The
Propaganda Multiplier
By
Swiss Propaganda Research
December 20, 2019 "Information
Clearing House"
- It is one of the most important aspects of
our media system, and yet hardly known to
the public: most of the international news
coverage in Western media is provided by
only three global news agencies based in New
York, London and Paris.
The key role played by these agencies means
Western media often report on the same
topics, even using the same wording. In
addition, governments, military and
intelligence services use these global news
agencies as multipliers to spread their
messages around the world.
A study of the Syria war coverage by nine
leading European newspapers clearly
illustrates these issues: 78% of all
articles were based in whole or in part on
agency reports, yet 0% on investigative
research. Moreover, 82% of all opinion
pieces and interviews were in favor of a US
and NATO intervention, while propaganda was
attributed exclusively to the opposite side.
========
The
Propaganda Multiplier:
How Global News
Agencies and
Western Media Report on Geopolitics
Translated by Terje Maloy
“Therefore, you always have to ask yourself:
Why do I get this
specific information, in this specific form,
at this specific moment?
Ultimately, these are always questions about
power.” (*)
Dr. Konrad Hummler, Swiss banking and media
executive
Introduction: “Something strange”
“How
does the newspaper know what it knows?” The
answer to this question is likely to
surprise some newspaper readers: “The main
source of information is stories from news
agencies. The almost anonymously operating
news agencies are in a way the key to world
events. So what are the names of these
agencies, how do they work and who finances
them? To judge how well one is informed
about events in East and West, one should
know the answers to these questions.” (Höhne
1977, p. 11)
A
Swiss media researcher points out: “The news
agencies are the most important suppliers of
material to mass media. No daily media
outlet can manage without them. () So the
news agencies influence our image of the
world; above all, we get to know what they
have selected.” (Blum 1995, p. 9)
In
view of their essential importance, it is
all the more astonishing that these agencies
are hardly known to the public: “A large
part of society is unaware that news
agencies exist at all … In fact, they play
an enormously important role in the media
market. But despite this great importance,
little attention has been paid to them in
the past.” (Schulten-Jaspers 2013, p. 13)
Even
the head of a news agency noted: “There is
something strange about news agencies. They
are little known to the public. Unlike a
newspaper, their activity is not so much in
the spotlight, yet they can always be found
at the source of the story.” (Segbers 2007,
p. 9)
“The Invisible Nerve Center of the Media
System”
So
what are the names of these agencies that
are “always at the source of the story”?
There are now only three global news
agencies left:
-
The American Associated Press
(AP)
with over 4000 employees worldwide. The
AP belongs to US media companies and has
its main editorial office in New York.
AP news is used by around 12,000
international media outlets, reaching
more than half of the world’s population
every day.
-
The quasi-governmental French
Agence France-Presse (AFP)
based in Paris and with around 4000
employees. The AFP sends over 3000
stories and photos every day to media
all over the world.
-
The British agency Reuters
in London, which is privately owned and
employs just over 3000 people. Reuters
was acquired in 2008 by Canadian media
entrepreneur Thomson – one of the 25
richest people in the world – and merged
into
Thomson Reuters,
headquartered in New York.
In
addition, many countries run their own news
agencies. These include, for instance, the
German DPA, the Austrian APA, and the Swiss
SDA. When it comes to international news,
however, national agencies usually rely on
the three global agencies and simply copy
and translate their reports.
The three global news agencies Reuters, AFP
and AP, and the three national agencies of
the German-speaking countries of Austria (APA),
Germany (DPA) and Switzerland (SDA).
Wolfgang Vyslozil, former managing director
of the Austrian APA, described the key role
of news agencies with these words: “News
agencies are rarely in the public eye. Yet
they are one of the most influential and at
the same time one of the least known media
types. They are key institutions of
substantial importance to any media system.
They are the invisible nerve center that
connects all parts of this system.” (Segbers
2007, p.10)
Small abbreviation, great effect
However, there is a simple reason why the
global agencies, despite their importance,
are virtually unknown to the general public.
To quote a Swiss media professor: “Radio and
television usually do not name their
sources, and only specialists can decipher
references in magazines.” (Blum 1995, P. 9)
The
motive for this discretion, however, should
be clear: news outlets are not particularly
keen to let readers know that they haven’t
researched most of their contributions
themselves.
