Setting
the limits of invasion journalism
In his latest column for the New Statesman, John Pilger
reports an unprecedented study by three UK universities
which found that, contrary to myth, 80 per cent of the
media followed "the government line" on Iraq and only 12
per cent challenged it. He analyses the subtleties and
insidious nature of censorship in free societies and
asks why this is neglected by many media colleges.
By John Pilger
12/07/06 "Information
Clearing House" -- -- On 14 November, Bridget
Ash wrote to the BBC’s Today programme asking why the
invasion of Iraq was described merely as “a conflict”. She
could not recall other bloody invasions reduced to “a
conflict”. She received this reply:
Dear Bridget
You may well disagree, but I think there’s a big difference
between the aggressive “invasions” of dictators like Hitler
and Saddam and the “occupation”, however badly planned and
executed, of a country for positive ends, as in the
Coalition effort in Iraq.
Yours faithfully,
Roger Hermiston
Assistant Editor, Today
In demonstrating how censorship
works in free societies and the double standard that props
up the facade of “objectivity” and “impartiality”, Roger
Hermiston’s polite profanity offers a valuable exhibit. An
invasion is not an invasion if “we” do it, regardless of the
lies that justified it and the contempt shown for
international law. An occupation is not an occupation if
“we” run it, no matter that the means to our “positive ends”
require the violent deaths of hundreds of thousands of men,
women and children, and an unnecessary sectarian tragedy.
Those who euphemise these crimes are those Arthur Miller had
in mind when he wrote: “The thought that the state... is
punishing so many innocent people is intolerable. And so the
evidence has to be internally denied.” Miller might have
been less charitable had he referred directly to those whose
job it was to keep the record straight.
The ubiquity of Hermiston’s view
was illuminated the day before Bridget Ash wrote her letter.
Buried at the bottom of page seven in the Guardian’s media
section was a report on an unprecedented study by the
universities of Manchester, Liverpool and Leeds on the
reporting leading up to and during the invasion of Iraq.
This concluded that more than 80 per cent of the media
unerringly followed “the government line” and less than 12
per cent challenged it. This unusual, and revealing,
research is in the tradition of Daniel Hallin at the
University of California, whose pioneering work on the
reporting of Vietnam, The Uncensored War, saw off the myth
that the supposedly liberal American media had undermined
the war effort.
This myth became the justification for the modern era of
government “spin” and the “embedding” (control) of
journalists. Devised by the Pentagon, it was
enthusiastically adopted by the Blair government. What
Hallin showed – and was pretty clear at the time in Vietnam,
I must say – was that while “liberal” media organisations
such as the New York Times and CBS Television were critical
of the war’s tactics and “mistakes”, even exposing a few of
its atrocities, they rarely challenged its positive motives
– precisely Roger Hermiston’s position on Iraq.
Language was, and is, crucial.
The equivalent of the BBC’s sanitised language in Iraq today
is little different from America’s “noble cause” in Vietnam,
which was followed by the “tragedy” of America’s “quagmire”
– when the real tragedy was suffered by the Vietnamese. The
word “invasion” was effectively banned. What has changed?
Well, “collateral damage”, the obscene euphemism invented in
Vietnam for the killing of civilians, no longer requires
quotation marks in a Guardian editorial.
What is refreshing about the new
British study is its understanding of the corporate media’s
belief in and protection of the benign reputation of western
governments and their “positive motives” in Iraq, regardless
of the demonstrable truth. Piers Robinson from the
University of Manchester, who led the research team, says
that the “humanitarian rationale” became the main
justification for the invasion of Iraq and was echoed by
journalists. “This is the new ideological imperative shaping
the limits of the media,” he says. “And the Blair government
has been very effective at promoting it among liberal
internationalists in the media.” It was the 1999 Kosovo
campaign, promoted by Blair and duly echoed as a
“humanitarian intervention”, that set the limits for modern
invasion journalism.
The Kosovo adventure has long
been exposed as a fraud that ridicules warnings of a “new
genocide like the Holocaust”, though little of this has been
reported. It as if our long trail of blood is forever
invisible, intellectually and morally. Certainly, it is time
those who run media colleges began to alert future
journalists to their insidious grooming
First published in the New
Statesman
Comment Guidelines
Be succinct, constructive and relevant to the story. We encourage engaging, diverse and meaningful commentary. Do not include personal information such as names, addresses, phone numbers and emails. Comments falling outside our guidelines – those including personal attacks and profanity – are not permitted.
See our complete Comment Policy and use this link to notify us if you have concerns about a comment. We’ll promptly review and remove any inappropriate postings.