The present situation has a different twist along the
same lines. The Iraq war drags on, the United States is certainly not
the victor -- and the U.S. president, a fervent believer in war and
violence, still has a lot to prove.
Faith that American might
makes right is apt to be especially devout among those who command the
world's most powerful military -- and have the option of trying to
overcome wartime obstacles by unleashing even more lethal violence.
These
days, there's a lot of talk about seeking a political solution in Iraq
-- but the Bush administration and the military leaders who answer to
the commander in chief are fundamentally engaged in a very different
sort of project. Looking ahead, from the White House, the key goal is
to seem to be winding down the U.S. war effort while actually
reconfiguring massive violence to make it more effective.
Two
sets of figures have paramount importance in mainline U.S. media and
politics -- the number of U.S. troops stationed in Iraq and the number
of them dying there. Often taking cues from news media and many
lawmakers on Capitol Hill, antiwar groups have tended to buy into the
formula, emphasizing those numbers and denouncing them as intolerably
high.
Meanwhile, the Iraqis killed by Americans don't become
much of an issue in the realms of U.S. media and politics. News
coverage provides the latest tallies of Iraqis who die from "sectarian
violence" and "terrorist attacks," but the reportage rarely discusses
how the U.S. occupation has been an ascending catalyst for that
carnage. It's even more rare for the coverage to focus on the magnitude
of Iraqi deaths that are direct results of American firepower.
In
the United States, many advocates of U.S. withdrawal from Iraq have
focused on what the war has been doing to Americans. This approach may
seem like political pragmatism and tactical wisdom, but in the long run
it's likely to play into the hands of White House strategists who will
try to regain domestic political ground by reducing American losses
while boosting the use of high-tech weaponry against Iraqi people.
Every
night, I receive an email bulletin that's called "U.S. Air Force Print
News." It's one of countless ways the Pentagon does continual outreach
to journalists with messages that encourage favorable coverage of what
the military is doing. Those messages are filled with stories about the
bravery, compassion and towering stature of -- in the words of retired
Gen. Colin Powell a decade ago -- "those wonderful men and women who do
such a great job."
But journalists receive just a trickle of
limited information about the bombing runs undertaken by the U.S.
military in Afghanistan and Iraq. The official sources have very little
to say about what happens to people at the other end of the bombs. And,
overall, U.S. media outlets don't add much information about the human
consequences.
In late May, an important challenge to those media
patterns appeared on the website TomDispatch.com (and, in shorter form,
in The Nation magazine). The in-depth article -- titled "Did the U.S.
Lie about Cluster Bomb Use in Iraq?" -- went beyond probing the
Pentagon's extensive use of barbaric cluster bombs in Iraq since the
spring of 2003. The piece, by journalist Nick Turse, also shined a
bright light on fundamental aspects of a U.S. air war that has seldom
seen any light of day in big American media outlets.
"Unfortunately,
thanks to an utter lack of coverage by the mainstream media, what we
don't know about the air war in Iraq so far outweighs what we do know
that anything but the most minimal picture of the nature of destruction
from the air in that country simply can't be painted," Turse writes.
The
article raises a key question: "Does the U.S. military keep the numbers
of rockets and cannon rounds fired from its planes and helicopters
secret because more Iraqi civilians have died due to their use than any
other type of weaponry?"
Turse, an associate editor and research
director of TomDispatch.com, has written for daily newspapers including
the Los Angeles Times and the San Francisco Chronicle. His article
pulls no punches about the press as he assesses huge gaps in media
coverage of the Iraq air war funded by U.S. taxpayers.
Sadly, he
observes, "media reports on the air war are so sparse, with reporting
confined largely to reprinting U.S. military handouts and announcements
of air strikes, that much of the air war in Iraq remains unknown --
although the very fact of an occupying power regularly conducting air
strikes in and near population centers should have raised a question or
two."
The available evidence is strong that the U.S. air war is
escalating -- with a surge of resulting casualties among Iraqi
civilians. Their suffering and their deaths get very little coverage in
the U.S. news media. "Since the Bush administration's invasion, the
American air war has been given remarkably short shrift in the media,"
Turse writes. And he cites "indications that the air war has taken an
especially grievous toll on Iraqi children."
The combination of
deceptive officials in the U.S. government and an evasive U.S. press
has been a disaster for the flow of information to the American public.
"With the military unwilling to tell the truth or say anything at all,
in most cases -- and unable to provide the stability necessary for
[non-governmental organizations] to operate, it falls to the mainstream
media, even at this late stage of the conflict, to begin ferreting out
substantive information on the air war," Turse points out. "It seems,
however, that until reporters begin bypassing official U.S. military
pronouncements and locating Iraqi sources, we will remain largely in
the dark with little knowledge of what can only be described as the
secret U.S. air war in Iraq."
As the summer of 2007 gets
underway, the demand to "bring the troops home" is necessary but
insufficient. The numbers of Americans fighting and dying in Iraq are
not a reliable measure of U.S. culpability in the continuing slaughter.
The
new documentary film "War Made Easy: How Presidents and Pundits Keep
Spinning Us to Death," based on
Norman Solomon's book of the same
title, is being released directly to DVD in mid-June. For information
about the full-length movie, produced by the Media Education Foundation
and and narrated by Sean Penn, go to: www.WarMadeEasyTheMovie.org