The
following figure shows some examples of
source tagging in popular European
newspapers. Next to the agency abbreviations
we find the initials of editors who have
edited the respective agency report.
News agencies as sources in newspaper
articles
Occasionally, newspapers use agency material
but do not label it at all. A study in 2011
from the Swiss Research Institute for
the Public Sphere and Society at the
University of Zurich came to the following
conclusions (FOEG 2011):
“Agency contributions are exploited
integrally without labeling them, or they
are partially rewritten to make them appear
as an editorial contribution. In addition,
there is a practice of ’spicing up‘ agency
reports with little effort: for example,
unpublished agency reports are enriched with
images and graphics and presented as
comprehensive articles.”
The
agencies play a prominent role not only in
the press, but also in private and public
broadcasting. This is
confirmed
by Volker Braeutigam, who worked for the
German state broadcaster ARD for ten years
and views the dominance of these agencies
critically:
“One
fundamental problem is that the newsroom at
ARD sources its information mainly from
three sources: the news agencies DPA/AP,
Reuters and AFP: one German/American, one
British and one French. () The editor
working on a news topic only needs to select
a few text passages on the screen that he
considers essential, rearrange them and glue
them together with a few flourishes.”
Swiss
Radio and Television (SRF), too, largely
bases itself on reports from these agencies.
Asked by viewers why a peace march in
Ukraine was not reported, the editors
said:
“To date, we have not received a single
report of this march from the independent
agencies Reuters, AP and AFP.”
In
fact, not only the text, but also the
images, sound and video recordings that we
encounter in our media every day, are mostly
from the very same agencies. What the
uninitiated audience might think of as
contributions from their local newspaper or
TV station, are actually copied reports from
New York, London and Paris.
Are You Tired Of
The Lies And
Non-Stop Propaganda?
|
Some
media have even gone a step further and
have, for lack of resources, outsourced
their entire foreign editorial office to an
agency. Moreover, it is well known that many
news portals on the internet mostly publish
agency reports (see e.g., Paterson 2007,
Johnston 2011, MacGregor 2013).
In the
end, this dependency on the global agencies
creates a striking similarity in
international reporting: from Vienna to
Washington, our media often report the same
topics, using many of the same phrases – a
phenomenon that would otherwise rather be
associated with »controlled media« in
authoritarian states.
The
following graphic shows some examples from
German and international publications. As
you can see, despite the claimed
objectivity, a slight (geo-)political bias
sometimes creeps in.
“Putin threatens”, “Iran provokes”, “NATO
concerned”, “Assad stronghold”: Similarities
in content and wording due to reports by
global news agencies.
The role of correspondents
Much
of our media does not have own foreign
correspondents, so they have no choice but
to rely completely on global agencies for
foreign news. But what about the big daily
newspapers and TV stations that have their
own international correspondents? In
German-speaking countries, for example,
these include newspapers such NZZ, FAZ,
Sueddeutsche Zeitung, Welt, and public
broadcasters.
First
of all, the size ratios should be kept in
mind: while the global agencies have several
thousand employees worldwide, even the Swiss
newspaper NZZ, known for its international
reporting, maintains only 35 foreign
correspondents (including their business
correspondents). In huge countries such as
China or India, only one correspondent is
stationed; all of South America is covered
by only two journalists, while in even
larger Africa no-one is on the ground
permanently.
Moreover, in war zones, correspondents
rarely venture out. On the Syria war, for
example, many journalists “reported” from
cities such as Istanbul, Beirut, Cairo or
even from Cyprus. In addition, many
journalists lack the language skills to
understand local people and media.
How do
correspondents under such circumstances know
what the “news” is in their region of the
world? The main answer is once again: from
global agencies. The Dutch Middle East
correspondent Joris Luyendijk has
impressively described how correspondents
work and how they depend on the world
agencies in his book
“People Like Us: Misrepresenting the Middle
East”:
“I had
imagined correspondents to be
historians-of-the-moment. When something
important happened, they would go after it,
find out what was going on, and report on
it. But I didn’t go off to find out what was
going on; that had been done long before. I
went along to present an on-the-spot report.
The
editors in the Netherlands called when
something happened, they faxed or emailed
the press releases, and I’d retell them in
my own words on the radio, or rework them
into an article for the newspaper. This was
the reason my editors found it more
important that I could be reached in the
place itself than that I knew what was going
on. The news agencies provided enough
information for you to be able to write or
talk your way through any crisis or summit
meeting.
