“Anna
Beats Bush”
Iraq, Iran, & the Vanishing Context
in American News
By Anthony DiMaggio
08/20/07 "Zmag"
-- -It’s no coincidence that the American
corporate media is the wealthiest communication
systems in the world, yet also one of the worst in
terms of educating its citizens. Extraordinary
riches require extraordinary efforts to divert
public attention from extreme inequality and the
democratic deficit under which Americans suffer.
Despite the abundance of media sources throughout
this country, Americans still endure a staggering
ignorance regarding the reality of U.S. foreign
policy. Horrendous media coverage no doubt accounts
for much of this ongoing tragedy. While there may
be more information available today than at any time
in history (in light of the rise of cable news, the
Internet, and other technological developments), the
quality of that news leaves much to be desired. News
reports today do not provide the public with the
context needed to evaluate the events happening
around them in a critical way. This lack of context
is of no surprise to those who understand that media
coverage is designed to indoctrinate and divert
attention, rather than to educate. The prolific
comic George Carlin has this insight to share
concerning the American media’s commitment to class
warfare:
“The real owners [are] the big wealthy business
interests that control things and make all the
important decisions. Forget the politicians. The
politicians are put there to give you the idea that
you have freedom of choice. You don’t. You have no
choice. You have owners. They own you. They own
and control the corporations. They’ve long since
bought and paid for the Senate, the Congress, the
state houses, the city halls, the judges. And they
own all the big media companies so they control just
about all the news and information you get to hear.
They spend billions every year lobbying to get what
they want. Well we know what they want. They want
more for themselves and less for everyone else.
They don’t want a population of citizens capable of
critical thinking. They don’t want well informed,
well educated people. That’s against their
interests. They want obedient workers.”
There’s an easy enough way to create apathetic,
obedient consumers: simply take away any meaningful
content from the media system upon which they rely.
This is perhaps best seen in the mass media’s
extreme reliance on junk food and fluff “news,” at
the expense of real stories that might have some
direct relevance to our lives. A brief survey of
television news coverage puts this reality into
better perspective. A poll done by the
Pew
Research Center
showed that, in the sample period studied (the week
of February 12th, 2007), “While
6% of coverage on all media sectors (newspapers,
network TV, cable TV, radio and the Internet) was
devoted to [Anna Nicole] Smith's death, fully 20% of
cable news focused on this story. At the height of
the media's feeding frenzy (the two day period
immediately following Smith's death), 24% of all
coverage and 50% of cable news was devoted to the
story.” The effects of such disproportionate
coverage did not go unnoticed by viewers or
researchers. When asked who they had heard the most
about in the news, the “most memorable people”
listed in the study was Anna Nicole (recognized by
38% of viewers), followed by George Bush (28%),
Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton (both 3%), and
Nancy Pelosi (1%).[1]
In other words, Anna Nicole Smith had more name
recognition than all of the other highest
scoring figures combined. This is particularly
disturbing for those with even a minimal commitment
to democracy, considering that the Anna Nicole story
ranked at the very bottom of the list in terms
stories viewers felt were “deserving more of my
time” (only 3% of viewers felt Anna Nicole deserved
more of their time, as opposed to 15% and 12%
respectively who felt the Iraq war and the 2008
campaign deserved more time). Viewers can look
forward to a deluge of celebrity gossip “news” if
they tune into the cable news networks this summer.
A brief review of CNN shows that in the 99
days of summer from early May through early August,
viewers could find a news feature on one of three
celebrities (Lindsay Lohan, Paris Hilton, and Nicole
Richie) on average once every other day. That's a
pretty extraordinary frequency considering the
stories covered just three people. While cable news
may be the worst medium to follow for those who are
interested learning something from the news, this
hardly excuses print news, which has also performed
pitifully in terms of publishing meaningful stories
and information. A summary of the following stories
gives us a better picture of how much is missing
from print media.
1.
