Subject: on journalism Date: Sun, 04 Jun 2006 19:47:17 -0700 From: Dan
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http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article13492.htm Normalizing
the Unthinkable 

John Pilger, Charlie Glass, Robert Fisk and Seymour Hersh on the failure
of the world's press 

By Sophie McNeill 

06/03/06 "Information Clearing House" -- -- The late journalist Edward
R. Murrow might well have been rolling in his grave on April 21. That's
because Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice gave a lecture that day in
Washington, DC to journalists at the Department of State's official
Edward R. Murrow Program for Journalists. 

For the Bush administration to use the memory of a person who stood up
to government propaganda is ironic to say the least. Secretary Rice told
the assembled journalists that "without a free press to report on the
activities of government, to ask questions of officials, to be a place
where citizens can express themselves, democracy simply couldn't work." 

One week earlier in New York City, Columbia University hosted a panel on
the state of the world's media that would have been more in Murrow's
style than the State Department-run symposium. Reporter and filmmaker
John Pilger, British Middle East correspondent for the Independent
Robert Fisk, freelance reporter Charlie Glass, and investigative
journalist for the New Yorker Seymour Hersh appeared together at this
April 14 event. 

Before the afternoon panel began, I met up with John Pilger at his
hotel. He'd just flown in from London and was only in New York for the
panel before flying to Caracas, Venezuela the next day. A journalist for
over 30 years, Pilger has reported from Vietnam, Cambodia, East Timor,
Palestine, and Iraq-to name a few of the countries to which his
investigative reporting and filmmaking had taken him. 

Pilger told me that he'd never been as concerned about the state of the
media as he was today. "I think there's a lot of reasons to be very
concerned about the information or the lack of information that we get.
There's never been such an interest, more than an interest, almost an
obsession, in controlling what journalists have to say." 

Despite the fact that the war in Iraq is reported daily in most U.S.
newspapers and networks around the world, Pilger didn't think the
world's press accurately conveyed the reality of life for Iraqi
civilians. "We get the illusion that we are seeing what might be
happening in Iraq. But what we're getting is a massive censorship by
omission; so much is being left out," he said. "We have a situation in
Iraq where well over 100,000 civilians have been killed and we have
virtually no pictures. The control of that by the Pentagon has been
quite brilliant. And as a result we have no idea of the extent of
civilians suffering in that country." 

I asked Pilger what the untold story of Iraq was that's just not getting
through. "Well, the untold story of Iraq should be obvious," Pilger
said. "But it never is. The untold story of Vietnam was that it was an
invasion and that huge numbers of civilians were killed. And in effect
it was a war against civilians and that was never told and that's
exactly true of Iraq." 

With the majority of the world's press holed up behind 4.5 miles of
concrete barrier in the green zone, it seems impossible for the standard
of reporting to improve anytime in the near future. I asked Pilger if he
blamed journalists for not wanting to put their lives at risk? "No, I
can't," he said. "But I don't see the point of being in the green zone.
I don't see the point of wearing a flak jacket and standing in a hotel
in a fortress guarded by an invader. 

"But there have been journalists-and others-who have actually gone with
the insurgents; who have reported about them. One of them, for instance,
is a young woman named Jo Wilding, a British human rights worker. She
was in Fallujah all through that first attack in 2004. Jo Wilding's
dispatches were some of the most extraordinary I've read, but they were
never published anywhere." 

Pilger said the mainstream press needs to get over its hang up of "our
man in Baghdad" and prioritize whatever information can be obtained by
whoever is brave enough or has the best contacts. "There are sources of
information for what is happening inside Iraq. Most of them are on the
web. I think those who give a damn in the mainstream really have to look
at those sources and surrender their prejudice about them and say we
need that reporter's work because he or she has told us something we
can't possibly get ourselves. And I think that's the only way we will
really serve the public." 

We had talked too long and had to quickly jump in a cab to make it to
the panel on time. The hall was packed with university students,
professors, and the public. 

Charlie Glass 

The event quickly got underway with Charlie Glass as the first speaker.
A former ABC America correspondent in the Middle East, Glass drew laughs
from the crowd when comparing his experience to the other panelists.
"When I began journalism I approached it in the way a lot of young naïve
people do, in that it was a vocation, a higher calling to tell the
truth. My three colleagues up here have managed to do that throughout
their careers. I tried very hard to do that throughout my career.but I
worked for an American network. It's not easy," joked Glass. 