That’s
why you often come across the same images
and stories if you leaf through a few
different newspapers or click the news
channels.
Our
men and women in London, Paris, Berlin and
Washington bureaus – all thought that wrong
topics were dominating the news and that we
were following the standards of the news
agencies too slavishly.
The
common idea about correspondents is that
they ‘have the story’, () but the reality is
that the news is a conveyor belt in a bread
factory. The correspondents stand at the end
of the conveyor belt, pretending we’ve baked
that white loaf ourselves, while in fact all
we’ve done is put it in its wrapping.
Afterwards, a friend asked me how I’d
managed to answer all the questions during
those cross-talks, every hour and without
hesitation. When I told him that, like on
the TV-news, you knew all the questions in
advance, his e-mailed response came packed
with expletives. My friend had relalized
that, for decades, what he’d been watching
and listening to on the news was pure
theatre.” (Luyendjik 2009, p. 20-22, 76,
189)
In
other words, the typical correspondent is in
general not able to do independent research,
but rather deals with and reinforces those
topics that are already prescribed by the
news agencies – the notorious “mainstream
effect”.
In
addition, for cost-saving reasons many media
outlets nowadays have to share their few
foreign correspondents, and within
individual media groups, foreign reports are
often used by several publications – none of
which contributes to diversity in reporting.
“What the agency does not
report, does not take place”
The
central role of news agencies also explains
why, in geopolitical conflicts, most media
use the same original sources. In the Syrian
war, for example, the
“Syrian Observatory for Human Rights”
– a dubious one-man organization based in
London – featured prominently. The media
rarely inquired directly at this
“Observatory”, as its operator was in fact
difficult to reach, even for journalists.
Rather, the “Observatory” delivered its
stories to global agencies, which then
forwarded them to thousands of media
outlets, which in turn “informed” hundreds
of millions of readers and viewers
worldwide. The reason why the agencies, of
all places, referred to this strange
“Observatory” in their reporting – and who
really financed it – is a question that was
rarely asked.
The
former chief editor of the German news
agency DPA, Manfred Steffens, therefore
states in his book “The Business of News”:
“A
news story does not become more correct
simply because one is able to provide a
source for it. It is indeed rather
questionable to trust a news story more just
because a source is cited. () Behind the
protective shield such a ’source‘ means for
a story, some people are inclined to spread
rather adventurous things, even if they
themselves have legitimate doubts about
their correctness; the responsibility, at
least morally, can always be attributed to
the cited source.” (Steffens 1969, p. 106)
Dependence on global agencies is also a
major reason why media coverage of
geopolitical conflicts is often superficial
and erratic, while historic relationships
and background are fragmented or altogether
absent. As put by Steffens: “News agencies
receive their impulses almost exclusively
from current events and are therefore by
their very nature ahistoric. They are
reluctant to add any more context than is
strictly required.” (Steffens 1969, p. 32)
Finally, the dominance of global agencies
explains why certain geopolitical issues and
events – which often do not fit very well
into the US/NATO narrative or are too
“unimportant” – are not mentioned in our
media at all: if the agencies do not report
on something, then most Western media will
not be aware of it. As pointed out on the
occasion of the 50th anniversary of the
German DPA: “What the agency does not
report, does not take place.” (Wilke 2000,
p. 1)
“Adding questionable stories“
While
some topics do not appear at all in our
media, other topics are very prominent –
even though they shouldn’t actually be:
“Often the mass media do not report on
reality, but on a constructed or staged
reality. () Several studies have shown that
the mass media are predominantly determined
by PR activities and that passive, receptive
attitudes outweigh active-researching ones.”
(Blum 1995, p. 16)
In
fact, due to the rather low journalistic
performance of our media and their high
dependence on a few news agencies, it is
easy for interested parties to spread
propaganda and disinformation in a
supposedly respectable format to a worldwide
audience. DPA editor Steffens warned of this
danger:
“The
critical sense gets more lulled the more
respected the news agency or newspaper is.
