I just discovered this gem by Nir Rosen.  It was posted on 19 May, 2011, but 
I'm very sure it's still valid, and will be for the foreseeable future.
A Critique of Reporting on the Middle East
May 19 2011 by Nir Rosen 

 [Image from CNN] 
I’ve spent most of the last eight 
years working in Iraq and also in Somalia, Afghanistan, Yemen, and other 
countries in the Muslim world. So all my work has taken place in the 
shadow of the war on terror and has in fact been thanks to this war, 
even if I’ve labored to disprove the underlying premises of this war. In a way 
my work has still served to support the narrative. I once asked 
my editor at the New York Times Magazine if I could write about a subject 
outside the Muslim world. He said even if I was fluent in 
Spanish and an expert on Latin America I wouldn’t be published if it 
wasn’t about jihad.
Too often consumers of mainstream 
media are victims of a fraud. You think you can trust the articles you 
read, why wouldn’t you, you think you can sift through the ideological 
bias and just get the facts. But you don’t know the ingredients that go 
into the product you buy. It is important to understand how knowledge 
about current events in the Middle East is produced before relying on 
it. Even when there are no apparent ideological biases such as those one often 
sees when it comes to reporting about Israel, there are 
fundamental problems at the epistemological and methodological level. 
These create distortions and falsehoods and justify the narrative of 
those with power.
According to the French intellectual 
and scholar Francois Burgat, there are two main types of intellectuals 
tasked with explaining the “other” to Westerners. He and Bourdieu 
describe the “negative intellectual” who aligns his beliefs and 
priorities with those of the state and centers his perspective on 
serving the interest of power and gaining proximity to it. And secondly, there 
is what Burgat terms as “the façade intellectual,” whose role in 
society is to confirm to Western audiences their already-held notions, 
beliefs, preconceptions, and racisms regarding the “other.” Journalists 
writing for the mainstream media, as well as their local interlocutors, 
often fall into both categories.
A vast literature exists on the 
impossibility of journalism in its classic, liberal sense with all the 
familiar tropes on objectivity, neutrality, and “transmitting reality.” 
However, and perhaps out of a lack of an alternative source of 
legitimation, major mainstream media outlets in the West continue to 
grasp to these notions with ever more insistence. The Middle East is an 
exceptionally suitable place for the Western media to learn about itself and 
its future because it is the scene where all pretensions of 
objectivity, neutrality towards power, and critical engagement faltered 
spectacularly.
Journalists are the archetype of 
ideological tools who create culture and reproduce knowledge. Like all 
tools, journalist don't create or produce. They are not the masters of 
discourse or ideological formations but products of them and servants to them. 
Their function is to represent a class and perpetuate the 
dominant ideology instead of building a counter hegemonic and 
revolutionary ideology, or narrative, in this case. They are the organic 
intellectuals of the ruling class. Instead of being the voice of the 
people or the working class, journalists are too often the functional 
tools for a bourgeois ruling class. They produce and disseminate culture and 
meaning for the system and reproduce its values, allowing it to 
hegemonize the field of culture, and since journalism today has a 
specific political economy, they are all products of the hegemonic 
discourse and the moneyed class. The working class has no 
networks within regimes of power. This applies too to Hollywood and 
television entertainment and series: it is all the same intellectuals 
producing them. Even journalists with pretensions of being serious 
usually only serve elites and ignore social movements. Journalism tends 
to be state centric, focusing on elections, institutions, formal 
politics and overlooking politics of contention, informal politics, and 
social movements.
Those with reputations as brave war 
reporters who hop around the world, parachuting Geraldo-style (Anderson 
Cooper is the new liberal Geraldo) into conflicts from Yemen to 
Afghanistan, typically only confirm Americans' views of the 
world. Journalism simplifies, which means it de-historicizes. Journalism in the 
Middle East is too often a violent act of representation. 
Western journalists take reality and amputate it, contort it, fit it 
into a predetermined discourse or taxonomy.
The American media always want to fit events in the region into a narrative of 
American Empire. The recent 
assassination of Osama Bin Laden was greeted with a collective shrug of 
the shoulders in the Middle East, where he had always been irrelevant, 
but for Americans and hence for the American media it was a historic and 
defining moment. Too often contact with the West has defined events in 
the Middle East and is assumed to drive its history, but the so called 
Arab Spring with its revolutions and upheavals evokes anxiety among 
white Americans. They are unsettled by the autogenetic liberation of 
brown people. While the Arab Spring may represent a revolutionary 
transformation of the Arab world, a massive blow to Islamist politics 
and the renaissance of secular and leftist Arab nationalist politics. 