Glass spoke about the censorship he had encountered as an American TV
reporter covering the Middle East, referring to a story he filed during
the Israeli invasion of Lebanon in 1982. There had been rumors of
Israeli Shin Bath death squads murdering Lebanese civilians in the South
and Glass and his crew had managed to film the evidence behind these
killings. "We nailed this story. We folded one of the death squads. We
got to the palace where they had assassinated a man half an hour after
he had been killed. We filmed it. We filmed the eyewitness. We filmed UN
soldiers, who had seen the same things, discussing it," recalled Glass. 

"ABC news didn't broadcast it. But they won't tell you they're not going
to broadcast it because they're afraid of losing advertising. They won't
tell you they won't broadcast it because they're afraid of the public
reaction. They tell you they just didn't have room that night or the
next night or the next night. And that's just the way it is. That is why
very few people in this country have any idea what's going on in the
Middle East." 

Glass believes this kind of censorship has led to a chasm of
misunderstanding within the U.S. public. "You don't understand what's
been going on in Iraq because you've been lied to again. Just like you
were in Vietnam. Just like you were in Lebanon and just like you were in
the West Bank and Gaza," he said. 

"Nobody has a clue why things went wrong in Iraq. Well, I'll tell you
why. They were always going to go wrong in Iraq. It wasn't because
Bremer screwed up. It wasn't because the U.S. pilfered the Iraqi
treasury, which is true. It wasn't because some soldiers misbehaved and
shot some people in cars. It was because it could never go right in
Iraq," Glass insisted. "The U.S. was not trusted by any Iraqi because
the U.S. history in Iraq was so reprehensible-from the betrayal of the
Kurds in 1975 when Henry Kissinger sold them out and they were massacred
in the tens of thousands by Saddam, from the time they aided Saddam
during the Iran/Iraq war, from the time they betrayed the Kurdish and
Shia rebellions in 1991, from the sanctions regime that followed. 

"Who would trust a power to liberate them who had already behaved like
that? It isn't a question of what happened after; it's a question of
what happened before. We had an obligation to tell what happened before
and we didn't," Glass said, before pausing to take a moment. "I've lost
my vocation. I actually don't really like this profession anymore,"
Glass said regrettably. 

Robert Fisk 

Next to speak was Middle East correspondent Robert Fisk, arguably the
world's most experienced Western reporter in the region. Fisk pulled out
a copy of the New York Times and spread it out on the lectern. "This is
from this morning's paper: Al-Qaeda's man in Iraq gets encouragement
from HQ," Fisk read aloud. "An interior minister official said,
officials said, the American military said, the Iraqi government said,
some American officials here observed, and some military officials have
said, two American intelligence officials said, one Pakistani official
said, and I've only got to column two," Fisk exclaimed. "I've always
believed that your major newspaper should be called 'American Officials
Say.' Then you can just scrap all the reporting and have the Pentagon
talking directly." 

Fisk expressed outrage at the semantics of language that occurs within
much of the reporting in the Middle East. "In the American press the
occupied Palestinian territories become the disputed territories, a
colony becomes a settlement or a neighborhood or an outpost. Here
semantically, we are constantly degrading the reasons for Palestinian
anger. Over and over again the wall becomes a fence. Like the Berlin
fence- had it been built by the Israelis, that's what it would have been
called. Then for anyone who doesn't know the real semantics of this
conflict, the Palestinians are generically violent. I mean who would
ever protest over a garden fence or a neighborhood? The purpose of this
kind of journalism is to diminish the real reasons behind the Middle
East conflict." 

Fisk went on to explain why he thinks the manipulation of language in
reporting skews the truth. "We have another phrase we are introducing
now. Have you noticed how these extraordinary creatures keep popping up
in reports from Baghdad? 'Men in police uniform' took part in the
kidnapping. 'Men in police uniform' abducted Margaret Hassan. 'Men in
army uniform' besieged police stations," Fisk said, somewhat
exasperated. 

"Now do the reporters writing this garbage actually think there is a
warehouse in Fallujah with eight thousand made to measure police
uniforms for insurgents?" Fisk asked, then answered. "Of course there
aren't, they are the policemen." 

