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Embedding, repression and murder: How the US military degraded
journalism in Iraq
By Chris Marsden
11 April 2003
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The April 8 missile attack on the Baghdad offices of Al Jazeera
and Abu Dhabi TV, as well as the tankfire directed at the Palestine
Hotel, residence of the non-embedded press corps, is the culmination
of the criminal efforts of the US army to silence all independent
reporting of its bloody massacre of Iraqi civilians and militia.
The deaths of three newsmenTariq Ayoub, Taras Protsyuk
and Jose Cuosoprompted protests worldwide and led to several
journalists denouncing the US actions as tantamount to murder.
Sky News correspondent David Chater asked pointedly in the
Independent, How are we supposed to carry on if American
shells are targeting Western Journalists? The papers
own columnist Robert Fisk asked, Is there some element in
the US military that wants to take out journalists?
There is nothing exaggerated in such responses. The claim by
the Pentagon that the attack on three separate sources of independent
journalism in one day was accidental is beneath contempt. The
Bush administration has done everything it can to prevent any
honest reporting of the war against Iraq and in the process have
mounted repeated bombings of media installations, arrested and
physically beaten reporters and had already been accused of deliberately
killing reporters prior to April 8.
The most high-profile case up until this past week was that
of the non-embedded ITV News correspondent Terry Lloyd, who was
killed on March 22 by US troops in Southern Iraq.
Cameraman Daniel Demoustier, who was injured in the same incident,
has said that US tanks opened fire on the ITN team after it came
into contact with a group of Iraqi soldiers who were seeking to
surrender. He has said the attack was deliberate in order to wipe
out troublesome witnesses.
Still missing are Fred Nerac, the French cameraman who accompanied
Lloyd, and the Lebanese translator, Hussein Osman.
ITN has accused the British and American governments of hiding
the truth about Lloyds death. Chief executive Stewart Purvis
said, Were now clear that somebody in the American
or British military knows what happened next but they have not
come forward.
Neracs wife, Fabienne, has asked US Secretary of State
Colin Powell to account for her husbands whereabouts during
a news conference in Brussels, Belgium. She has been supported
by French President Jacques Chirac.
Other high profile cases of suppression include the sacking
of Peter Arnett by NBC on March 31, following a right-wing witchhunt
because he gave an interview to Iraqi TV. The Pentagon also insisted
that Fox journalist Geraldo Rivera be sent home for allegedly
revealing the plans of a military unit in Iraq in advance and
US forces expelled Phil Smucker of the Boston-based Christian
Science Monitor from Iraq for allegedly being too specific
in a report.
What is less reported is the routine suppression involved in
the policy of embedding and the undemocratic, hostile
and sometimes brutal nature of the US treatment of non-embedded
journalists.
Embedded journalists number around 600 and are both under the
control of the military and predisposed towards friendly and non-controversial
reporting.
The policy was drawn up by Secretary of Defence Donald Rumsfeld,
who described it with some candour as self-serving.
Under the Pentagons 50 pages of guidelines, embedded correspondents
are forbidden to report any information that would undermine or
compromise the US offensive, including reports of military and
civilian casualties. Not only did journalists have to agree to
this, but they were sucked in to life with the troops and an identification
with them both conscious or unconscious.
Journalists, once accepted for embedding, have no right to
leave. By the later stages of the war, however, many journalists
did want to leave but Colonel Jay DeFrank of the Department of
Defence explained why this was unacceptable: A lot of the
reporting is based on getting into the [combat] environment and
getting to know people. You dont get it if you step in as
a casual observer.
There is little wonder that embedding is often cynically referred
to as being in bed with the military.
The April 7 Guardians media section published
a revealing account by one independent journalist, who wished
to remain anonymous for fear of reprisals.
He explains:
There are 1,670 unembedded journalists,
or unilaterals, in Kuwaitsent to cover a war to which they
have virtually no access.... Like many news organisations, mine
wanted unilaterals alongside embeds. You cant cover a war
from a tank turret alone. How can you build a wider picture? How
do you gain an Iraqi perspective? How do you tell the stories
that the coalition would rather remain hidden?
Yet just a handful get even close to the story. As evasive
routes to the north are discovered, new roadblocks and obstacles
shut them down. Those that get through to the borders hunker down
in safe houses, a tight-knit community dodging border police,
contemplating their next move: into Iraq.
When he finally got into Iraq after a week, he was still forced
to surmount military restrictions on contact with the Iraqis.
He explains, Southern Iraq is a lawless place right now.
But that facta given in waris used as an excuse to
control journalists. The deaths of Terry Lloyd and his ITN team
are cited as a reason for keeping us out. A British military spokesman
here told me that the deaths proved why non-embeds must stay away.
That feels like a vulgar justification of censorship and control....
The sources of control are Washington and London. A Whitehall
press minder is with Britains military spokesman at all
times. His word is law. Rules are bent for non-embeds who are
trusted to offer up feelgood stories. More aggressively inquisitive
media are routinely blocked.
The anonymous journalist concludes by explaining that the
broadcast networks are complicit. With their embedded teams producing
great visuals, what need is there for broader analysis from the
battlefield.... ITN, Sky and the BBC all belong to an exclusive
club: the Forward Transmission Unit, based just inside Iraq and
attached to the military, which allows a select few correspondents
to package the war.