Someone who wants to introduce a
questionable story into the world press only
needs to try to put his story in a
reasonably reputable agency, to be sure that
it then appears a little later in the
others. Sometimes it happens that a hoax
passes from agency to agency and becomes
ever more credible.” (Steffens 1969, p. 234)
Among
the most active actors in “injecting”
questionable geopolitical news are the
military and defense ministries. For
example, in 2009 the head of the American
news agency AP, Tom Curley,
made public
that the Pentagon employs more than 27,000
PR specialists who, with a budget of nearly
$ 5 billion a year, are working the media
and circulating targeted manipulations. In
addition, high-ranking US generals had
threatened that they would “ruin” him and
the AP if the journalists reported too
critically on the US military.
Despite – or because of? – such threats our
media regularly publish dubious stories
sourced to some unnamed “informants” from
“US defense circles”.
Ulrich
Tilgner, a veteran Middle East correspondent
for German and Swiss television, warned in
2003, shortly after the Iraq war, of acts of
deception by the military and the role
played by the media:
“With
the help of the media, the military
determine the public perception and use it
for their plans. They manage to stir
expectations and spread deceptive scenarios.
In this new kind of war, the PR strategists
of the US administration fulfill a similar
function as the bomber pilots. The special
departments for public relations in the
Pentagon and in the secret services have
become combatants in the information war.
For
their deception maneuvers, the US military
specifically uses the lack of transparency
in media coverage. The way they spread
information, which is then picked up and
distributed by newspapers and broadcasters,
makes it impossible for readers, listeners
or viewers to trace the original source.
Thus, the audience will fail to recognize
the actual intention of the military.” (Tilgner
2003, p. 132)
What
is known to the US military, would not be
foreign to US intelligence services. In a
remarkable report
by British Channel 4, former CIA officials
and a Reuters correspondent spoke candidly
about the systematic dissemination of
propaganda and misinformation in reporting
on geopolitical conflicts:
Former
CIA officer and whistleblower
John Stockwell
said of his work in the Angolan war: “The
basic theme was to make it look like an
[enemy] aggression. So any kind of story
that you could write and get into the media
anywhere in the world, that pushed that
line, we did. One third of my staff in this
task force were propagandists, whose
professional career job was to make up
stories and finding ways of getting them
into the press. () The editors in most
Western newspapers are not too skeptical of
messages that conform to general views and
prejudices. () So we came up with another
story, and it was kept going for weeks. ()
But it was all fiction.”
Fred Bridgland
looked back on his work as a war
correspondent for the Reuters agency: “We
based our reports on official
communications. It was not until years later
that I learned that a little CIA
disinformation expert had sat in the US
embassy and had composed these communiqués
that bore absolutely no relationship at all
to truth. () Basically, and to put it very
crudely, you can publish any old crap and it
will get into the newspaper.”
And
former CIA analyst
David MacMichael
described his work in the Contra War in
Nicaragua with these words: “They said our
intelligence of Nicaragua was so good that
we could even register when someone flushed
a toilet. But I had the feeling that the
stories we were giving to the press came
straight out of the toilet.” (Hird
1985)
Of
course, the intelligence services also have
a large number of
direct contacts
in our media, which can be “leaked”
information to if necessary. But without the
central role of the global news agencies,
the worldwide synchronization of propaganda
and disinformation would never be so
efficient.
Through this “propaganda multiplier”,
dubious stories from PR experts working for
governments, military and intelligence
services reach the general public more or
less unchecked and unfiltered. The
journalists refer to the news agencies and
the news agencies refer to their sources.
Although they often attempt to point out
uncertainties (and hedge themselves) with
terms such as “apparent”, “alleged” and the
like – by then the rumor has long been
spread to the world and its effect has taken
place.
The Propaganda Multiplier: Governments,
military and intelligence services using
global news agencies to disseminate their
messages to a worldwide audience.
As the New York Times
reported …
In
addition to global news agencies, there is
another source that is often used by media
outlets around the world to report on
geopolitical conflicts, namely the major
publications in Great Britain and the US.
News
outlets like the New York Times or the BBC
may have up to 100 foreign correspondents
and additional external employees. However,
as Middle East correspondent Luyendijk
points out:
“Our
news teams, me included, fed on the
selection of news made by quality media like
CNN, the BBC, and the
New York Times. We did that on the
assumption that their correspondents
understood the Arab world and commanded a
view of it – but many of them turned out not
to speak Arabic, or at least not enough to
be able to have a conversation in it or to
follow the local media. Many of the top dogs
at CNN, the BBC, the Independent, the
Guardian, the New Yorker, and the NYT were
more often than not dependent on assistants
and translators.” (Luyendijk p. 47)
In
addition, the sources of these media outlets
are often not easy to verify (“military
circles”, “anonymous government officials”,
“intelligence officials” and the like) and
can therefore also be used for the
dissemination of propaganda. In any case,
the widespread orientation towards the major
Anglo-Saxon publications leads to a further
convergence in the geopolitical coverage in
our media.
