What the Town Meeting on Iraq revealed
A political system in crisis
21 February 1998
By the Editorial Board
The February 18th "International Town Meeting" at
Ohio State University was a political debacle for the Clinton
administration. Intended to demonstrate popular support for the
impending air war against Iraq, the meeting instead revealed widespread
disquiet about a new military assault, as well as resentment and
suspicion toward the government and the media.
Neither the White House operatives and CNN officials who staged
the event, nor the three top foreign policy aides who defended
the government's war plans, were prepared for the sometimes loud
and often pointed opposition expressed by sections of the audience.
The White House was apparently so confident that its town meeting--properly
vetted to screen out embarrassing questions--would project the
"right" image, it chose CNN to broadcast the event,
knowing that the network's global range would reach Saddam Hussein's
headquarters. A measure of how badly it miscalculated was the
decision of the regime in Baghdad to rebroadcast to the Iraqi
public excerpts of the program, showing questioners challenging
the Clinton administration officials.
Secretary of State Madeleine Albright, Secretary of Defense
William Cohen and national security adviser Samuel Berger thought
they could go to Columbus and simply repeat their stock phrases
about "weapons of mass destruction," "rogue states"
and how the US represents "the will of the international
community." In their arrogance, they exemplified the contempt
of US policymakers for the intelligence of the American people.
No less astonishing than the administration's misreading of
the public mood was the abysmally low level, from an intellectual
standpoint, of its attempt to defend its policy. That people at
the pinnacle of the government--ostensibly the most seasoned foreign
policy specialists--should display such a combination of ignorance
and incompetence can only mean they exist in a sheltered political
environment, where none of the ideological assumptions of American
imperialist policy are challenged, no one feels the need to answer
to the people, and the overarching concern is how best to utilize
the media to deceive the masses and manipulate public opinion.
Dodging the real questions
At the Town Meeting the three Clinton spokesmen resorted to
pat phrases and diversions when confronted with questions reflecting
many different standpoints, from those who implied a bombing attack
would not go far enough, to those expressing concern over casualties,
Iraqi as well as American, to those voicing outright opposition
to US militarism and aggression. Challenged by a young teacher
who asked why Washington was singling out Iraq when it supported
many governments guilty of repression, torture and external aggression,
Albright resorted to a crude smear, accusing the questioner of
siding with Saddam Hussein.
At one level, the administration's political miscalculations
reflect the degree to which the political establishment bases
itself on the images of social reality created by the media --
images which bear little relation to the actual state of affairs.
Indeed, the immediate response of some Clinton officials was to
fault CNN for failing to anticipate and block opposition to the
administration's policy. The main conclusion that will be drawn
in high places is the need to take even more extensive measures
to control such media events in the future.
The evolution of the American media over the past several decades
is itself a significant aspect of the growing alienation of the
political system from the masses of working people. In the 1960s
and 70s government and corporate officials repeatedly expressed
concern over widespread coverage of civil unrest and protest at
home, and the role of the US military abroad. With images of violence
in American cities and US atrocities in Vietnam filling the airwaves,
the media became a frequent target of political attack.
The late 1970s and early 1980s saw a series of well-publicized
libel actions, including General William Westmoreland's suit against
CBS, aimed at bringing the media under tighter control. A consensus
developed within top corporate and political circles that coverage
and commentary on the social contradictions of American society,
and critical exposures of its foreign policy, had to be suppressed.
The role of the media was to highlight the positive features
of American life and galvanize public opinion behind the foreign
policy objectives of American capitalism. Above all, it had the
job of building support for US military interventions and vetting
their coverage so as to exclude images of death and destruction.
US militarism and media censorship
Since the early 1980s, each instance of US aggression has been
presented to the American public in an increasingly censored and
distorted manner, beginning with Grenada in 1983, including Panama
in 1989, and reaching its high point in the war against Iraq.
In Desert Storm virtually no pictures were shown of dead Iraqis,
either soldiers or civilians. To this day no report has been given
of the death toll from the bombs, missiles and bullets of the
US and its Gulf War allies.
At the same time that the techniques for manipulating the news
grew more sophisticated, the integration of the media into the
capitalist state became more pronounced. Today, with barely a
pretense of objectivity, the major news outlets function as propaganda
organs of the government.
