-Caveat Lector-

Muzzling the Media

"Why does the world hate us so much? One reason may be that no one
likes being lied to..."

Vietnam and Afghanistan Show why Limiting Press Access to War is
Unpatriotic

Village Voice
December 12 - 18, 2001
by Rick Perlstein

http://alexconstantine.50megs.com/home.html

Back in October, the president of MSNBC, Erik Sorenson, asked
whether he thought the media would be able to give Americans an
accurate accounting of the war in Afghanistan, replied, "We'll find
out in five or 10 years what the real truth is." Last week, the
conflict there all but over, Leonard Downie Jr., executive editor
of The Washington Post, concurred. In a live online discussion with
him, a reader observed: "My impression is that the media have had
less access to the facts about activities in Afghanistan than to
the facts in any prior American military engagement since World War
II." Downie responded: "Time will tell whether important
information has been hidden from the American people by the
administration."

Time will tell. I'd rather be told by the Washington Post.

Sometimes the government lies to us. Sometimes it is simply
incompetent and hides the fact. And sometimes the institutions of
the media cooperate. It's even worse in wartime. That's as American
as jazz. And now that the Afghan phase of the war on terrorism
appears all but over, it's fair to begin to wonder: Have any lies,
any incidences of systematic incompetence or worse, been hidden
from the American people during this war?

It's impossible to say�and hardly just because of the Afghan
engagement's supposed unorthodox and decentralized nature. The
Pentagon, of course, has been perfecting its techniques for choking
off information at least since the Vietnam War. The exact nature of
the restrictions placed on the American press remain vague, but the
patterns are clear. Reporters have had some access to U.S.
warships, none whatsoever to high-level decision
making�unsurprising for this administration, which was already the
least open in memory before September 11. And in the field of
battle? Said NPR's Steve Inskeep to the Washington, D.C., City
Paper, "Nobody has really had any decent access to U.S. forces."

Even harder to discern is the extent to which media organizations
are censoring themselves. It's happening, of course: the
conservative Weekly Standard ran a December 3 cover article
positively boasting of how many journalists (Dan Rather, Geraldo
Rivera, Thomas Friedman) have been willing to cast aside the ethic
of objectivity in service to the cause of patriotism.

To which most Americans seem to be replying: all to the good. The
Pentagon says it's for the safety of the troops, for the integrity
of our military operations. And in an era of patriotism, it seems a
self-evident conclusion. But it ain't necessarily so. Cast your
eyes over history, in fact, and it is relatively unencumbered
access to what happens on the battlefield that looks more and more
like the patriotic act.

Soldiers in Vietnam knew this. There, explains John R. MacArthur,
Harper's publisher and author of the hair-raising 1992 study Second
Front: Censorship and Propaganda in the Gulf War, "The reporters
took care of the soldiers, and the soldiers took care of the
reporters." Whatever the myths that the relationship between the
two groups was adversarial, MacArthur says, the soldiers knew their
superiors were doing a poor job. They wanted to win. So they wanted
something they knew would help their cause: independent
observers�journalists�keeping tabs on their betters. Of course
Vietnam seems now to be a special case; they "needed independent
witnesses to protect them from the crazy second lieutenant leading
them on a suicide mission," recalls MacArthur...

While the White House pressured The New York Times, The Washington
Post, The Wall Street Journal, and the Los Angeles Times to pull
their war correspondents out of Baghdad, and the papers acquiesced,
reporters from other countries stayed. And if anything, their
militaries, though it may have pained them to admit it, may have
been better off for it.

Our military might have been better off for the scrutiny as well:
If we are not able to maintain the trust of other nations long
enough to keep the viable coalition against international terrorism
that George W. Bush says we need from Afghanistan onward, it will
likely have something to do with the awful mistakes that happened
under his father's watch in Iraq in 1991�and that were hidden from
world opinion until 1992. Things like the cover-up of the savage
dumbness of all too many of our "smart" bombs and the belated press
discovery that the public relations firm Hill & Knowlton was behind
the fabricated stories about Iraqis pulling babies from incubators
to convince the world that Kuwait was a democratic innocent worth
saving from Iraqi aggression. Why does the world hate us so much?
One reason may be that no one likes being lied to.

I wish our country were psychologically secure enough to be willing
to scare the military into more accountability by making their
activities more public. It would end up making our democracy more
secure. It might help us do better in wars. Once, the Supreme Court
seemed to agree.

I've been reading the Pentagon Papers recently. You may know
something about this astonishing document: A mammoth analytic
history of America's involvement in Vietnam since the U.S. began
its commitment to defeat the Communist insurgency in the '40s, it
was commissioned by a disenchanted then Defense Secretary Robert
McNamara in 1967, desperate for insights into how to redeem a
situation he already knew to be an irredeemable disaster (he
resigned from the government soon after). The documents began to be
published in the Times and The Washington Post in 1971, until the
Nixon administration legally ordered the papers to stop on grounds
of national security; it took a 6-3 Supreme Court decision to allow
them to continue. The decision should have, but didn't, set a
precedent: that the government can exercise censorship only if it
demonstrates that revealing the information may harm the security
of troops in the field. It wasn't a decision about war reporting
per se; the Pentagon Papers were a history covering events at least
three years old by the time they were released. But between the
lines of the ruling, the justices seemed to be upholding a grander
principle: that, other things being equal, more information about
ongoing wars can better serve the national interest than habits of
utmost secrecy.