But the American media has been obsessed with Islamists, looking for 
them behind every demonstration, and the uprisings have been often 
treated as if they were something threatening and as if they had led to 
chaos. And all too often it just comes down to “what does this mean for 
Israel’s security?” The aspirations of hundreds of millions of freedom 
seeking Arabs are subordinated to the security concerns of five million 
Jews who colonized Palestine. 
There is a strong element of 
chauvinism and racism behind the reporting. Like American soldiers, 
American journalists like to use the occasional local word to show they 
have unlocked the mysteries of the culture. The chauvinism issue was 
discussed a lot during Desert Storm, where journalists started to use 
"we." Liberals won’t say "we" but they are still circumscribed by 
Imperial, white supremist paradigms. “Wasta” is one such word. One American 
bureau chief in Iraq told me that Muqtada Sadr had a lot of wasta now so he 
could prevent a long American presence. Inshallah is another such word. And in 
Afghanistan, it's pushtunwali, the secret to understanding Afghans. Islam is 
also treated like a code 
that can be unlocked and then locals can be understood as if they are 
programmed only through Islam.
Arab culture and Islam are spoken of 
the way race was once spoken of in India and Africa, and it is difficult to 
portray Arabs and Muslims as the good guys unless they are “like 
us”: Google executives, elites who speak English, dress trendy, and use 
Facebook. So they are made to represent the revolutions while the poor, 
the workers, the subalterns, the majority who don’t even have internet 
access let alone Twitter accounts, are ignored. And in order to make the 
revolutions in Tunisia and especially Egypt seem non threatening, the 
nonviolent tactics are emphasized while the many acts of violent 
resistance to regime oppression are completely ignored. This is not just the 
journalists’ fault. It is driven by American discourse, which 
drives the editors back in New York and Washington.
To understand the environment 
journalists inhabit, the interlocutors, translators, and fixers they 
rely on to filter and mediate for them and the nature in which they 
collect information, accounts, and interviews. One of the popular myths 
about reporting in Iraq is that journalists stayed in the Green Zone, 
the walled off fortress neighborhood that housed the American occupiers 
and now houses the Iraqi government along with some foreign embassies. 
This is not true. Throughout the occupation almost no journalists 
actually inhabited the Green Zone. They stayed in green zones of their 
own creation, whether secure compounds or intellectual green zones, 
creating their own walls. The first green zone for journalists was the 
fortress around the Sheraton and Palestine hotels in Baghdad, which was 
initially guarded by American soldiers and later by Iraqi security 
guards. The New York Times soon constructed its own immense 
fortress, with guard dogs, guard towers, security guards, immense walls, 
vehicle searches, so too BBC, Associated Press, and others. Then there 
were was the Hamra hotel compound where many bureaus moved until it was 
damaged in an explosion in 2010. CNN, Fox, al Jazeera English had their 
own green zone, though freelancers like myself could rent rooms there. 
And there is one last green zone, which is a large neighborhood 
protected by Kurdish peshmerga where middle class Iraqis and some news 
bureaus live.
In principle, there is nothing wrong 
with staying in a secure compound. Foreigners are often targeted in 
conflict zones and authoritarian countries and you want all those 
privileges that local victims of violence (i.e. the population) are not 
afforded: You want to go to sleep at night without wondering whether men will 
kick down your door and drag you away, or whether you should go to sleep with 
your clothes on so that if a car bomb hits you won’t be 
caught sleeping naked under a pile of rubble. You want to 
eat "decent" food and have running water, constant electricity, internet 
access, conversations with colleagues. A journalist doesn’t have to 
live like an impoverished local. But the less local life you experience 
the less you can do your job, and this is what readers need to 
understand. The average person anywhere in the world goes to work and 
comes back home. He knows little about people outside his social class, 
ethnic group, neighborhood, or city. As a journalist you are making 
judgments on an entire country and interpreting it for others, but you 
don’t know the country because you don’t really live in it. You spend 
twenty hours a day in seclusion from the country. You have no basis for 
judgment because to you Iraq is out there, the red zone, and the pace of filing 
can make this even harder.
Most mainstream journalists have 
since 2004 treated reporting in Iraq like a military operation, going 
out on limited missions with a lot of planning, an armored car, a chase 
car for backup, in and out, do the interview and come back home to your 
green zone. Or they would more often just make the trip to the actual 
green zone where officials are easy to meet and interview, where you can enjoy 
a drink, socialize with diplomats, and feel macho because you 
live in the red zone. But in their artificial green zone they are still 
sheltered from life, from Iraqis and from violence.