The
following figure shows some examples of such
citation based on the Syria coverage of the
largest daily newspaper in Switzerland,
Tages-Anzeiger. The articles are all from
the first days of October 2015, when Russia
for the first time intervened directly in
the Syrian war (US/UK sources are
highlighted):
Frequent citation of major British and US
media, exemplified by the Syria war coverage
of Swiss daily newspaper Tages-Anzeiger in
October 2015.
The desired narrative
But
why do journalists in our media not simply
try to research and report independently of
the global agencies and the Anglo-Saxon
media? Middle East correspondent Luyendijk
describes his experiences:
“You
might suggest that I should have looked for
sources I could trust. I did try, but
whenever I wanted to write a story without
using news agencies, the main Anglo-Saxon
media, or talking heads, it fell apart. ()
Obviously I, as a correspondent, could tell
very different stories about one and the
same situation. But the media could only
present one of them, and often enough, that
was exactly the story that confirmed the
prevailing image.” (Luyendijk p.54ff)
Media
researcher Noam Chomsky has described this
effect in his essay
“What makes the mainstream media mainstream”
as follows: “If you leave the official line,
if you produce dissenting reports, then you
will soon feel this. () There are many ways
to get you back in line quickly. If you
don’t follow the guidelines, you will not
keep your job long. This system works pretty
well, and it reflects established power
structures.” (Chomsky 1997)
Nevertheless, some of the leading
journalists continue to believe that nobody
can tell them what to write. How does this
add up? Media researcher Chomsky
clarifies
the apparent contradiction:
“[T]he
point is that they wouldn’t be there unless
they had already demonstrated that nobody
has to tell them what to write because they
are going say the right thing. If they had
started off at the Metro desk, or something,
and had pursued the wrong kind of stories,
they never would have made it to the
positions where they can now say anything
they like. The same is mostly true of
university faculty in the more ideological
disciplines. They have been through the
socialization system.” (Chomsky 1997)
Ultimately, this “socialization system”
leads to a journalism that no longer
independently researches and critically
reports on geopolitical conflicts (and some
other topics), but seeks to consolidate the
desired narrative through appropriate
editorials, commentary, and interviews.
Conclusion: The “First Law of Journalism”
Former
AP journalist Herbert Altschull called it
the First Law of Journalism: “In all press
systems, the news media are instruments of
those who exercise political and economic
power. Newspapers, periodicals, radio and
television stations do not act
independently, although they have the
possibility of independent exercise of
power.” (Altschull 1984/1995, p. 298)
In
that sense, it is logical that our
traditional media – which are predominantly
financed by advertising or the state –
represent the geopolitical interests of the
transatlantic alliance, given that both the
advertising corporations as well as the
states themselves are dependent on the
transatlantic economic and security
architecture led by the United States.
In
addition, the key people of our leading
media are – in the spirit of Chomsky’s
“socialization system” – often themselves
part of transatlantic elite networks. Some
of the most important institutions in this
regard include the US Council on Foreign
Relations (CFR), the Bilderberg Group, and
the Trilateral Commission, all of which
feature many prominent journalists (see
in-depth study of these groups).
Most
well-known publications, therefore, may
indeed be seen as a kind of “establishment
media”. This is because, in the past, the
freedom of the press was rather theoretical,
given significant entry barriers such as
broadcasting licenses, frequency slots,
requirements for financing and technical
infrastructure, limited sales channels,
dependence on advertising, and other
restrictions.
It was
only due to the Internet that Altschull’s
First Law has been broken to some extent.
Thus, in recent years a high-quality,
reader-funded journalism
has emerged,
often outperforming traditional media in
terms of critical reporting. Some of these
“alternative” publications already reach a
very large audience, showing that the “mass”
does not have to be a problem for the
quality of a media outlet.