The Court may have been convinced not merely by the First Amendment
issues involved but by the contents of the Papers themselves. For a
big part of the story they tell is about the U.S. government
keeping secrets from the press�first and foremost the secrets
behind the Gulf of Tonkin Resolution, the extraordinary action that
gave President Johnson carte blanche to wage war unchecked by
Congress. When U.S. destroyers were apparently fired upon by North
Vietnamese PT boats in the Gulf in August of 1964, Johnson sold the
action as a viciously unprovoked attack. It wasn't. It actually was
a response to six months (or, if you interpret it another way, five
years) of U.S. covert warfare: "destructive undertakings"�as one
secret document revealed in the Times�aimed at "targets identified
with North Vietnam's economic and industrial well-being." Which was
quite something, for North Vietnam, a marshy agricultural nation,
had hardly any industrial well-being to speak of. Bombing North
Vietnam never helped end the war one bit. And the Papers reveal
that experts were explaining all along that bombing could have no
measurable effect on getting the insurgency in South Vietnam to
stop.

The astonishing thing about the Papers is that it reveals that
there was never a moment since World War II in which some
intelligence agency (often the much-maligned CIA) wasn't giving
warnings like this. In '48 the message was that Ho Chi Minh, the
leader of the insurgency, didn't take orders from any international
Communist conspiracy; in '54 it was that the entire region was
"devoid of decisive military objectives"; in '65 through '67 that
ground troops wouldn't work where bombing had already failed.
American presidents kept escalating the war anyway, lying and lying
and lying about it. "The president desires that with respect to the
actions in paragraphs 5 through 7," a 1965 document revealed,
"premature publicity be avoided by all possible precautions. The
actions themselves should be taken as rapidly as practicable, but
in ways that should minimize any appearance of sudden changes in
policy. . . . The President's desire is that these movements and
changes should be understood as being gradual and wholly consistent
with existing policy."

Paragraphs 5 through 7 was the presidential order to send 20,000
soldiers to fight on the ground in Vietnam: a change in existing
policy of whirlwind suddenness, the whereabouts of 20,000 soldiers
risking their lives shrouded as if they didn't exist. (Some way to
support our troops.) By the time the irremediable depth of our
commitment to winning an unwinnable war became evident when
reporters finally began figuring things out (and later when the
Pentagon Papers were made public), the president felt far too
committed to pull out.

The parallel to the current war, of course, is not entirely apt.
Vietnam was fought over abstractions�as the Pentagon itself
admitted. (A 1965 secret memo listed U.S. aims in Vietnam as 70
percent to avoid a humiliating U.S. defeat, 20 percent to make a
point to the Chinese, and 10 percent to permit the South Vietnamese
"to enjoy a better, freer way of life.") This time, we were
attacked. And of course the Pentagon Papers were not a product of
dogged journalism, but of the fact that a government report
happened, fortuitously, to surface from the actions of a
disgruntled defense analyst, Daniel Ellsberg. The war never seemed
to end; this one seems over already.

But rescue last week's papers from the recycling bin, read the
stories again, and ask yourself: Can we really be sure of what's
going on? A Web tease for an article in The New York Times from
December 6 on Kandahar notes an "an unconfirmed report that the
Taliban leader has decided to surrender the city," as if the paper
of record was getting its information from the barking chain in the
movie 101 Dalmatians. The New York Post attributed a story
that�fasten your seat belts now�Osama bin Laden is hiding in caves
to a "widespread report" that "intelligence sources" have said so.
The deficit is made up with media stenography of the two things the
Pentagon is happy to talk about: first, military successes
("Yesterday, the Pentagon showed a video clip of a bomb taking out
an entire building where prisoners were fighting," as reported by
the New York Post); second, gee-whiz gadgetry ("greatly improved in
recent years by the same digital revolution that has drastically
increased the power of video recorders and computers," as reported
by the New York Times,).

Maybe the U.S. military can get out of Afghanistan without
incurring any regional disaster, any national embarrassment, any
further sundering of the international order, without atrocity, and
without making Americans cynical�even without benefit of a robust
press watching over their work. I pray that it may be so. And maybe
the new mayor of some midsized Jersey burg with a record of public
mendacity going back to his days as dogcatcher will get through his
term in office without doing anything wrong, even without the
Bergen Record going over his ledgers.

My fellow Americans: Trust them at your own risk.

War needs journalistic watchdogs as much as or more than any city
hall, because human beings, even those responsible for safeguarding
lives, may lie mercilessly if there is no one to watch over them.
Even in what we are told are "extraordinary circumstances," in
which "everything has changed," and the country is "more united
than ever before."

"We'll find out in five years what the real truth is": Do you
really want to stake your patriotism on assurances like that?



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