-------- Original Message --------
Subject:        Edwards / MEDIA ALERT: PATRIOTISM AS PROPAGANDA - PART 1 / Jan 
14
Date:   Sun, 14 Jan 2007 19:23:38 -0800 (PST)
From:   ZNet Commentaries <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
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Today's commentary:
http://www.zmag.org/sustainers/content/2007-01/12edwards.cfm

==================================

ZNet Commentary
MEDIA ALERT: PATRIOTISM AS PROPAGANDA - PART 1 January 14, 2007
By Dave Edwards 

On December 24, the Independent on Sunday's front page featured a portrait of a 
British soldier gazing pensively into the distance. A banner headline filled 
the page: "An 'IoS' Christmas special with the troops - Letters home from the 
front, pages 8-15." (You can see the front page here: 
http://www.medialens.org/alerts/06/screenshots/independent_061224_front_cover.jpg)

The editors explained on page 2:

"Today's paper is a celebratory one, and not just because it's Christmas Eve. 
This edition contains a special section dedicated to our forces, especially 
those in Afghanistan and Iraq... As a present from this paper and its readers, 
we have sent to their families, courtesy of Harvey Nicholls, a hamper, or made 
a donation to charity of their choice."

Page 9 had another banner headline: "Christmas on the front line: 'Daddy would 
love to come home - but I've got a job to do.'" On the BBC website, Martin Bell 
made a similar point in his report on British troops in Basra:

"The troops just get on with it. They always have. They always will." (Bell, 
'An army Christmas in Iraq,' BBC online, December 23, 2006; 
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/programmes/from_our_own_correspondent/6200511.stm) 

The whole of the Independent on Sunday's page 10 was taken up by a series of 
pictures: a British soldier reading on his bed, a soldier chatting to a group 
of Iraqi children, a group of three soldiers with a female soldier smiling, and 
a British soldier playing football with smiling Iraqi adults and children. (See 
here: 
http://www.medialens.org/alerts/06/screenshots/independent_061224_page_10.jpg)

The pages surrounding these images were filled with moving letters home from 
British troops, some of whom have been killed in action.

In one sense, this is a valid, even admirable, focus. The British troops are 
human beings and it is right that we should feel compassion for their suffering 
and loss. But this is not the whole story. Although our media are supposed to 
be neutral reporters of world events, their compassion is overwhelmingly 
reserved for "our" troops, whereas the troops and civilians of "the enemy" are 
treated with indifference and even contempt. 

As we will see in Part 2, the media emphasis on the humanity and benevolence of 
British troops dove-tails well with the presentation of US-UK leaders as noble 
and compassionate. Both generate a kind of psychological force-field against 
recognising the ugly realities of our actions. 

On January 4, the press reported that nine British soldiers accused of beating 
"Iraqis" - in fact, children or youths - in violence caught on video would not 
face charges. The BBC commented:

"The footage showed Iraqis allegedly being kicked, punched and head-butted." 
('No charges over Iraq video riots,' January 4, 2007; 
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/6230711.stm)

Our dictionary definition of "allege" is: "declare to be the case, especially 
without proof". Readers can decide for themselves if there is proof that 
British troops kicked, punched and head-butted the Iraqis here:

http://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=british troops beating

An earlier BBC website article reported:

"The Labour Deputy Prime Minister, John Prescott, has punched a protester who 
threw an egg at him during a visit to Rhyl in north Wales."  
(http://news.bbc.co.uk/onthisday/hi/dates/stories/may/16/newsid_4098000/4098929.stm)

But why was Prescott's punch not an "alleged" punch? What is the difference in 
terms of proof?

The Times online similarly reported:

"An investigation into the alleged beatings was made after clips from the 
video, apparently taken by a soldier serving at the British base at al-Amarah 
in southern Iraq, were published by the News of the World last February." 
(Michael Evans, 'Soldiers avoid courts martial,' January 5, 2007; 
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,200-2532369.html)

A further problem with the media's patriotic focus is that it points away from 
serious thought and honest discussion. After all, is it enough to say of 
British armed forces, as Martin Bell did: "The troops just get on with it. They 
always have. They always will."?

