Guest guest Posted December 23, 2005 Report Share Posted December 23, 2005 I was in Vietnam in 1966-67, when the corporate media propaganda of showing " Viet Cong " bodies on the nightly TV network news was still in fashion. Realizing it was not rallying the public into thinking we were " winning, " but backfiring in repulsing the public and turning them against the war, corporate bigs decided to take all bleeding off the air, and have done that since. So we now have wars with no bleeding. Drop tons of bombs, but don't show the results (and call it " journalism " ). Make it into a kind of video game with smart bombs going into buildings defined as valid targets (but don't show the bodies). That's how you gain support for horror. It works. They were able to get support from the majority of Americans for the invasion of Iraq by blasting lies daily all over corporate media. Although wounded American soldiers were shown, to gain sympathy for the war, wounded children were hidden out of sight. Corporate media bray constantly that they like to give " both " sides of issues. The peace side need not apply for microphone access, however. Every American heard hordes of military generals and other officials who could not disagree with administration rhetoric without losing their jobs. Don Rumsfeld's " We know exactly where the weapons of mass destruction are hidden " comes to mind as the unopposed viewpoint blasted around the clock by corporate media. Shock and Awe was shown as a magnificent fireworks display. Not a drop of blood. The toppling of the Saddam statue was staged by followers of Pentagon intelligence source Ahmad Chalabi in downtown Baghdad, surrounded by U.S. tanks. At the time, we sent pictures of close ups of their faces around the internet, identifying them, and a wide shot of the staged demonstration showing the circle of U.S. tanks around it. Even right wing columnists reported at the time that the U.S. flag placed over the statue's head, was the one which had flown over the Pentagon on 9/11 (spontaneous demonstration, hell). Corporate media are still reporting this phony event on behalf of the Bush Administration as proof that Iraqis love to be invaded and occupied by foreigners. The millions of people who marched for peace were almost entirely ignored. The experts, Scott Ritter, former chief weapons inspector in Iraq and Hans Blix, representing the U.N. as chief weapons inspector in Iraq, who we cited at the time of the invasion, were attacked in corporate media and made to look like lunatics for saying there were no weapons of mass destruction. Peace movement leaders were ignored, as Democrats, nearly all united in supporting Bush, were presented by corporate media as " opposition. " As Gore Vidal so succinctly put it twenty years ago on the Johnny Carson Tonight Show, " The Democrats and Republicans are funded by the same corporations. " It is not difficult to see into the future of news stories in the Land of the Free. Corporate media and corporate government work for the same masters. Bush is in trouble, representing the government wing of corporate empire, so corporate media are rallying to his defense. They can't be too obvious, so have a cadre of talking heads pre-defined as opposition voices at the ready (Tom Friedman of the NY Times and Richard Cohen of the Washington Post, both defined as " opposing liberals, " spread the lies when going to war repeatedly in the name of giving " both sides. " Corporate media journalists who opposed the war have largely lost their jobs, but nobody, as far as we know, who spread the lies supporting the war, has lost their job. On behalf of Bush and keeping Republicans from losing both houses of Congress in the 2006 elections, the corporate media response is executing now on two fronts: 1) to convince the irate masses that troops are about to be withdrawn from Iraq (the page one headline on my local newspaper today, ABC http://abcnews.go.com/ , CBS http://www.cbsnews.com/sections/home/main100.shtml NBC http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/10573155/ , etc.), and 2) to replace the small number of ground troops who will actually be sent home, with increased bombing (together with massive increases in Iraqi casualties), as control of the skies is guaranteed. We have reported all this before, but Norman Solomon does a great job of putting it together here --Jack A New Phase of Bright Spinning Lies About Iraq by Norman Solomon Three days before Christmas, the Bush administration launched a new salvo of bright spinning lies about the Iraq war. " In an interview with reporters traveling with him on an Air Force cargo plane to Baghdad, " the Associated Press reported Thursday morning, Donald Rumsfeld " hinted that a preliminary decision had been made to go below the 138,000 baseline " of U.S. troops in Iraq. Throughout 2006, until Election Day in early November, this kind of story will be a frequent media refrain as the Bush regime does whatever it can to prevent a loss of Republican majorities in the House and Senate. By continuing to fortify large military bases in Iraq -- and by continuing to escalate an air war there courtesy of U.S. taxpayers but largely outside the U.S. media frame -- the White House is determined to exploit every weakness and contradiction of antiwar sentiment inside the United States. There's a lot for the