From Korea through every
conflict up to Iraq , the rhetoric is remarkable similar, as are the
real aims and the deadly consequences of the policy.
Solomons
target is not just the politicians, however, but the journalists who
become the vehicle for selling that story. His work reminds us that
even when journalists seem to be reporting critically about failed war
policies, they almost always implicitly endorse U.S. officials
underlying claim about the desire for peace and democracy.
While
the film covers all the conflicts in the post-WWII period, it is the
Vietnam/Iraq parallels that are most chilling. One of the most crucial
to remember in defiance of the distorted revisionist history that
suggests the U.S. public lost its will to support the Vietnam War
because of relentlessly critical news coverage is that journalists
were largely supportive of the war in the early years. Not until the
failures on the battlefield were too obvious to ignore did the media
coverage abandon the administrations propaganda line.
The
producers of this film have used archival footage brilliantly, and one
of the most illustrative clips is of Walter Cronkite in 1965 climbing
into a B-57 to go along on a bombing run. In the breathless fashion
typical of so much war reporting, Cronkite extols the virtue of the
airplane and the thrill of the mission. Viewers see him get off the
plane and say to the officer hes about to interview, Well, colonel,
its a great way to go to war.
After the Tet Offensive in 1968
Cronkite would declare the war mired in stalemate, and so hes
remembered as a critic of the war. But like most of the press corps he
first was enthusiastic about U.S. power, and even in that famous 1968
broadcast he didnt challenge the basic propaganda story about the
so-called Communist threat.
That segment also reminds us that
journalists have long expressed a giddy, almost childlike, fascination
with the increasingly high-tech weapons with which these wars have been
fought. Journalists, it seems, are always suckers for machines that go
fast and blow things up. Solomon suggests that theres a kind of
idolatry there. Some might see it as a worship of the gods of metal.
This technology fetish reached unimaginably sick levels in the 2003
invasion of Iraq , when the news media flooded us with high-tech
graphics and retired military officers offering commentary.
Solomon
reminds us that for all the talk about precision weapons, the
percentage of deaths that are civilians has climbed steadily from 10
percent in World War I to almost 90 percent in Iraq . He describes how
an acculturated callousness to the effects of massive bombardment has
built up in our society, facilitated to a large extent by journalists
who are more likely to focus on how a weapon works than what it does to
victims. One of the films most poignant scenes comes when images of
those victims are shown over the voice of former Secretary of Defense
Donald Rumsfeld waxing eloquent about the unprecedented humanitarianism
of this precision bombing.
But back to Vietnam and Bushs
bizarre analogy, in which he suggested that the United States mistake
was not invading another country to block a popular leftist government
that had been on the verge of winning a fair election. No, it turns out
that our mistake was leaving an immoral and unwinnable war too soon.
When
I asked Solomon last week for his reaction to Bushs comparison, he
pointed out that Bush was invoking a familiar stab-in-the-back theme
to assert that a lack of resolve at home undermined the military
effort, to bolster the idea that with continued support, this time the
USA can, and must, see the war through to its appropriately triumphant
conclusion. But the possibility of such a victory in Iraq is about as
likely as it was in Vietnam , in large part because each war was
morally bankrupt from the start.
It was the same game during the
Vietnam War, Solomon said, pointing to news footage from War Made Easy
of a network TV announcer saying, Appealing for public support for his
peace policy, Mr. Nixon said, The enemy cannot defeat or humiliate the
United States. Only Americans, he said, can do that.
Perhaps
we have not really been defeated and humiliated by either the enemy or
ourselves, but by leaders who have created this warfare state and
journalists who have helped sell it to the public. War Made Easy is a
useful tool for progressive educators and activists who want to
redefine peace and end a state of perpetual war.
* War Made Easy was produced and distributed by the Media Education Foundation. For their entire catalog, go to:
http://mediaed.org/.
* The film is available for home viewing and for use as an organizing tool. For details on ordering,
visit here.
* The film is also playing in select independent theaters. For information on locations,
visit here.
*
Solomon is also the author of the recently released book Made Love Got
War: Close Encounters with America s Warfare State. For more
information on that book, go to:
www.madelovegotwar.com/.
* For more information on Solomon and his syndicated column, go to:
www.normansolomon.com/