Hugo Chavez & Iran: A New York Times
story from early August repeated complaints from
Argentinean Jews about Chavez’s close ties with
their government, in light of Venezuela’s close
relationship with Iran.[2]
As the story explained, such complaints come at a
particularly sensitive time, in light of the Iranian
President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s supposed promise to
“wipe Israel off the map.”[3]
Of course, Chavez has also been routinely demonized
by American media outlets for his alleged
“totalitarian” and “anti-American” disposition,
which is thought to justify the Bush
administration’s aggressive and belligerent rhetoric
and actions against his government and people.[4]
What you
won’t hear:
Such stories consistently and conveniently leave out
the fact that 1. far from an authoritarian, Chavez
has been democratically elected twice by the people
of Venezuela in heavily monitored elections. Over
72% of Venezuelans voted in the 2006 election, in
which Chavez received nearly 63% of the vote - over
20% more than Bush received in 2004 when he claimed
to have earned the “political capital” of the
American people. Chavez is quite popular due to
his populist disposition and his commitment to
redistributive politics, much to the chagrin of
America’s corporate and political elites. 2. Chavez
is not “anti-American," at least if we understand
"America" to include the 300 million Americans who
inhabit it. Far from being a hate-monger, Chavez
has actually expressed deep admiration and sympathy
for the American people. It is the Bush
administration that originally incited antagonism
toward Chavez, not the other way around. It doesn’t
take a genius, but rather access to decent news
coverage, to understand why. It is now known that
the Bush administration conspired with Venezuelan
military leaders during a failed 2002 coup that
briefly overthrew Chavez, and ordered for the
dissolution of the country’s democratically elected
National Assembly, its constitution, and Supreme
Court. Chavez was quickly returned to power,
however, after a popular uprising against the
conspirators. Good luck finding such revelations
regularly reported in the American press –
hysterical anti-Chavez rhetoric plays much better
with American elites who are more concerned with
destroying Venezeula's democracy than preserving it.
Of course, one can only imagine what American
reporters would say about Chavez if he had taken
part in a coup aimed at overthrowing the Bush
administration. At the very least, a military
invasion and overthrow against Venezuela would be
considered quite legitimate amongst American media
reporters, owners, and editors. The equivalent
prescription – that the Bush administration must be
overthrown by Venezuela – is considered unthinkable
in the minds of America’s politico-media elite.
Better to leave such double standards unaddressed
though, as they fail to flatter American political
and economic elites.
2. The
Anti-War Movement:
An August 7th story in the Chicago
Tribune reported on the activities of anti-war
protestors throughout America’s heartland.[5]
The article focused on the activities of two
protestors, Ashley Casale and Michael Israel, who
are traveling to towns and cities across the country
spreading their message against the occupation of
Iraq.
What you
won’t hear:
Don’t expect to actually hear anything substantive
about why Casale and Israel are protesting
the war – those reasons are nowhere to be found in
the Tribune piece. While the story is full
of references to various anti-war banners carried by
the protestors reading “Peace,” “Bring the Troops
Home,” and “War is not the Answer,” there is not a
single coherent argument against the war visible
throughout the 1,000-word piece. The lack of a
context for understanding anti-war arguments is not
isolated to the Tribune’s coverage. A
content analysis of articles printed in 2007 (from
January to July) in the New York Times
discussing withdrawal from Iraq reveals a similar
pattern. At a time when the majority of Americans
are opposed to the occupation and favor withdrawal
within a year, there are virtually no criticisms of
the war (from quoted sources) reflected in the
New York Times coverage. Criticisms of the
occupation as driven by imperialism or a desire to
control Iraqi oil are not mentioned a single time in
the coverage. Neither is the challenge that the
U.S. is conducting an illegal occupation. No source
is cited arguing for withdrawal on grounds
condemning U.S. terrorism and American
responsibility for the deaths of hundreds of
thousands of Iraqi civilians. Majority Iraqi
public opposition to the occupation is never
mentioned by a quoted source in a single story
either. Concern with excess American military
casualties is also left out of quoted sources
entirely. Even pragmatic assessments that the war is
unwinnable or too costly are not mentioned at all.
In fact, the only criticisms that appear at all
amongst quoted sources in 2007 coverage include just
one mention of Iraqi nationalism as a motivating
force for rebellion (in a story on Iraqi political
leader Moqtada al-Sadr), and three references to
American public opposition to the war. These four
quoted sources arguing for withdrawal throughout
2007 can hardly be characterized as fulfilling the
requirements of a robust debate over the reasons for
staying in or leaving Iraq. On the other hand,
arguments for the war from quoted sources are well
represented in the New York Times coverage.