Is it right to implicitly celebrate this stoic, military commitment to doing 
what one is told? In truth, we are discussing participation in one of the most 
shockingly cynical and violent criminal acts of modern times. More than 655,000 
Iraqis have paid with their lives for this criminality. The New York Times 
reminds us of the reality of the occupation:

"The foot was balanced on a shopping bag after being scooped up off the dirty 
street by a man in a track suit. There was no person to go with the limb. 
Nearby a charred body was still smoldering, smoke coming off the black corpse 
45 minutes after the attack.

"For 50 yards, the dead were scattered about, some in pieces, some whole but 
badly burned... Thirteen people were killed and 22 wounded, just a small 
fraction of the civilians killed across the country this week." (Marc Santora 
and John Spanner, 'Deadly blasts in Baghdad leave gruesome traces,' New York 
Times, January 5, 2007)

Alongside the Independent on Sunday's patriotic focus on December 24, an honest 
newspaper would surely have made space for the argument that honour, courage 
and moral responsibility mean refusing to participate in our government's 
illegal actions. An honest newspaper would also have celebrated the men and 
women who have refused to fight, and allow readers to decide for themselves who 
has taken the most reasonable course of action.

In fact, according to the Pentagon, some 6,000 members of the US armed forces 
have refused to remain at their posts since the war began (during the Vietnam 
war, some 170,000 draftees refused to fight by registering as conscientious 
objectors).   One of them is US Naval Petty Officer Pablo Paredes, who refused 
to join his ship to Iraq in December 2004. In an interview, Paredes explained 
his position:

"I don't see what we're doing there or why we're there. I don't believe for one 
minute that it's about spreading democracy. I don't believe for one minute that 
it was about weapons of mass destruction. Oil sounds like the number one, you 
know." (Andrea Peters, 'US sailor refuses deployment to Iraq in protest against 
war,' World Socialist Web Site, December 10, 2004; 
http://www.wsws.org/articles/2004/dec2004/navy-d10.shtml)

Paredes has made an excellent point that applies equally to journalists and 
presidents:

"Unfortunately, our president continues to hide behind the bravery of the 
troops, and it disgusts me because it's absolutely possible to say, you know, 
'These guys are great. They're doing their job.' But what you're sending them 
to do doesn't make sense. And it's a fundamental thing that has to happen in 
this country. Everyone's almost afraid to say something against the war because 
it's unpatriotic, and I don't understand why you have to trade humanity for 
patriotism. I don't know when that happened."

In April 2006, a British court martial sentenced Royal Air Force doctor Flight 
Lieutenant Malcolm Kendall-Smith to eight months imprisonment after he refused 
to cooperate in training and deployment for a third tour of Iraq. Dr. 
Kendall-Smith has said:

"I believe the occupation of Iraq is illegal... and for me to comply... would 
put me in conflict with both domestic and international law.... I would, in 
fact, refuse the orders as a duty under international law, the Nuremberg 
principles and the law of armed conflict." (Harvey Thompson, 'British military 
doctor court martialed for refusing to serve in Iraq,' World Socialist Web 
Site, April 22, 2006; http://www.wsws.org/articles/2006/apr2006/raf-a22.shtml)

In sentencing Kendall-Smith, Judge advocate Jack Bayliss was unimpressed:

"Obedience of orders is at the heart of any disciplined force. Refusal to obey 
orders means that the force is not a disciplined force but a rabble." (Ibid)

We are not arguing that the media always fail to report the views and actions 
of conscientious objectors - occasional, superficial coverage is granted. The 
point is that the media essentially never endorse the actions of these 
objectors. They would never send hampers from Harvey Nicholls to their 
families, or devote pages of photographs and newsprint celebrating their 
courage, suffering and service to their country as they regularly do for troops 
who fight.

Instead, our newspapers invariably report as though accepting employment as a 
professional soldier absolves a human being of moral responsibility. 

And this is how even our best media keep the public mind marinaded in ideas 
that lead away from critical thought, from a sense of personal responsibility 
and, most importantly, from a sense of compassion for our victims abroad.

 Part 2 will follow shortly...

 Please do NOT reply to the email address from which this media alert 
originated. Instead please email us at: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

This media alert will be archived shortly here:

http://www.medialens.org/alerts/07/070108_patriotism_as_propaganda.php

The Media Lens book 'Guardians of Power: The Myth Of The Liberal Media' by 
David Edwards and David Cromwell (Pluto Books, London) was published in 2006. 
For further details, including reviews, interviews and extracts, please click 
here:

http://www.medialens.org/bookshop/guardians_of_power.php

Visit the Media Lens website: http://www.medialens.org



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