They did not just hang out, sit in 
restaurants, in mosques and husseiniyas, in people’s homes, walk through slums, 
shop in local markets, walk around at night, sit in juice shops, sleep in 
normal people’s homes, visit villages, farms, and experience 
Iraq like an Iraqi, or as close as possible. This means they have no 
idea what life is like at night, what life is like in rural areas, what 
social trends are important, what songs are popular, what jokes are 
being told, what arguments take place on the street, how comfortable 
people feel, what sorts of Iraqis go to bars at night. Hanging out is 
key. You just observe, letting events and people determine your 
reporting. They also did not investigate, pursue spontaneous leads, 
develop a network of trusted contacts and sources. Dwindling resources 
and interest meant bureaus had to shut down or reduce staff and only 
occasionally parachute a journalist in to interview a few officials and 
go back home.
And since they don’t know Arabic they literally cannot read the writing on the 
wall, the graffiti on the 
wall, whether it is for the mujahedin, for Muqtada Sadr, or for the 
football teams of Madrid or Barcelona. It means that if they talk to one man 
the translator only tells them what he said and not what everybody 
around him was saying; they don’t hear the Sadrist songs supporting the 
Shiites of Bahrain, or hear the taxi driver complaining about how things were 
better under Saddam, or discussing the attacks he saw in the 
morning, or the soldiers joking at a checkpoint, or the shopkeeper 
cursing the soldiers. In fact they don’t even take taxis or buses, so 
they miss a key opportunity to interact naturally with people. It means 
they can’t just relax in people’s homes and hear families discuss their 
concerns. They are never able to develop what Germans call fingerspitzengefuhl, 
that finger tip feeling, an intuitive sense of what is happening, what 
the trends and sentiments are, which one can only get by running one’s 
fingers through the social fabric.
A student of the Arab world once 
commented that any self-appointed terrorism expert must first pass the 
Um Kulthum test, meaning has he heard of Um Kulthum, the iconic Egyptian diva 
of Arab nationalism whose music and lyrics still resonate 
throughout the Middle East. If they hadn’t heard of her then they 
obviously were not familiar with Arab culture. In Iraq an equivalent 
might be the Hawasim test. Saddam called the 1991 war on Iraq “Um al 
Maarik,” or the mother of all battles. And he called the 2003 war on 
Iraq “Um al Hawasim,” or the mother of all decisive moments. Soon the 
looting that followed the invasion was called Hawasim by Iraqis, and the word 
became a common phrase, applied to cheap markets, to stolen goods, to cheap 
products. If you drive your car recklessly like you don’t care about it another 
driver might shout at you, “what, is it hawasim?” If 
you don’t make an effort to familiarize yourself with these cultural 
phenomena then just go back home.
Relying on a translator means you can only talk to one person at a time and you 
miss all the background 
noise. It means you have to depend on somebody from a certain social 
class, or sect, or political position, to filter and mediate the country for 
you. Maybe they are Sunni and have limited contacts outside their 
community. Maybe they are a Christian from east Beirut and know little 
about the Shiites of south Lebanon or the Sunnis of the north. Maybe 
they’re urban and disdainful of those who are rural. In Iraq, maybe they are a 
middle class Shiite from Baghdad or a former doctor or engineer 
who look down upon the poor urban class who make up the Sadrists, so 
your translator will dismiss them as uneducated or poor, as if that 
makes them unimportant. And so in May 2003 when I was the first American 
journalist to interview Muqtada Sadr my bureau chief at Time magazine was angry 
at me for wasting my time and sending it on to the 
editors in New York without asking him, because Muqtada was unimportant, 
lacking credentials. But in Iraq social movements, street movements, 
militias, those with power on the ground, have been much more important 
than those in the establishment or politicians in the green zone, and it is 
events in the red zone which have shaped things.
You don’t understand a country by 
going on preplanned missions; you learn about it when unplanned things 
happen, when you visit a friend’s neighborhood for fun and other 
neighbors come over. You learn about it by driving around in a normal 
car, not an armored one with tinted windows. That’s when Iraqi soldiers 
and police ask you to hitch a ride and take them towards their home. A 
few months ago soldiers at a checkpoint outside Ramadi asked me to give 
one of their colleagues a ride to Baghdad. He was from Basra. In 
addition to the conversation we struck up, what was most revealing was 
that a soldier outside Ramadi felt safe enough to ask a stranger for a 
ride, whereas before he would not have even carried his ID on him, and 
that a stranger agreed to take a member of the security forces. I’ve 
since given rides to other Iraqi soldiers and policemen.
