Media Spin
on Iraq: We’re Leaving (Sort of)
By Norman Solomon
07/26/07 "AlterNet"
-- - -- Last week, a media advisory from “The NewsHour
with Jim Lehrer” announced a new series of interviews on the
PBS show that will address “what Iraq might look like when
the U.S. military leaves.”
A few days later, Time magazine published a cover story
titled “Iraq: What will happen when we leave.”
But it turns out, what will happen when we leave is that we
won't leave.
Urging a course of action that's now supported by “the best
strategic minds in both parties,” the Time story calls for
“an orderly withdrawal of about half the 160,000 troops
currently in Iraq by the middle of 2008.” And: “A force of
50,000 to 100,000 troops would dig in for a longer stay to
protect America's most vital interests ... ”
On Iraq policy, in Washington, the differences between
Republicans and Democrats -- and between the media's war
boosters and opponents -- are often significant. Yet they're
apt to mask the emergence of a general formula that could
gain wide support from the political and media
establishment.
The formula's details and timelines are up for grabs. But
there's not a single “major” candidate for president willing
to call for withdrawal of all U.S. forces -- not just
“combat” troops -- from Iraq, or willing to call for a
complete halt to U.S. bombing of that country.
Those candidates know that powerful elites in this country
just don't want to give up the leverage of an ongoing U.S.
military presence in Iraq, with its enormous reserves of oil
and geopolitical value. It's a good bet that American media
and political powerhouses would fix the wagon of any
presidential campaign that truly advocated an end to the
U.S. war in -- and on -- Iraq.
The disconnect between public opinion and elite opinion has
led to reverse perceptions of a crisis of democracy. As war
continues, some are appalled at the absence of democracy
while others are frightened by the potential of it. From the
grassroots, the scarcity of democracy is transparent and
outrageous. For elites, unleashed democracy could jeopardize
the priorities of the military-industrial-media complex.
Converging powerful forces in Washington -- eager to at
least superficially bridge the gap between grassroots and
elite priorities -- are likely to come up with a game plan
for withdrawing from Iraq without withdrawing from Iraq.
Scratch the surface of current media scenarios for a U.S.
pullout from Iraq, and you're left with little more than
speculation -- fueled by giant dollops of political
manipulation. In fact, strategic leaks and un-attributed
claims about U.S. plans for withdrawal have emerged
periodically to release some steam from domestic antiwar
pressures.
Nearly three years ago -- with discontent over the war
threatening to undermine President Bush's prospects for a
second term -- the White House ally Robert Novak floated a
rosy scenario in his nationally syndicated column that
appeared on Sept. 20, 2004. “Inside the Bush administration
policy-making apparatus, there is strong feeling that U.S.
troops must leave Iraq next year,” he wrote. “This
determination is not predicated on success in implanting
Iraqi democracy and internal stability. Rather, the
officials are saying: Ready or not, here we go.”
Novak's column went on to tell readers: “Well-placed sources
in the administration are confident Bush's decision will be
to get out.” Those well-placed sources were, of course,
unnamed. And for good measure, Novak followed up a month
before the November 2004 election with a piece that recycled
the gist of his Sept. 20 column and chortled: “Nobody from
the administration has officially rejected my column.”
This is all relevant history today as news media are
spinning out umpteen scenarios for U.S. withdrawal from
Iraq. The game involves dangling illusionary references to
“withdrawal” in front of the public.
But realities on the ground -- and in the air -- are quite
different. A recent news dispatch from an air base in Iraq,
by Charles J. Hanley of the Associated Press, provided a
rare look at the high-tech escalation underway. “Away from
the headlines and debate over the 'surge' in U.S. ground
troops,” AP reported on July 14, “the Air Force has quietly
built up its hardware inside Iraq, sharply stepped up
bombing and laid a foundation for a sustained air campaign
in support of American and Iraqi forces.”
In contrast to the spun speculation so popular with U.S.
media outlets like Time and the PBS “NewsHour,” the AP
article cited key information: “Squadrons of attack planes
have been added to the in-country fleet. The air
reconnaissance arm has almost doubled since last year. The
powerful B1-B bomber has been recalled to action over Iraq.”
This kind of development fits a historic pattern -- one that
had horrific consequences during the war in Vietnam and,
unless stopped, will persist for many years to come in Iraq.
Assessing the distant mirror of the Vietnam War, the
narration of the new documentary “War Made Easy” (based on
my book of the same name) spells out a classic White House
maneuver: “Even when calls for withdrawal have eventually
become too loud to ignore, officials have put forward
strategies for ending war that have had the effect of
prolonging it -- in some cases, as with the Nixon
administration's strategy of Vietnamization, actually
escalating war in the name of ending it.”
Between mid-1969 and mid-1972, American troop levels dropped
sharply in Vietnam -- while the deadly ferocity of American
bombing spiked upward.
The presence of large numbers of U.S. troops in Iraq during
the next years is a likelihood fogged up by fanciful media
stories asserting -- without tangible evidence -- that
American troops will “pull out” and the U.S. military will
“leave” Iraq. The spin routinely glides past such matters as
the hugely militarized U.S. embassy in Baghdad, the numerous
permanent-mode U.S. bases in Iraq, and the vast array of
private-and-often-paramilitary contractors at work there
courtesy of U.S. taxpayers. And there's the rarely mentioned
prize of massive oil reserves that top officials in
Washington keep their eyes on.
The matter of U.S. bases in Iraq is a prime example of how
events on Capitol Hill have scant effects on war machinery
in the context of out-of-control presidential power. “The
House voted overwhelmingly on Wednesday to bar permanent
United States military bases in Iraq,” the New York Times
reports. But the war makers in the nation's capital still
hold the whip that keeps lashing the dogs of war.
As the insightful analyst Phyllis Bennis points out: “The
bill states an important principle opposing the
'establishment' of new bases in Iraq and 'not to exercise
United States control of the oil resources of Iraq.' But it
is limited in several ways. It prohibits only those bases
which are acknowledged to be for the purpose of permanently
stationing U.S. troops in Iraq; therefore any base
constructed for temporarily stationing troops, or rotating
troops, or anything less than an officially permanent
deployment, would still be accepted. Further, the bill says
nothing about the need to decommission the existing U.S.
bases already built in Iraq; it only prohibits
'establishing' military installations, implying only new
ones would be prohibited.”
Despite all the talk about how members of Congress have been
turning against the war, few are clearly advocating a
genuine end to U.S. military intervention in Iraq. Media
outlets will keep telling us that the U.S. government is
developing serious plans to “leave” Iraq. But we would be
foolish to believe those tall tales. The antiwar movement
has an enormous amount of grassroots work to do -- changing
the political terrain of the United States from the bottom
up -- before the calculus of political opportunism in
Washington determines that it would be more expedient to end
the U.S. occupation of Iraq than to keep it going under one
guise or another.
The new documentary film "War Made Easy: How Presidents and
Pundits Keep Spinning Us to Death," based on Norman
Solomon's book of the same title, is now available on DVD.
For information about the full-length movie, produced by the
Media Education Foundation and and narrated by Sean Penn, go
to:
www.WarMadeEasyTheMovie.org .
© 2007 Independent Media Institute
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