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CNN tells reporters: No propaganda, except American
By Patrick Martin
6 November 2001
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In an extraordinary directive to its staff, Cable News Network
has instructed reporters and anchormen to tailor their coverage
of the US war against Afghanistan to downplay the toll of death
and destruction caused by American bombing, for fear that such
coverage will undermine popular support for the US military effort.
A memo from CNN Chairman Walter Isaacson to international correspondents
for the network declares: As we get good reports from Taliban-controlled
Afghanistan, we must redouble our efforts to make sure we do not
seem to be simply reporting from their vantage or perspective.
We must talk about how the Taliban are using civilian shields
and how the Taliban have harbored the terrorists responsible for
killing close to 5,000 innocent people.
I want to make sure were not used as a propaganda
platform, Isaacson declared in an interview with the Washington
Post, adding that it seems perverse to focus too much
on the casualties or hardship in Afghanistan.
Were entering a period in which theres a
lot more reporting and video from Taliban-controlled Afghanistan,
he said. You want to make sure people understand that when
they see civilian suffering there, its in the context of
a terrorist attack that caused enormous suffering in the United
States.
In a second memo leaked to the Post, CNNs head
of standards and practices, Rick Davis, expressed concern about
reports on the bombing of Afghanistan filed by on-the-spot reporters.
Davis noted that it may be hard for the correspondent in
these dangerous areas to make the points clearly about the
reasons for the US bombing. In other words, the CNN official feared
that overseas correspondents might be intimidated by local opposition
to the US military intervention and allow such sentiments to influence
their reports.
To ensure that every CNN report always includes a justification
of the war, Davis prescribed specific language for anchors to
read after each account of civilian casualties and other bomb
damage. He suggested three alternative formulations:
* We must keep in mind, after seeing reports like this
from Taliban-controlled areas, that these US military actions
are in response to a terrorist attack that killed close to 5,000
innocent people in the US.
* We must keep in mind, after seeing reports like this,
that the Taliban regime in Afghanistan continues to harbor terrorists
who have praised the September 11 attacks that killed close to
5,000 innocent people in the US.
* The Pentagon has repeatedly stressed that it is trying
to minimize civilian casualties in Afghanistan, even as the Taliban
regime continues to harbor terrorists who are connected to the
September 11 attacks that claimed thousands of innocent lives
in the US.
Davis concluded with an ultimatum to journalists concerned
that they may sound like parrots for the White House: Even
though it may start sounding rote, it is important that we make
this point each time.
The Tailwind capitulation
A turning point in the transformation of CNN into a thinly
disguised outlet for Pentagon propaganda was the 1998 controversy
over the networks broadcast of an investigative report entitled
Valley of Death. The program dealt with allegations
that the US military used chemical weapons in Laos in 1970 during
the Vietnam War. Produced by April Oliver and Jack Smith, and
narrated by Peter Arnett, it provided considerable evidence that
Operation Tailwind, as the military called it, involved the use
of sarin, a deadly nerve gas.
But coming amidst a series of US provocations against Iraq
over allegations that Saddam Husseins regime was developing
weapons of mass destruction, the CNN program threatened to cut
across a major objective of American foreign policy. A storm of
protest was whipped up by far-right elements, including former
military officers, and both former Secretary of State Henry Kissinger
and former Chairman of the Joint Chiefs Colin Powell denounced
the television report.
CNNs response was complete capitulation. Network founder
Ted Turner, still the largest stockholder in the parent Time-Warner
conglomerate, made abject apologies to the Pentagon. CNN repudiated
the exposé, fired its two producers, and reprimanded Arnett
who, to his shame, distanced himself from the program and claimed
he was not responsible for its allegations.
Less than a year later Arnett himself was fired. The Pulitzer
Prize-winning journalist had been widely acclaimed for his on-the-spot
reporting from Baghdad during the Gulf War. His dismissal, in
the midst of the war on Yugoslavia, was followed by another demonstration
of the ties between the network and the national security apparatus.
CNNs chief correspondent in the former Yugoslavia, Christiane
Amanpour, married State Department spokesman James Rubin, the
Clinton administrations principal liaison with the Kosovo
Liberation Army guerrillas. Both continued in their jobs as full-time
apologists for the war on Yugoslavia, one at the State Department
podium, the other in front of a CNN camera in the Balkans.
Human shields and other lies
While CNNs policy may be the most crudely expressedor
the only one recorded in a corporate memorandum that has become
public knowledgeits stance is characteristic of the entire
American media, which serves in the Afghanistan war as 24x7 propagandists
for American imperialism.
Isaacsons reference to civilian shields is
typical of the cynical lies spread by the American government,
with the obedient support of the media. This claim was first broached
during the Persian Gulf War, when US officials routinely dismissed
reports of horrific civilian casualties caused by the US bombing
of Iraq, claiming that Saddam Hussein had ordered tanks, warplanes
and entire chemical and biological weapons facilities to be moved
into residential neighborhoods.
