Backspin
for War
The Convenience of Denial
By Norman Solomon
08/17/07 "ICH
" -- -- The man
who ran CNN's news operation during the invasion of Iraq is
now doing damage control in response to a new documentary's
evidence that he kowtowed to the Pentagon on behalf of the
cable network. His current denial says a lot about how
"liberal media" outlets remain deeply embedded in the
mindsets of pro-military conformity.
In mid-August, the former CNN executive publicly defended
himself against a portion of the "War Made Easy" film (based
on my book of the same name) that has drawn much comment
from viewers since the documentary's release earlier this
summer. As Inter Press Service reported, the movie shows "a
news clip of Eason Jordan, a CNN News chief executive who,
in an interview with CNN, boasts of the network's cadre of
professional 'military experts.' In fact, CNN's retired
military generals turned war analysts were so good, Eason
said, that they had all been vetted and approved by the U.S.
government."
Inter Press called the vetting-and-approval process
"shocking" -- and added that "in a country revered for its
freedom of speech and unfettered press, Eason's comments
would infuriate any veteran reporter who upholds the most
basic and important tenet of the journalistic profession:
independence."
But Eason Jordan doesn't want us to see it that way. And he
has now fired back via an article in IraqSlogger, which
calls itself "the world's premier Iraq-focused Web site."
Jordan runs that Web site.
The journalist who wrote the Aug. 14 article, Christina
Davidson, was in an awkward spot: "War Made Easy" directly
criticizes her boss, and it was the subject of the article.
Davidson's only assessment of the film that wasn't favorable
had to do with its criticisms of Jordan. "While there's no
doubt that journalistic laziness contributed to the
uncritical re-broadcasting of the Bush administration's
official line," she wrote, "Solomon takes it a little too
far in trying to make the case that all of the cable
networks were actively complicit in promoting the war.
Solomon bases his reasoning primarily on one choice quote
from Eason Jordan, former CNN news chief and current CEO of
IraqSlogger's parent company, Praedict."
In fact, the film provides a wide range of evidence that
"all of the cable networks were actively complicit in
promoting the war" -- the result of chronic biases rather
than "journalistic laziness." And CNN, like the rest of the
cable news operations, comes in for plenty of tough scrutiny
in the documentary. As the magazine Variety noted in a
review of "War Made Easy" on Aug. 13, "Fox News is
predictably bashed here, but supposedly neutral CNN gets it
even harder."
CNN is among the news outlets at the core of the myth of
"the liberal media" -- perpetuated, in part, by the fact
that people are often overly impressed by the significance
of rhetorical attacks on some media organizations by more
conservative outlets. (Before his resignation from CNN in
2005, Eason Jordan was himself subjected to denunciations
from the right -- for allegedly skewing news coverage to
curry favor with the Baghdad government during Saddam's rule
and, after the invasion, for reportedly stating that U.S.
troops had targeted some journalists in Iraq.) But antipathy
from right-wing pundits is hardly an indication of
journalistic independence.
Stretching to defend Jordan's CNN record, IraqSlogger
complains that the CEO of its parent company is unfairly
characterized in the film: "Solomon assumes that Jordan was
seeking the blessing of Pentagon officials on the propriety
of his choices, when in fact he was just doing a boss's
duty."
The article then provides a quote from Jordan, supplying his
explanation to set the record straight: "Employers routinely
vet prospective employees with their previous employers. In
these cases, we vetted retired generals to ensure they were
experts in specific military and geographic areas. The
generals were not vetted for political views."
The explanation can only flunk the laugh test.
Eason Jordan was CNN's chief news executive when, on April
20, 2003 (a month after U.S. troops invaded Iraq), he
appeared on CNN and revealed that he'd gotten the Defense
Department's approval of which retired high-ranking officers
to put on the network's payroll. "I went to the Pentagon
myself several times before the war started and met with
important people there and said, for instance -- 'At CNN,
here are the generals we're thinking of retaining to advise
us on the air and off about the war' -- and we got a big
thumbs-up on all of them. That was important."
With war euphoria riding high, Jordan was eager to shore up
his -- and CNN's -- image as cooperative pals of the
nation's military commanders. Now, Jordan is trying some
backspin with the claim that he was merely checking job
references.
"Often journalists blame the government for the failure of
the journalists themselves to do independent reporting," I
note in the documentary. "But nobody forced the major
networks like CNN to do so much commentary from retired
generals and admirals and all the rest of it." What Jordan
did on behalf of CNN "wasn't even something to hide,
ultimately. It was something to say to the American people
on his own network, 'See, we're team players. We may be the
news media, but we're on the same side and the same page as
the Pentagon.' And that really runs directly counter to the
idea of an independent press. And that suggests that we have
some deep patterns of media avoidance when the U.S. is
involved in a war based on lies."
Part of that deadly avoidance comes when powerful news
executives do the bidding of the Pentagon -- and then, later
on, claim that they did nothing of the kind.
Norman Solomon is the author
of War Made Easy: How Presidents and Pundits Keep Spinning
Us to Death. For information and excerpts from the book, go
to: www.WarMadeEasy.com
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