Over the last year there have been a 
slew of articles about whether the Iraqi security forces are ready to 
handle security for themselves, but these have all been based on the 
statements of American or Iraqi officials. Journalists have not talked 
to Iraqi lieutenants, or colonels, or sergeants; they have not 
cultivated these sources or just befriended them, met them for drinks 
when they were on leave, sat with them in their homes with their 
families. So the views of the Iraqi security forces, the Iraqi soldiers 
and policemen who man checkpoints and go on raids are not written about. 
Meeting with them also lets you understand the degree to which 
sectarianism has been reduced in the security forces while corruption 
and abuses such as torture and extra judicial killings remain a problem. And 
just traveling around the country since 2009 would reveal that yes, Iraqi 
security forces can maintain the current level of security (or 
insecurity) because they have been doing it since then, manning 
checkpoints in the most remote villages, cultivating their own 
intelligence sources, and basically occupying Iraq. The degree to which 
Iraq remains heavily militarized has not been sufficiently conveyed, but since 
2009 Iraqi security forces have been occupying Iraq, and the 
American presence has been largely irrelevant from a daily security 
point of view.
And then there are the little Abu 
Ghraibs. The big scandals like Abu Ghraib, or the “Kill Team” in 
Afghanistan, eventually make their way into the media where they can be 
dismissed as bad apples and exceptions and the general oppression of the 
occupations can be ignored. But an occupation is a systematic and 
constant imposition of violence on an entire country. It’s twenty-four 
hours of arresting, beating, killing, humiliating, and terrorizing and 
unless you have experienced it it’s impossible to describe except by 
trying to list them until the reader gets numb. I was only embedded 
three times over eight years, twice in Iraq for ten days each and once 
in Afghanistan for three weeks. My first embed in Iraq was in October 
2003, six months after I first arrived. I was in the Anbar province. I 
saw soldiers arresting hundreds of men, rounding up entire villages, all the 
so-called military aged men, hoping somebody would know something; I saw old 
men being harshly pushed down on the floor, their hands tied 
tightly behind them, children screaming for their daddies while they 
watched them bloody and beaten and terrified, while soldiers laughed or 
smoked or high fived or chewed tobacco and spit on the lawn, while lives were 
being destroyed. I know one of the men I saw arrested died from 
torture and countless others ended up in Abu Ghraib. I saw old men 
pushed down on the ground violently. I saw innocent men beaten, 
arrested, mocked, humiliated. These are the little Abu Ghraibs that come with 
any occupation, even if it’s the Swedish girl scouts occupying a 
country. Many journalists spent their entire careers embedded, months or even 
years, so multiply what I saw by hundreds, by thousands and tens 
of thousands of terrorized traumatized families, beatings, killings, 
children who lost their fathers and wet their beds every night, women 
who could not provide for their families, innocent people shot at 
checkpoints. 
Then there are the daily Abu Ghraibs 
you endure when you live in an occupied country, having to navigate a 
maze of immense concrete walls, of barbed wire, waiting at checkpoints, 
waiting for convoys to go by, waiting for military operations to end, 
waiting for the curfew to end, military vehicles running you off the 
road, fifty caliber machine guns pointed at you, M16s pointed at you, 
pistols pointed at you, large foreign soldiers shouting at you and 
ordering you around. Or maybe in Afghanistan the military convoy runs 
over a water canal, destroying the water supply to a village of thirty 
families who now have no way to live, or they arrest an innocent Afghan 
because he has Taliban music on his cell phone like many Afghans do, and now he 
must make his way through the afghan prison system.
But if you are white and/or identify 
with white American soldiers then you ignore these things. If you 
identify at even the deepest level with US fetishizing of militarism and the 
myth of the heroic US GI, they just don’t occur to you. And so they never occur 
to your readers. Likewise you never think of how your 
average Yemeni or Egyptian or Iraqi deals with their own security forces on a 
daily basis because you focus on the elite level of politics and 
security and your cars don’t get stopped at checkpoints because you have the 
right badges. You don’t get detained by the police because you have the right 
badge. Until you get beaten up by regime thugs like Anderson 
Cooper and then you can become a hysterical opponent of Mubarak and 
crusader for justice. Television reporting is overprotective of the 
celebrity correspondent; they barely go out, they just embed, and they 
do their live shots on the street inside their safe compounds, while 
making the story more about the celebrity correspondent rather than the 
story. Then they show the “back story” about the journalist and his work rather 
than the story.