Nevertheless, up to now the traditional
media has been able to attract a solid
majority of online visitors, too. This, in
turn, is closely linked to the hidden role
of news agencies, whose up-to-the-minute
reports form the backbone of most online
news sites.
Will
“political and economic power”, according to
Altschull’s Law, retain control over the
news, or will “uncontrolled news” change the
political and economic power structure? The
coming years will show.
Case study: Syria war
coverage
As
part of a case study, the Syria war coverage
of nine leading daily newspapers from
Germany, Austria and Switzerland were
examined for plurality of viewpoints and
reliance on news agencies. The following
newspapers were selected:
-
For Germany: Die Welt,
Süddeutsche Zeitung (SZ), and
Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung (FAZ)
-
For Switzerland: Neue
Zürcher Zeitung (NZZ), Tagesanzeiger
(TA), and Basler Zeitung (BaZ)
-
For Austria: Standard,
Kurier, and Die Presse
The
investigation period was defined as October
1 to 15, 2015, i.e. the first two weeks
after Russia’s direct intervention in the
Syrian conflict. The entire print and online
coverage of these newspapers was taken into
account. Any Sunday editions were not taken
into account, as not all of the newspapers
examined have such. In total, 381 newspaper
articles met the stated criteria.
In a
first step, the articles were classified
according to their properties into the
following groups:
-
Agencies: Reports from
news agencies (with agency code)
-
Mixed: Simple reports
(with author names) that are based in
whole or in part on agency reports
-
Reports: Editorial
background reports and analyses
-
Opinions/Comments:
Opinions and guest comments
-
Interviews: Interviews
with experts, politicians etc.
-
Investigative:
Investigative research that reveals new
information or context
The
following Figure 1 shows
the composition of the articles for the nine
newspapers analyzed in total. As can be
seen, 55% of articles were news agency
reports; 23% editorial reports based on
agency material; 9% background reports; 10%
opinions and guest comments; 2% interviews;
and 0% based on investigative research.
Figure 1: Types of articles (total; n=381)
The
pure agency texts – from short notices to
the detailed reports – were mostly on the
Internet pages of the daily newspapers: on
the one hand, the pressure for breaking news
is higher than in the printed edition, on
the other hand, there are no space
restrictions. Most other types of articles
were found in both the online and printed
editions; some exclusive interviews and
background reports were found only in the
printed editions. All items were collected
only once for the investigation.
The
following Figure 2 shows
the same classification on a per newspaper
basis. During the observation period (two
weeks), most newspapers published between 40
and 50 articles on the Syrian conflict
(print and online). In the German newspaper
Die Welt there were more (58), in
the Basler Zeitung and the Austrian
Kurier, however, significantly less
(29 or 33).
Depending on which newspaper, the share of
agency reports is almost 50% (Welt,
Süddeutsche, NZZ, Basler Zeitung), just
under 60% (FAZ, Tagesanzeiger), and 60 to
70% (Presse, Standard, Kurier). Together
with the agency-based reports, the
proportion in most newspapers is between
approx. 70% and 80%. These proportions are
consistent with previous media studies
(e.g., Blum 1995, Johnston 2011, MacGregor
2013, Paterson 2007).
In the
background reports, the Swiss newspapers
were leading (five to six pieces), followed
by Welt, Süddeutsche and
Standard (four each) and the other
newspapers (one to three). The background
reports and analyzes were in particular
devoted to the situation and development in
the Middle East, as well as to the motives
and interests of individual actors (for
example Russia, Turkey, the Islamic State).
However, most of the commentaries were to be
found in the German newspapers (seven
comments each), followed by Standard
(five), NZZ and Tagesanzeiger
(four each). Basler Zeitung did not
publish any commentaries during the
observation period, but two interviews.
Other interviews were conducted by
Standard (three) and Kurier
and Presse (one each).
Investigative research, however, could not
be found in any of the newspapers.
In
particular, in the case of the three German
newspapers, a journalistically problematic
blending of opinion pieces and reports was
noted. Reports contained strong expressions
of opinion even though they were not marked
as commentary. The present study was in any
case based on the article labeling by the
newspaper.
Figure 2: Types of articles per newspaper
The
following Figure 3 shows
the breakdown of agency stories (by agency
abbreviation) for each news agency, in total
and per country. The 211 agency reports
carried a total of 277 agency codes (a story
may consist of material from more than one
agency). In total, 24% of agency reports
came from the AFP; about 20% each by the DPA,
APA and Reuters; 9% of the SDA; 6% of the
AP; and 11% were unknown (no labeling or
blanket term “agencies”).