Sources who oppose withdrawal are cited regularly
arguing that Iraq faces civil war in light of
current conditions or withdrawal (a claim that shows
up in 23% of stories). In addition, those who
oppose withdrawal cite the threat of Iraqi
terrorists and Iraqi militias/insurgents in 19% and
8% respectively in the Times articles. Far
and away, the largest number of justifications for
remaining in Iraq come from those who reference the
importance of supporting the troops. References to
the troops show up in 51% of all the Times
stories. It is perhaps fitting that the "support
the troops" rationale is the most commonly appearing
defense of the war in stories on withdrawal, at
least if the point of media coverage is to deter
meaningful public policy debate. The "support
the troops" claim is clearly the most vacuous of all
the pro-war arguments. In-and-of-itself, the claim
doesn't constitute a serious defense of the
occupation, considering that both pro and anti-war
critics cite the need to "support the troops" when
arguing in favor of, and in opposition to,
withdrawal. Even President Bush has admitted that
both pro-and anti-war advocates support the troops.
Such references, then, can hardly serve as the crux
of a substantive pro-war argument.
3. Iran,
the U.S., & the Nuclear "Threat"
Iran's alleged nuclear
threat to the United States and its allies has been
a mainstay of American media coverage for at least
the last four years.[6]
This is clearly the case when reviewing major media
coverage. A content analysis of the Washington
Post's news stories, editorials, and op-ed
coverage of Iran's alleged nuclear weapons shows a
pattern of deception, one-sidedness, and
manipulation. A review of over 230 Post news
stories, 31 editorials, and 58 op-eds from 2003
through 2007 shows that assertions suggesting Iran
may or is developing nuclear weapons appeared twice
as often as claims or assertions that Iran is not or
may not be developing such weapons. The paper's op-eds
and editorials are even more slanted, as 90% of
editorials and 93% of op-eds suggest Iran is
developing nuclear weapons, as opposed to o% of
editorials and 16% of op-eds suggesting Iran may not
be developing such weapons. Belligerent rhetoric is
also used far more often in regards to the Iranian
"threat" (of which there is no evidence of to date)
than to the far larger U.S. and Israeli military
threat to Iran (which has been announced vocally and
shamelessly over and over throughout the American
and Israeli press). Belligerent terms are applied
twice as often in regards to Iranian development of
nuclear weapons. Such terms, portray Iran as a
"threat," and discuss the "fear" invoked by a
potentially nuclear armed Iran, as well as the
"danger" of such a development – as contrasted with
similar references to a U.S. "threat," to the "fear"
of a U.S. or Israeli attack, or the "danger" both
countries pose to Iran.
What you
won't hear:
While there is plenty of vilification featured
throughout the stories on Iranian WMD, you can
forget about reading a level-headed review of the
actual intelligence available discussing whether
Iran is actually developing such weapons. While the
International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) is
referenced in 61% of the Post's editorials
and 29% of its op-eds, the IAEA's actual conclusion
that there is "no evidence" Iran is developing
nuclear weapons is referenced in just 1 editorial
(3% of all editorials) and in only 1 op-ed (2% of
all op-eds). Similarly, the IAEA is cited in 73% of
all the Post's news stories on Iranian
weapons, despite the fact that the paper tilts by a
ratio of 2:1 in favor of assertions that Iran is
developing nuclear weapons. It appears that the
IAEA itself, rather than its actual conclusions, has
propaganda value for U.S. media and political
elites. Don't bother looking for damning evidence
implicating the U.S. for double standards and
hypocrisy in dealing with Iran either – you won't
find them. References to the fact that it was the
U.S. itself that originally supported Iranian
uranium enrichment show up in just 1% of the
Post's news stories, and in just 3% of all op-eds,
and none of the paper’s editorials. The same goes
for admissions that the United States is undertaking
a similar project of enriching its own uranium for
use in a new generation of American nuclear weapons
(the major distinction, however, is that the U.S.
openly admits to its project, while Iran has
admitted to no such program). The very activity
that U.S. leaders are condemning Iran for secretly
pursuing is arrogantly advocated and pursued by the
United States (the only country to have ever used
nuclear weapons on civilians), although one wouldn't
know any of this from looking at the coverage. U.S.
enrichment of uranium for use in nuclear weapons
receives not a single mention in Post
editorials and op-eds, and receives only fleeting
mention in the paper's news stories.[7]
Similarly, while the global nuclear
non-proliferation treaty (preventing its signatories
from developing nuclear weapons) is mentioned in
regards to Iran in 38% of the Post's news
stories, 39% of editorials, and 14% of op-eds, the
treaty is not brought up in a single news story, and
appears in only 3% of editorials and 2% of all op-eds
in terms of it its application to the United
States. The conclusion couldn't be more obvious to
the astute reader – though both the U.S. and Iran
have both signed the agreement, it only
realistically applies to the U.S. International
non-proliferation law is meant only for American
enemies: the United States is bound by no such
rules, even when it has ratified them.
