The Shame of US Journalism
Is the Destruction of Iraq, Not Fake
Helicopter Stories
By Christian Christensen
February 06, 2015 "ICH"
- "Bill
Moyers"-
The news that NBC’s Brian Williams
was not, in fact, on a helicopter in
2003 that came under fire from an Iraqi
Rocket-Propelled Grenade (RPG) should come
as a surprise to no one. Williams had
repeated the lie on several occasions over
the course of a decade until a veteran, who
was on the actual helicopter that was
attacked, had enough of Williams’ war porn
and
called the TV host out on Facebook. In a
quite pathetic effort to cover his tracks,
the anchor — who makes in excess of
$10 million per year — claimed that his
fairy tale was, in fact, “a bungled attempt
by me to thank one special veteran and by
extension our brave military men and women”
who had served in Iraq. Twelve years, it
seems, is enough time for Williams to
confuse being on a helicopter that came
under fire from an RPG with being on a
helicopter that did not.
Given that
Williams works for NBC, his participation in
the construction of a piece of fiction
during the US invasion and occupation of
Iraq is apt. US network news, together with
outlets such as CNN,
aggressively cheer-led an invasion
predicated on a massive falsehood: the Iraqi
possession of WMD. What is jarring, however,
is the fact that Williams’ sad attempt to
inject himself into the fabric of the
violence is getting more ink and airplay
than the
non-existence of WMD did back in the
early-to-mid 2000s: a lie that provided the
justification for a military action that has
taken the lives of
hundreds of thousands of Iraqi civilians.
From embedded journalists to
ultra-militaristic news logos and music, US
television news media were more than willing
to throw gas on the invasion fire. “Experts”
in the studio
were invariably ex-generals looking to
pad their pensions, while anti-war activists
(who spoke for sizable portions of the US
and UK populations back in 2003) were
avoided like the plague. After all, what
news organization wants to be
tarred with the “peace” brush when
flag-waiving jingoism sells so incredibly
well? The one-sidedness of coverage,
particularly in the US, bordered on the
morally criminal.
Despite some
limited soul-searching by journalists a
decade after 9/11 and the
invasion of Iraq about the abject
failure of the US news to engage, in a truly
critical fashion, with the falsehoods
peddled by the Bush administration, the
current focus on an inane untruth told by
one celebrity news anchor has overshadowed
the bigger picture about the US media and
Iraq. And I don’t think that’s a
coincidence.
In the post-9/11, pre-invasion period, US
citizens proved to be
spectacularly misinformed about the 9/11
attacks, Iraq, Al Qaeda, Saddam Hussein and
WMD. When the invasion began, many in the US
simply had no clue about what was going on.
Was that all the fault of the US media? No,
but it’s fair to say a pretty large chunk of
the responsibility lay at their feet. Then,
once the bombing and street fighting became
banal and lost its attractiveness to
audiences and advertisers, most US media
outlets simply abandoned an Iraq left to
fend for itself in a vortex of violence,
political instability and corruption. And,
who wants to talk about that when you can
write about Williams upping his War Zone
Reporter street cred? But, if you do want to
hear about violence in Iraq, you can rely on
Fox News to suggest that this particular
hell might also be a liberal conspiracy…
The number of Iraqi citizens who have
died as a direct and indirect by-product of
the US invasion is enough to populate a
mid-sized US city, and thousands continue to
die on a monthly basis in non-imaginary
attacks.
Yet, here we are, over a decade later,
still discussing celebrity fantasies. That
isn’t just bad journalism, it’s an affront
to all who lost their lives in a brutal and
bloody deception. Williams is just sorry
about the wrong thing.
Buying the War: How Big
Media Failed Us