In
Germany, the DPA, AFP and Reuters each have
a share of about one third of the news
stories. In Switzerland, the SDA and the AFP
are in the lead, and in Austria, the APA and
Reuters.
In
fact, the shares of the global agencies AFP,
AP and Reuters are likely to be even higher,
as the Swiss SDA and the Austrian APA obtain
their international reports mainly from the
global agencies and the German DPA
cooperates closely with the American AP.
It
should also be noted that, for historical
reasons, the global agencies are represented
differently in different regions of the
world. For events in Asia, Ukraine or
Africa, the share of each agency will
therefore be different than from events in
the Middle East.
Figure 3: Share of news agencies, total
(n=277) and per country
In the
next step, central statements were used to
rate the orientation of editorial opinions
(28), guest comments (10) and interview
partners (7) (a total of 45 articles). As
Figure 4 shows, 82% of the
contributions were generally US/NATO
friendly, 16% neutral or balanced, and 2%
predominantly US/NATO critical.
The
only predominantly US/NATO-critical
contribution was an op-ed in the Austrian
Standard on October 2, 2015,
titled: “The strategy of regime change has
failed. A distinction between ‚good‘ and
‚bad‘ terrorist groups in Syria makes the
Western policy untrustworthy.”
Figure 4: Orientation of editorial opinions,
guest comments, and interviewees (total;
n=45).
The
following Figure 5 shows
the orientation of the contributions, guest
comments and interviewees, in turn broken
down by individual newspapers. As can be
seen, Welt, Süddeutsche Zeitung, NZZ,
Zürcher Tagesanzeiger and the Austrian
newspaper Kurier presented
exclusively US/NATO-friendly opinion and
guest contributions; this goes for FAZ
too, with the exception of one
neutral/balanced contribution. The
Standard brought four US/NATO friendly,
three balanced/neutral, as well as the
already mentioned US/NATO critical opinion
contributions.
Presse was the only one of the examined
newspapers to predominantly publish
neutral/balanced opinions and guest
contributions. The Basler Zeitung
published one US/NATO-friendly and one
balanced contribution. Shortly after the
observation period (October 16, 2015),
Basler Zeitung also published an
interview with the President of the Russian
Parliament. This would of course have been
counted as a contribution critical of the
US/NATO.
Figure 5: Basic orientation of opinion
pieces and interviewees per newspaper
In a
further analysis, a full-text keyword search
for “propaganda” (and word combinations
thereof) was used to investigate in which
cases the newspapers themselves identified
propaganda in one of the two geopolitical
conflict sides, USA/NATO or Russia (the
participant “IS/ISIS” was not considered).
In total, twenty such cases were identified.
Figure 6 shows the result:
in 85% of the cases, propaganda was
identified on the Russian side of the
conflict, in 15% the identification was
neutral or unstated, and in 0% of the cases
propaganda was identified on the USA/NATO
side of the conflict.
It
should be noted that about half of the cases
(nine) were in the Swiss NZZ, which
spoke of Russian propaganda quite frequently
(“Kremlin propaganda”, “Moscow propaganda
machine”, “propaganda stories”, “Russian
propaganda apparatus” etc.), followed by
German FAZ (three), Welt
and Süddeutsche Zeitung (two each)
and the Austrian newspaper Kurier
(one). The other newspapers did not mention
propaganda, or only in a neutral context (or
in the context of IS).
Figure 6: Attribution of propaganda to
conflict parties (total; n=20).
Conclusion
In
this case study, the geopolitical coverage
in nine leading European newspapers was
examined for diversity and journalistic
performance using the example of the Syrian
war.
The
results confirm the high dependence on the
global news agencies (63 to 90%, excluding
commentaries and interviews) and the lack of
own investigative research, as well as the
rather biased commenting on events in favor
of the US/NATO side (82% positive; 2%
negative), whose stories were not checked by
the newspapers for any propaganda.
About the authors: Swiss Propaganda Research
(SPR) is an independent research group
investigating geopolitical propaganda in
Swiss and international media. You can
contact us
here.
English translation provided by Terje
Maloy.
This article was originally published by
"Swiss
Propaganda Research"
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Published (EN): March 2019
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