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Media Spin
Can Seperate War From Death
by Norman Solomon; December 05, 2002
A dozen years after
the Gulf War, public perceptions of it are now very helpful to the White
House. That's part of a timeworn pattern. Illusions about previous wars
make the next one seem acceptable. As George Orwell observed: "Who
controls the past controls the future; who controls the present controls
the past."
It's not unusual to
hear journalists and politicians say that the Gulf War had few casualties.
Considering the magnitude of media spin, that myth is hardly surprising.
"When the air war began in January 1991," recalls Patrick J. Sloyan, who
covered the Gulf War as a Newsday correspondent, "the media was fed
carefully selected footage by (Gen. Norman) Schwarzkopf in Saudi Arabia
and (Gen. Colin) Powell in Washington, DC. Most of it was downright
misleading."
In an essay written as
a fellow at the Alicia Patterson Foundation this year, Sloyan describes
"limitations imposed on reporters on the battlefield" in 1991: "Under
rules developed by (Defense Secretary Dick) Cheney and Powell, journalists
were not allowed to move without military escorts. All interviews had to
be monitored by military public affairs escorts. Every line of copy, every
still photograph, every strip of film had to be approved -- censored --
before being filed. And these rules were ruthlessly enforced."
As December 2002
began, Los Angeles Times media critic David Shaw told readers: "Based on
past performance, both by the current Bush administration and by its
immediate Republican predecessors, there's every reason to think that if
we go to war against Iraq, Washington will exert more control over the
media than ever before, using every tactic from manipulation to deception
to disinformation."
For the most part,
mainstream news organizations are avid participants in such deceit. Their
objections are routinely feeble and belated.
Even when they occur,
media critiques usually steer clear of moral concern. They're much more
likely to focus on false claims about technical performances: whether
"smart bombs" were truly accurate, whether cruise missiles strayed off
course, and so forth. But the greatest deception of the Gulf War was far
more profound. "In manipulating the first and often most lasting
perception of Desert Storm," wrote Sloyan, "the Bush administration
produced not a single picture or video of anyone being killed. This
sanitized, bloodless presentation by military briefers left the world
presuming Desert Storm was a war without death."
Now, the Pentagon is
in gear for what a pull-out poster in the latest Mad Magazine calls "Gulf
Wars, Episode II." ("Production designed to distract you from the failing
economy. Produced by the military-industrial complex in association with
Exxon, Texaco, Mobil, et al.") A key reason many Americans are inclined to
go along with the next war is that Episode I seemed like a pretty decent
made-for-TV movie. Media references to "Desert Storm" rarely dwell on --
or even mention -- the human losses during the six-week period of the Gulf
War.
But in his excellent
new book "Tinderbox," scholar Stephen Zunes points out: "Most estimates
put the Iraqi death toll in the Gulf War in the range of 100,000. Due to
the increased accuracy of aerial warfare, the proportion of Iraqi
civilians killed was much less than it had been in previous air campaigns.
At the same time, because the bombing was the heaviest in world history --
consisting of tens of thousands of sorties -- the absolute numbers were
quite high. Most estimates of the civilian death toll are approximately
15,000."
What are the likely
human consequences of the impending war on Iraq? News media should be
asking that question. But the American public remains in the dark.
"The avowed U.S. aim
of regime change means any new conflict will be much more intense and
destructive than the Gulf War, and will involve more deadly weapons
developed in the interim," said a report issued last month by health
professionals with the London-based Medact organization and International
Physicians for the Prevention of Nuclear War. They warned: "Furthermore,
the mental and physical health of ordinary Iraqis is far worse than it was
in 1991, making them much more vulnerable this time round."
The report found that
"credible estimates of the total possible deaths on all sides during the
conflict and the following three months range from 48,000 to over 260,000.
Civil war within Iraq could add another 20,000 deaths. Additional later
deaths from post-war adverse health effects could reach 200,000."
And here's another
conclusion from the report that major U.S. news outlets keep ignoring: "In
all scenarios, the majority of casualties will be civilians."
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