Those not in this exclusive club are routinely discriminated
against and can face severe sanction.
The actions of the US military have provoked a number of official
protests. Following the death of Lloyd, the International Federation
of Journalists (IFJ) demanded an inquiry into how a press
vehicle, clearly marked, can be subject to such an attack
and urged US troops and their allies to protect all media staff
covering the Iraq war, including those not formally travelling
under military protection. It is not acceptable to create
a privileged group of so-called embedded journalists
and to ignore the needs of other journalists from all around the
world, it said.
The European Broadcasting Union (EBU) said that British and
US forces give preference to embedded reporters while freezing
out independents. EBU Head of News Tony Naets said, They
have created a caste system with embedded journalistsusually
from countries in the so-called coalition who can associate with
the troopsand the truly unilateral broadcaster who is prevented
from coming anywhere near the news.
EBU Secretary General Jean Stock said April 2, Reporters
and camera crews who put their lives at risk have been detained
by American and British troops and returned to Kuwait.
Reporters Sans Frontieres (RSF) complained about such detentions
and one incident in particular. Many journalists have come
under fire, others have been detained and questioned for several
hours and some have been mistreated, beaten and humiliated by
coalition forces, said RSF secretary general, Robert Menard.
He was referring to the fate of four independent reporters
who were arrested by US military police as they slept near an
American unit 100 miles south of Baghdad and held overnight. Israelis
Dan Scemama and Boaz Bismuth and Luis Castro and Victor Silva
from Portugal say they were mistreated and denied contact with
their families.
The US soldiers said we were terrorists and spies and
treated us as such, said Scemama. They want all the
journalists in Iraq to have one of their liaison officers with
them to supervise the footage they are broadcasting. There is
no doubt that this is why they treated us so cruelly.
Five MPs had jumped on one of his Portuguese colleagues, after
he begged to be allowed to speak to his wife and children. They
knocked him to the ground, kicked him, stepped on him, tied him
up and threw him back into the camp. He came back half an hour
later. He was crying like a child, said Scemama, who added
that he was himself threatened with being shot.
There is another aspect of the RSFs criticisms of the
US Army that bears directly on the subsequent bombing of the Palestine
Hotel.
The organisation points to the bombing of the Iraqi Ministry
of Information in Baghdad on March 29 and then again on March
30, which destroyed the international medias base on the
buildings roof. Journalists had left the building just one
hour before the missile strikes and subsequently refused to go
to the ministry buildinghence the shifting by the Iraqi
regime of briefings to the Palestine Hotel.
The BBCs Andrew Gilligan noted in the Mail on Sunday
that the Iraqi ministers would shift their press conferences
to another room at the last minute in case the Americans should
try a lucky shot.
Then they lock us in. Not just to make sure we take down
every syllable of overblown rhetoric, but as another safeguard
against that inconvenient cruise missile strikeand to stop
us seeing the way they leave.
It now appears that the lucky shot, when it came,
came in the form of tankfire rather than a cruise missile.
The US is by no means alone in its overt hostility to any expression
of independent journalism. As usual the Blair government has been
there to lend moral support and provide the necessary political
justification for Washingtons more naked efforts at suppression.
Amongst the more high profile attacks made on journalists is
that by Defence Minister Geoff Hoon against Robert Fisk of the
Independent, who he accused of being a dupe of Saddam Husseins
regime for revealing evidence that two bombings of Iraqi markets
had been carried out by the US and not Iraq.
Home Secretary David Blunkett made a more sweeping attack on
April 2, not only on media outlets for treating reports from Baghdad
as though they were the moral equivalent of reports
based on information given by the US and UK allied forces, but
on the progressive and liberal public that believe
their reports.
Blunkett said Saddam was exploiting the weaknesses of
our democracy, the weaknesses of our media systems
Those of a progressive, or liberal bent, in my view, are egged
on into believing that this is the right way to get to the true
facts.
Not to be outdone, the commander of the British forces in the
Gulf, Air Marshal Brian Burridge, accused the media of losing
the plot over the war on Iraq. He railed in the right-wing
Telegraph newspaper, You stand for nothing, you support
nothing, you criticise, you drip.
Stewart Purvis of ITN responded by noting how senior British
military commanders invariably misunderstood the role of the media
and expected them to be cheerleaders in any conflict.
They all think they belong to some sort of UK PLC and
ask you dont you belong to that too? It amazes
me that very senior officers dont understand the difference
between the army being part of the state and journalists
role to be independent of the state and report on it.
The independence of journalism from the state is the crux of
what is posed by the war in Iraq. The philosopher Edmond Burke,
and after him the historian Thomas Carlyle, famously advanced
the concept of the media as the fourth estate that
acts as a check on the three official branches of the statethe
executive, legislature and the judiciary. Today the state power
cannot and will not tolerate even a minimal check on its excesses.
The independence of the media has already been largely eliminated
for the duration of the Iraqi conflict. Most news organisations
have accepted this without complaint and those who object have
been subject to sustained pressure to fall into line. This will
only whet the appetites of the ruling elite in Washington and
London for more of the same. For if the news organisations are
prepared to accept such a degree of control in Iraq, then they
will be asked to do the same in the interests of the so-called
war against terrorism at home.
See Also:
US bombs Al-Jazeera center in Baghdad
[9 April 2003]
British journalist killed
by American troops
[25 March 2003]
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