Robert Kaplan, a terrible writer and 
great supporter of imperialism, said one smart thing by accident when he 
criticized journalists for not being able to relate to American 
soldiers because journalists represented an elite while soldiers come 
from rural areas, went to public schools, and come from the working 
class (we’re not supposed to use that word because everybody in America 
thinks they’re middle class). But equally they cannot relate easily to 
the working classes anywhere, and so they gravitate to the elites. 
Focusing on elites and officials is a problem in general, not just in 
Middle East coverage. An American official visiting the region warrants 
articles about the region, but it is not studied empirically in its own 
context. People in power lie, whether they are generals, presidents, or 
militia commanders. This is the first rule. But at best journalists act 
as if only brown people in power lie and so they rely on the official 
statements of white people, whether they are military officers or 
diplomats, as if they should be trusted. The latest example is the Bin 
Laden killing, when most mainstream journalists lazily relied on US 
government “feeds”; they were literally fed an official version that 
kept on changing, but this is business as usual.
One reason for the failure of 
journalists to leave their green zones may be a combination of laziness 
and aversion to discomfort. But in Iraq, Afghanistan, other developing 
countries and areas of conflict in some countries, you have to leave 
your comfort zone. You might prefer an English-speaking whiskey-drinking 
politician over six hours of bouncing along dirt roads in the heat and 
dust in order to sit on the floor and eat dirty food and drink dirty 
water and know you’re going to get sick tomorrow, but the road to truth 
involves a certain amount of diarrhea.
When there are no physical green 
zones journalists will create them, as in Lebanon, where they inhabit 
the green zones of Hamra, Gumayzeh, or Monot, which shelters journalists from 
the rest of the country, giving them just enough of the exotic so 
they can feel as if they live in the orient, without having to visit 
Tripoli, Akkar, the Beqa, or the majority of Beirut or Lebanon where the poor 
live. Like other countries, Lebanon has a ready local fixer and 
translator mafia who can determine the price and allow a journalist who 
parachutes in to meet a representative of all the political factions, 
drink wine with Walid Jumblat and look at his collection of unopened 
books (including one I wrote) and unread copies of the New York Review of Books 
while never having to walk through a Palestinian refugee camp or Tariq 
al Jadida in Beirut or Bab al Tabaneh in Tripoli and see how most people live 
and what most people care about.
A green zone can be the capital city 
or a neighborhood or a focus only on officials, as long as it shields 
you from the red zone of reality, or poverty, of class conflict, of 
challenges to your ideology or comfort. In Egypt even before the 
revolution Cairo got most of the media’s attention, but during the 
revolution journalists barely ventured outside Tahrir square. Egypt is 
86 million people, its not just Tahrir; it’s not just Cairo or 
Alexandria. Port Said and Suez were barely covered, even though Suez was such a 
key spark in the revolution. In Libya at first everything was 
new and everybody was an explorer and adventurer, but now the 
self-appointed opposition leadership is trying to manage the message so 
you can be lazy and just refer to their statements. Yemen was totally 
neglected, but when people came it was almost always just to Sanaa. And 
Yemen’s capital has its own green zone in the Movenpic hotel, situated 
safely outside the city. Now Yemen is portrayed as if it were two rival 
camps demonstrating in Sanaa even though the uprisings started long 
before (and were much more violent) in Taez, Aden, Saada and elsewhere. 
Yemen is viewed mostly through prism of the war on terror, through the 
American government’s prism, rather than the needs and views of the 
people. But if you spend any time with the demonstrators you realize how 
unimportant al Qaeda and its ideology are in Yemen, so that they don’t 
even deserve an article. And you would do well to remember that even 
though the Yemeni franchise of al Qaeda is portrayed as America’s 
greatest threat, AQAP’s record is little more than a failed underwear 
bomber and a failed printer cartridge bomb. 
American reporting is problematic 
throughout the third world, but because the American 
military/industrial/financial/academic/media complex is so directly 
implicated in the Middle East, the consequences of such bad reporting 
are more significant. Journalists end up serving as propagandists 
justifying the killing of innocent people instead of a voice for those 
innocent people. Our job should not be about speaking truth to power. 
Those in power know the truth, they just don’t care, and they serve 
systems greater than themselves anyway. It’s about speaking truth to the 
people, to those not in power, in order to empower them, or 
unfortunately, sometimes to leave them feeling bitter and cynical.
This piece was first delivered as a talk at Jadaliyya's co-sponsored conference 
on "Teaching the Middle East After the Tunisian and Egyptian Revolutions."

http://www.jadaliyya.com/pages/index/1627/a-critique-of-reporting-on-the-middle-east


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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