soldiers"
reproduces the war as a forum for WWII movie style individual heroism
and male bonding, without a hint of moral ambiguity-and even given a new
positive meaning for the signs of "war" and of an expansionist,
militaristic state; images that had lost some of their luster in the
60s.

conclusions

As the date for the next war rapidly approaches, apparently determined
more by the details of military deployment and strategy than the
activities of the UN inspectors or the proof of Bush's odd claims about
Iraq's menace to the United States, those of us who hold critical
viewpoints about American military power may seek lessons from the way
our position was effectively neutralized the last time around. How can
our message escape the categories and histories erected to make military
aggression seem like common sense?

First of all, we must not give any legitimacy to the qualifications of
military "experts" or calls to nationalist "unity." The outbreak of war
should not be seen as a signal to put aside our differences and "support
our troops." The prosecution of the war is itself a political
process-and real politics does not only include two manufactured
positions represented by comfortable leaders. Seemingly apolitical calls
to commend our troops made by sports announcers or others outside the
circumscribed spheres of debate are not innocent-they are subtle ways to
get us to endorse military action-and should be consistently rejected.

Secondly, our message should challenge the sweeping stereotypes that
represent the "enemy" as a single, malevolent individual who manifests
the out-of-control, irrational, and boundary-crossing characteristics of
negative Nature. Instead, we should focus on the humanity we share with
the victims of US military aggression, and the grotesque impact of bombs
on human flesh. The war, when it starts, is not a clean game of
high-tech football played on a video screen-wherever we can, we need to
publicize photographs that demonstrate the true, dirty nature of these
assaults. Pilots are not heroes risking their lives to protect our
freedoms. They are men who awake from comfortable beds, fly hundreds of
miles to destroy the homes, bodies, and lives of people (and whatever
cats, dogs, or cows live with them) they will never know or see, and
then return home in time for supper.

Finally, we need to challenge the wholesale rewriting of history that
accompanies each new war. Noted historian G.W. Bush (who once stated
perceptively that "the past is over") claims that opponents of the war
"have not learned the lessons of history." Instead of returning to trite
homilies about the "greatest generation" of World War II or remaking
Vietnam as a noble cause undermined by weak public support, we need to
describe the war in terms of other, post-WWII US-led regime changes, and
to educate Americans about what happened next. What happened after the
1954 regime change in Guatemala that deposed a left-leaning democratic
government described by the Eisenhower administration as a communist
threat to America? What about the 1953 regime change in Iran? The
attempted overthrow of the Cuban government in 1961? The infamous coup
of September 11, 1973 that murdered Chilean president Salvadore Allende
and imposed General Pinochet? And what about the militarization of the
"War on Drugs" or the invasion of Panama?

Have these mostly unilateral regime changes, justified by claims later
shown to be false, led to greater democracy and opportunity for the
people in the affected nations? Have they made the United States safer
and created regional stability? The shocking history of American
military aggression and its aftermath is almost completely absent from
reporting on Iraq. It shouldn't be.

Ben Feinberg is a Professor of Anthropology at Warren Wilson College in
Asheville NC. He can be reached at: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

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