The most notorious US atrocity of that war was the destruction
of a bomb shelter in the Al-Amariya neighborhood of Baghdad, in
which hundreds of civilians were killed, the majority of them
women and children. The Pentagon claimed that Al-Amariya was a
top secret command-and-control center for the Iraqi military,
and that the women and children had been deliberately planted
there as human shields. Subsequent investigation revealed
that these claims were spurious.
This did not stop the media from uncritically accepting similar
statements about the US bombing of Yugoslavia in 1999, when civilian
casualties were invariably blamed on the government of Slobodan
Milosevic. The same kind of lies are now circulated about Afghanistan,
with reports that the Taliban regime is moving heavy weapons and
military detachments into mosques and relief centersin order
to justify in advance the next American atrocity.
The myth of human shields is only one example of
the torrent of lies that flows out of the White House, Pentagon
and CIA, swallowed and regurgitated by the US media without a
qualm.
White House political adviser Karl Rove and press spokesman
Ari Fleischer were caught lying about why Bush took so long to
return to the White House September 11 after the suicide hijackings
hit the World Trade Center and the Pentagon. These officials peddled
the story that the White House had received a credible threat
to Air Force One. It later emerged that there was no such threat,
and the story had been concocted to provide a plausible explanation
for Bushs embarrassing conduct. Now the same administration
issues alerts about terrorist threats for the entire United States
without a single major media voice asking why, given the previous
lies, these alerts should be believed.
The administration initially pledged to release conclusive
evidence of Osama bin Ladens role in the terrorist attacksColin
Powell made the promise on national televisionbut reversed
itself abruptly. The supposed evidence has never been produced.
The American media raised no hue and cry, and continues to repeat
the official claims that the guilt of bin Laden is incontrovertible.
White House, Pentagon shape coverage
With the onset of the bombing campaign, the effort by the White
House and Pentagon to dictate terms of press coverage of the war
was stepped up. Bushs national security adviser Condoleeza
Rice called the five television networks asking them to limit
coverage of statements by Osama bin Laden. Other officials suggested
these statements might contain coded instructions to terrorists.
The networks immediately issued a pledge of cooperation.
White House officials have responded to press criticism of
the Bush administrations handling of the anthrax attacks
by seeking to rebuke reporters whose questions express skepticism
about the government response. Campbell Brown, an NBC White House
correspondent, said a top White House official telephoned her
to complain of a hostile question to newly appointed Director
of Homeland Security Tom Ridge. To get an unsolicited phone
call from a senior official at this White House is very unusual,
she told the Washington Post.
The top executive at ABC News, David Westin, was raked over
the coals for remarks at a forum at the Columbia University journalism
school where he was asked whether the Pentagon was a legitimate
military target. Westin replied by distinguishing between
his personal revulsion at the loss of life on September 11 and
his responsibility as a journalist to describe the event accurately,
including the motivation of those responsible for the attack,
who may have regarded the Pentagon in that light.
The forum was broadcast by C-SPAN, and Westins comments
were lambasted by Internet gossip Matt Drudge, the New York
Post, and other voices of the right wing. Westin issued a
public statement October 31, declaring, I apologize for
any harm that my misstatement may have caused.
In the war zone itself, the Pentagon systematically violates
its own ground rules for press coverage, which prescribe that
the media should have access to all major units and locations.
Only a handful of reporters are on the ground in Afghanistan,
and these operate under the type of self-censorship revealed in
the CNN memo. Reporters are barred from many US naval warships
in the Indian Ocean as well as air bases in the Middle East and
Central Asia.
While the usual justification for such practices is the safety
of the troops, the Pentagon has never documented a single incident
where press coverage compromised operational security.
Seventeen news organizations were aware that the US was about
to launch bombing raids on Afghanistan at least 24 hours before
the attacks began October 7, but not a single one broke the story
in advance.
Richard Reeves, a veteran liberal journalist, described the
informal wartime muzzling of the press in a recent column titled,
Truth in the Packaging of War News. He cited a 1982
Naval War College advisory on press treatment, which prescribed
the following rules: Sanitize the visual images of war,
control media access to theaters, censor information that could
upset readers and viewers, exclude journalists who would not write
favorable stories.
This was predictable for the military, Reeves wrote, but his
main criticism was of the submissive response of the media. My
gripe is with my own business, he explained. The press,
in general, prefers appearing authoritative in war coverage to
admitting that we are being manipulated and lied toand that
we do not actually know what is going on, particularly in the
early combat of any war.
See Also:
The US
War In Afghanistan
[WSWS Full Coverage]
US government steps up press
censorship
[19 October 2001]
The media and Mr. Bush
[16 October 2001]
Why did CNN
retract its nerve gas report? A closer look
[16 July 1998]
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