This process has been reinforced by the increasing monopolization
of the mass media. The major television networks in the US are
now owned by a handful of corporate conglomerates--Disney (ABC),
General Electric (NBC), Westinghouse (CBS), the Murdoch empire
(Fox) and Time Warner (CNN).
The marriage of the corporate-controlled media and the state
is reflected as well in the personnel who occupy the uppermost
ranks of reporters, news anchors and commentators. Millionaires
and multi-millionaires in their own right, they routinely hobnob
with the so-called movers and shakers of the business and political
world. The guest list at any major state function will include
a significant number of TV news personalities and press commentators.
Media and government -- a tight knit circle
The politically incestuous relationship between big business,
the government and the media is exemplified by personal ties.
To cite a few examples: NBC White House correspondent Andrea Mitchell
is married to Alan Greenspan, the chairman of the Federal Reserve
Board; CNN's chief international correspondent Christiane Amanpour
is married to James Rubin, the assistant secretary of state for
public affairs; and ABC News' Cokie Roberts is the daughter of
Hale Boggs (D-Louisiana), the late House majority leader.
Under such conditions, it is no wonder that the media--and
the politicians who base themselves on focus groups, polls and
the advice of media spin masters--can become entranced by the
images of their own making. The very fact that the media, in practical
terms, lacks any independence from the capitalist state actually
contributes to the political disorientation within the ruling
circles. Just in the space of a few weeks the pundits have been
blindsided first by the public reaction to the Monica Lewinsky
sex scandal, and now by the growing disquiet over a military attack
on Iraq.
The problem for Clinton and the entire political establishment
highlighted by the Town Meeting in Ohio cannot be solved by media
manipulators. That event provided a glimpse of the profound isolation
of the ruling elite in America from the masses of working people.
The insulation of policy makers has grown dramatically over
the past two decades, as the chasm has widened between the rich
and the super rich on the one hand, and the vast majority of the
population on the other. To an unprecedented degree, the economic
and political elite in America live in a world of luxury and power
that has only the most tenuous connections to the world of economic
insecurity and stagnant or falling living standards inhabited
by working people.
The official institutions of politics and mass communications
function shamelessly as the handmaidens of corporate wealth and
power. Dazzled by the success of the stock market, lulled by the
subservience of what is called the organized labor movement, the
narrow and privileged social layer that holds the reins of power
is inclined to take for good coin the media images of a prosperous
and contented nation.
Clinton's Pentagon speech -- illusion and reality
Indeed, one day before the Ohio disaster, Clinton presented
in his speech from the Pentagon just such an idyllic picture of
America at the end of the 20th century. The only threat to universal
peace and prosperity, he asserted, was the demonic force supposedly
embodied in the person of Saddam Hussein.
Columbus was chosen as the site for the Town Meeting because
of its credentials as a white collar, conservative city. But how
many families in the Columbus area have been hit by corporate
downsizing, the decay of public education, the soaring cost of
health insurance, and the general decay of urban life?
It was this social reality and the growing alienation of masses
of people from the existing political system that found their
expression--as yet in a politically unfocused form--in the Town
Meeting. In its aftermath, commentators worried out loud that
the very image of working people and students standing up to government
officials and challenging their war propaganda, at an event broadcast
around the world, would have a catalytic effect, reassuring millions
of others that they are not alone in their anger and opposition,
and emboldening them to speak out against the government's policies.
The New York Times noted nervously that the forum at Ohio
State University was "eerily reminiscent of the protests
and passions generated by the Vietnam War."
At the same time, the Town Meeting expressed the increasingly
hollow and worm-eaten character of democracy in America. The fact
that the ruling class and its political representatives feel they
can launch major military interventions without so much as the
pretense of serious public debate, or even the constitutional
requirement of Congressional approval, is one expression of the
incompatibility of political democracy with the existing level
of social inequality.
It is critical that the growing social discontent, which will
inevitably express itself in great class struggles, find expression
in a political program that articulates the real needs and interests
of the masses of working people.
The World Socialist Web Site is dedicated to providing the
political analysis, historical knowledge and socialist perspective
which the coming mass movement will require. This is the only
basis for opposing imperialist war and the assault on democratic
rights.
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