Any
honest reading of the results above can lead to no
other conclusion: U.S. media coverage has reached
appalling levels. Short of conducting a major
research project like one of those undertaken above,
it is very difficult for citizens to acquire the
critical information needed to arrive at realistic
assessments of what is going on in the world. How
can citizens make informed decisions regarding
public policy when they are subject to
systematically skewed, propagandistic news coverage?
America's parochial press is not designed to promote
debate or to educate, but rather to repeat the
official line. Citizens (outside the intellectual,
political, and business elite) are expected to
conform to the ideal of the apathetic consumers who
know little about international affairs, and care
even less. Such ignorance is encouraged in a mass
media more concerned with selling products than
engaging citizens. As Noam Chomsky cogently argues:
in a democracy, "You can no longer control people by
violence. You can’t just throw them into a torture
chamber. You have to find other means. One means is
propaganda. Another means is rabid consumerism, to
try to drive people into massive consumption. In the
United States the economy has suffered under the
neoliberal policies, as has been the case worldwide,
and is maintained to a high extent by consumer
spending…From infancy children are deluged by
propaganda telling them: buy, buy, buy, and so
on…These are devices to try to control the
populations and ensure that the private tyrannies
endure." The American press is not producing
enlightened citizens, but rather alienated
consumers. Whether the public will stand up and
rebel against such contempt, however, is a question
yet to be answered.
Anthony
DiMaggio is the author of the book, Mass Media, Mass
Propaganda: Examining American News in the "War on
Terror" (forthcoming December 2007). He has taught
Middle East Politics and American Government at
Illinois State University. He can be reached at
adimag2@uic.edu
Notes
[1]Pew
Research Center, "Iraq Most Closely Followed
and Covered News Story," 23 February 2007,
[2]Alexei
Barrionuevo, "Jews
in Argentina Wary of Nation's Ties to Chávez,"
New York Times, 7 August 2007.
[3]Even
the claim that Ahmadinejad has threatened to
"wipe Israel off the map" appears to be a
distortion originating in Western
propaganda, rather than in the public
record. Numerous scholars and reporters
such as Juan Cole and Jonathan Cook have
countered the standard claim that Iran is
calling for the destruction of Israel,
citing Ahmadinejad's actual statement, which
quoted the late Ayatollah Khomeini as
promising that Israel's illegal occupation
of Jerusalem would "vanish from the page of
time." To make such a claim in opposition
to an occupation is quite different from
calling for a state's destruction. All this,
not to mention that Iran’s supreme leader
Ayatollah Khameini has public supported the
Saudi plan calling for a two state
settlement between Israel and Palestine, in
explicit recognition of the right of Israel
to exist.
[4]For
a recent sample of anti-Chavez pieces, see
the following: Kevin Sullivan, "Chavez Casts
Himself as the Anti-Bush," Washington
Post, 15 March 2005, 1(A).; Dale Van Atta,
"World's Most Dangerous Leaders," Readers
Digest, July 2007, > and
Fox News, "The Iron Fist of Hugo Chavez," 4
February 2005,
<http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,146472,00.html>
[5]Colleen
Mastony, "Peace March Becomes Somewhat Less
Lonely," Chicago Tribune, 7 August
2007.
[6]For
a brief sample of recent mainstream media
pieces on Iran, see: Robin Wright, "As U.S.
Steps up Pressure on Iran, After Effects
Worry Allies," Washington Post, 16
August 2007; and Sheryl Gay Stolberg, "Bush
Differs with Karzai on Iran," New York
Times, 7 August 2007.
[7]I
have only found a single story referencing
U.S. enrichment of uranium for use in
nuclear weapons from 2003-2007 (within
stories talking about Iran), and that story
wasn't even primarily about Iran and nuclear
weapons, but focused rather on the U.S.
enrichment efforts. The 690 word story
referenced Iran just once in 12 paragraphs:
Walter Pincus, "U.S. Plan for New Nuclear
Weapons Advances," Washington Post,
20 October 2006, 11(A).