pro-war propagandists to exploit. American opponents of this war often emphasize the deaths and injuries of U.S. troops and the anguish of loved ones at home. At the same time, to whatever extent it's a conscious strategy or a genuine nationalistic form of narcissism, Americans who denounce the war commonly seem to be playing to a media gallery that can easily acknowledge the importance of American lives -- but downplays the loss of Iraqi lives unless those tragedies can be pinned on enemies of the U.S. occupation. What's on the horizon for 2006 is that the Bush administration will strive to put any real or imagined reduction of U.S. occupation troop levels in the media spotlight. Meanwhile, the Pentagon will use massive air power in Iraq. It's a process already underway, as independent journalist Dahr Jamail -- who worked on the ground in Iraq for more than eight months of the U.S. occupation -- pointed out in a mid-December article titled " An Increasingly Aerial Occupation. " As he put it: " The American media continues to ignore the increasingly devastating air war being waged in Iraq against an ever more belligerent Iraqi resistance -- and, as usual, Iraqi civilians continue to bear the largely unreported brunt of the bombing. " Yes, we should demand swift withdrawal of U.S. troops from Iraq. But, at this point, to do so without also demanding an end to U.S. bombing of Iraq is to fall into a trap laid by the war makers in Washington. This kind of thing has happened before -- with devastating results for people trying to survive a Pentagon air war that was receiving little U.S. media attention. The Nixon administration was eager to divert attention from the slaughter in Southeast Asia to peace talks in Paris -- and to the gradual withdrawal of U.S. troops from Vietnam over a period of more than three years. In general the networks were all too willing to oblige. The negotiations and withdrawals served as diversions from bloody facts of the continuing war. The tonnage of U.S. bombing actually increased -- while the networks' focus moved away from the ongoing bloodshed. At NBC, for instance, " although combat footage was sent to New York from the Saigon bureau every day for two months following the [early November 1968 U.S.] decision [initiating peace negotiations in Paris], it was aired only three times on the evening news, " journalist Edward Jay Epstein noted. " The preceding year, when there had been almost the same number of American combat deaths during the same period, combat stories were shown almost every night of the week. " With the media wisdom determining that the main Vietnam story had become the negotiations, NBC News producer Robert Northshield said that " combat stories seemed like a contradiction and would confuse the audience. " Other networks came to similar conclusions. And the media evasions were to become more extreme as Washington reduced the number of American troops in Vietnam. A typical approach was embodied in edicts handed down at ABC, where the executive producer of the evening news, Av Westin, put out a March 1969 memo that explained: " I have asked our Vietnam staff to alter the focus of their coverage from combat pieces to interpretive ones, pegged to the eventual pull-out of the American forces. This point should be stressed for all hands. " In a telex to the network's Saigon bureau, Westin gave the news of his decree to the news correspondents: " I think the time has come to shift some of our focus from the battlefield, or more specifically American military involvement with the enemy, to themes and stories under the general heading 'We Are on Our Way Out of Vietnam.' " For U.S. media, the Vietnam story had been front-and-center when American soldiers were firmly deployed there. But as the White House gradually pulled troops from Vietnam, the media shifted farther away from the actual destruction of people, villages, farmland and ecosystems -- even while the U.S. air war and coordinated ground assaults in Southeast Asia persisted at a very high rate of killing. During 2006, reductions of U.S. troop levels in Iraq -- accompanied by intensive media spin about prospects for U.S. military disengagement -- are likely even while the already-horrific air war escalates. Those who die under U.S. bombs will rarely make the TV network news or the newspapers back in the United States. The Bush administration is eager to downplay the escalating air war. In 2006, the antiwar movement must do the opposite. Part of this article is adapted from Norman Solomon's new book " War Made Easy: How Presidents and Pundits Keep Spinning Us to Death. " For information, go to: www.WarMadeEasy.com If you wish to be removed from this list, please let us know To join the Liberty Underground news service visit libertyunderground/ where we put out a daily news/opinion piece which goes beyond the narrow range of corporate media propaganda. You may also join our talk group at libertyundergroundtalk/ if you would like to participate. Liberty Underground of Virginia (LUV) is at http://luvsite.org Sign up for the monthly actions and join LUV here: http://luvsite.org/member.html Tell your friends about us because some people just don't get it " When the power of love becomes stronger than the love of power, we will have peace. " Jimi Hendrix Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.