Fisk's main criticism was reserved for television coverage of the
conflict. "Television connives at war because it will not show you the
reality. If an Iraqi is lucky enough to die in a romantic position he
will get on the air," Fisk said. He then added, "But if he doesn't have
a head on or if he is like most of the victims, torn to bits, you will
not see him." 

Fisk talked of his television colleague's pictures being routinely
censored by producers and editors back home. "I've heard them say this
down the line, 'It's pornographic to show these pictures. We've got
people at breakfast time; they will be puking over their cornflakes...
We can't show this.' My favorite one is 'We've got to respect the dead.'
We can kill them as much as we want, but once they're dead we've got to
respect them, right? And so you will be shielded from this war. You will
be shielded from this reality." 

Fisk believes having journalists holed up in the green zone suits the
military forces in Iraq. "The Americans, and to a lesser extent the
British, like it this way. They do not want us moving around. They do
not want us going to the mortuaries and counting the dead." 

Fisk told of an experience he had when visiting a Baghdad mortuary in
August 
2005. "The mortuary officials, against the law of Iraq, which doesn't
count for much at the moment, let me see the Ministry of Health computer
that American and British officials have ordered the ministry not to
allow Western journalists access to.which showed that in July alone last
year 
1,100 Iraqis had died by violence, just in Baghdad." 

Fisk challenged the standard reporting conventions hammered into
journalism student's heads around the world. "There's one that comes up
from the journalism school system which is you've got to give equal time
to both sides," explained Fisk. "To which I say well, if you were
reporting the slave trade in the 18th century, would you give equal time
to the slave ship captain? No. If you're covering the liberation of a
Nazi camp, do you give equal time to the SS spokesman? No. When I
covered a Palestinian suicide bombing of a restaurant in Israeli west
Jerusalem in August 2001, did I give equal time to the Islamic jihad
spokesman? No. When 1,700 Palestinians were slaughtered in the
Palestinian refugee camps of Sabra and Shatila in 
1982, did I give equal time to the Israeli spokesman, who of course was
representing an army who watched the massacre as its Lebanese Phalangist
allies carried it out? No. Journalists should be on the side of the
victims," Fisk said. 

He closed with a sober warning to viewers and readers closely following
the Iraq war coverage. "We have a real disaster on our hands because the
American project in Iraq is dead and don't believe anything anyone else
tells you in any newspaper. It is a catastrophe and every reporter
working in Iraq knows it, but they don't all tell you that," Fisk said,
pausing. "And that is our shame." 

John Pilger 

John Pilger addressed the audience next by challenging the very idea
that America and its allies are at war. "We are not at war. Instead,
American and British troops are fighting insurrections in countries
where our invasions have caused mayhem and grief...but you wouldn't know
it. Where are the pictures of these atrocities?" 

Pilger referred to the first wars he covered, Vietnam and Cambodia, and
compared the role of journalists then to today. "The invasion of Vietnam
was deliberate and calculated-as were policies and strategies that
bordered on genocide and were designed to force millions of people to
abandon their homes. Experimental weapons were used against civilians.
All of this was rarely news. The unspoken task of the reporter in
Vietnam, as it was in Korea, was to normalize the unthinkable. And that
has not changed." 

Pilger went on to explain his reaction to current reporting of events in
Iraq. "The other day, on the third anniversary of the invasion, a BBC
newsreader described the invasion as a 'miscalculation.' Not illegal.
Not unprovoked. Not based on lies. But a miscalculation. Thus, the
unthinkable is normalized. By concentrating on military pronouncements.
By making it seem like it is a respectable war, you normalize what is
the unthinkable. And the unthinkable is a war against civilians. It's a
war that has claimed tens of thousands of people. There are estimates
that put it well over 
100,000. When journalists report it as a respectable geopolitical act
and promote the idea that it was to bring democracy to this country,
then they're normalizing the unthinkable." 

Pilger turned his attention to the BBC. Generally accepted worldwide as
a reputable and independent source of information, Pilger rejected this
notion outright. "In Britain, where I live, the BBC, which promotes
itself as a sort of nirvana of objectivity and impartiality and truth,
has blood all over its corporate hands." Pilger cited a study conducted
by the journalism school of the University College in Cardiff that found
in the lead up to the war, 90 percent of the BBC's references to weapons
of mass destruction suggested Saddam Hussein actually possessed them. 

