The Deeper
Truths Journalists Are Blind To
By Jonathan Cook
February
21, 2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- As I have found out myself, there is nothing
media outlets like less than criticising other media
publications or the “profession” of journalism. It’s
not really surprising. The credibility of
a corporate media depends precisely on their not
breaking ranks and not highlighting the structural
constraints a “free press” operates under.
So one has
to commend the Boston Globe for publishing
this piece by Stephen Kinzer, a former foreign
correspondent, warning that the media is not telling
us the truth about what is going on in Syria.
But those
constraints are also why Kinzer glosses
over deeper problems with the coverage of Syria.
This
[most western reporting of Syria] is convoluted
nonsense, but Americans cannot be blamed for
believing it. We have almost no real information
about the combatants, their goals, or their
tactics. Much blame for this lies with our
media.
Under
intense financial pressure, most American
newspapers, magazines, and broadcast networks
have drastically reduced their corps of foreign
correspondents. Much important news about the
world now comes from reporters based in
Washington. In that environment, access and
credibility depend on acceptance of official
paradigms. Reporters who cover Syria check with
the Pentagon, the State Department, the White
House, and think tank ‘experts.’ After a spin on
that soiled carousel, they feel they have
covered all sides of the story. This form of
stenography produces the pabulum that passes for
news about Syria.
This is
more of the “cock-up, not conspiracy” justification
for skewed reporting. If only there was more money,
more space, more time, more reporters, the media
would not simply spew the government’s official
line. Guardian journalist Nick Davies wrote a whole
book, Flat Earth News, making much the same claim –
what he called “churnalism”. I reviewed it at length
here. Journalists like this kind of argument
because it shifts responsibility for their failure
to report honestly on to faceless penny-pinchers in
the accounting department.
And yet,
there are journalists reporting from the ground in
Syria – for example, Martin Chulov of the Guardian –
who have been just as unreliable as those based in
Washington. In fact, many of the points Kinzer
raises about the reality in Syria echo recent
articles by Seymour Hersh, who is writing from the
US, not Damascus. But he, of course, has been
shunted to the outer margins of media discourse,
publishing in the London Review of Books.
Media
coverage of Iraq was just as woefully misleading
during the sanctions period in the 1990s, when I
worked in the foreign department at the Guardian,
and later in the build-up of the US-led attack on
Iraq. In those days, when there was no shortage of
resources being directed at foreign reporting, the
coverage also closely hewed to the official view of
the US and UK governments.
The problem
is not just that foreign reporting is being stripped
of financial resources as the media find it harder
to make a profit from their core activities. It is,
as Ed Herman and Noam Chomsky pointed out long ago
in their book Manufacturing Consent, that the
corporate media is designed to reflect the interests
of power – and the corporations that control our
media are power. They select journalists
through a long filtering process (school,
university, journalism training, apprenticeships)
precisely designed to weed out dissidents and those
who think too critically. Only journalists whose
worldview aligns closely with those in power reach
the top.
None of
this is in Kinzer’s piece. It is doubtful that he,
a member of the media elite himself, would recognise
such an analysis of the journalist’s role. As
Chomsky once told British journalist Andrew Marr,
when Marr reacted with indignation at what he
inferred to be an accusation from Chomsky that he
was self-censoring:
I don’t
say you’re self-censoring. I’m sure you believe
everything you’re saying. But what I’m saying
is, if you believed something different you
wouldn’t be sitting where you’re sitting.
That
understanding of journalism does not depend on
conspiracy, but nor does it accept that it is all
about cock-up. It posits a much more interesting,
and plausible, scenario that journalists get into
positions of influence to the extent that they
are unlikely to rock the boat for elite interests.
The closer they get to power, the more likely they
are to reflect its values. Much like politicians, in
fact.
That’s why
extremely few senior journalists have read
Manufacturing Consent. And why among the Guardian
journalists I worked with, though none seemed
familiar with his huge body of work, there were few
intellectuals who were referred to in more derisive
terms than Chomsky.
Jonathan Cook is a Nazareth- based journalist
and winner of the Martha Gellhorn Special Prize
for Journalism - See more at: http://www.jonathan-cook.net/blog/2016-02-21/the-deeper-truths-journalists-are-blind-to/#sthash.HGTHqd92.dpuf
Jonathan
Cook is a Nazareth- based journalist and winner of
the Martha Gellhorn Special Prize for Journalism
http://www.jonathan-cook.net/ |