Pilger added, "We now know that the BBC and other British media were
used by MI-6, the secret intelligence service. In what they called
Operation Mass Appeal, MI-6 agents planted stories about Saddam's
weapons of mass destruction, such as weapons hidden in his palaces and
in secret underground bunkers. All of these stories were fake. But
that's not the point. The point is that the role of MI-6 was quite
unnecessary because a systematic media self-censorship produced the same
result." 

To Pilger the most significant way journalists are used by government is
in what he calls a "softening up process" before planned military
action. "We soften them up by dehumanizing them. Currently journalists
are softening up Iran, Syria, and Venezuela," Pilger said. "A few weeks
ago Channel 4 News in Britain, regarded as a good liberal news service,
carried a major item that might have been broadcast by the State
Department. The reporter presented President Chavez of Venezuela as a
cartoon character, a sinister buffoon whose folksy Latin way disguised a
man, and I quote, 'in danger of joining a rogues gallery of dictators
and despots-Washington's latest Latin nightmare.' 

"Rumsfeld was allowed to call Chavez 'Hitler' unchallenged. According to
the reporter, Venezuela under Chavez was helping Iran develop nuclear
weapons. No evidence was given for this bullshit." He cited a recent
report by the media watchdog FAIR, which found that 95 percent of the
100 media commentaries surveyed expressed hostility to Chavez, with
terms such as "dictator," "strongman," and "demagogue" regularly used in
publications such as the Los Angeles Times and the Wall Street Journal.
"The softening- up of Venezuela is well advanced in the United States.
So that if or when the Bush administration launches Operation Bilbao, a
contingent plan to overthrow the democratic government of Venezuela, who
will care? We will have only the media version, another lousy demagogue
got what was coming to him. A triumph of censorship by omission and by
journalism," he concluded. 

Seymour Hersh 

The last speaker, Seymour Hersh, had just published his report on the
Bush administration's secret plans for an attack on Iran, which he spoke
about. "Here we've got a situation, which is really unique in our
history. This is a president who is completely inured to the press. It
doesn't matter what we write or say. He has got his own vision, whether
he's talking to God or doing things on behalf of what his father didn't
do or whatever it is. He has his own messianic view of what to do and
he's not done," warned Hersh. 

The moderator questioned Hersh about his use of anonymous sources and
the possibility that his Iran story was from a government plant. "It's
an appropriate question," he remarked. 

"People would say are you part of the process, trying to put pressure on
the Iranians by using psychological warfare and planting the story? I
really wish they had that kind of cunning.that they would think in a
Kissingerian way," he laughed. "But the fact is with George Bush, it's
been very consistent. What you see is what you get." 

"It was not a plant," Hersh explained. "This [report] came from people
willing to take bullets for us. willing to put their lives on the line,
who understand combat and who are scared to death about this guy in the
White House." Hersh went on to warn the audience about what he thought
would happen with the Bush administration and Iran; "Folks, don't bet
against it because he's probably going to do it; because somebody up
there is telling him this is the right thing to do." 

Hersh considered the damning words of his colleagues. "Yes, it's
important to beat up on us. As usual we deserve it. As usual we failed
you totally," Hersh remarked wearily. "But above and beyond all that,
folks, by my count there are something like 1,011 days left in the reign
of King George the Lesser and that is the bad news. But there is good
news. And the good news is that tomorrow when we wake up there will be
one less day." 

To a large round of applause, the afternoon ended. I asked Pilger his
final thoughts. He paused and then replied, "Journalists, like
politicians, like anybody really, should be called to account for the
consequences of their actions. Journalists have played a critical role
in sustaining wars. Starting them and sustaining them. And we have to
face that discussion. There's nothing wrong with journalism, it's a
wonderful privilege, it's a craft actually, and I'm very proud to be a
journalist. But it's the way it's practiced. It's as if it has been
hijacked by corporatism and we should take it back." 

Sophie McNeill is a freelance video journalist whose work regularly
appears on Australia's SBS Television "Dateline" program. She lives in
New York.

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