This article was first published in The Providence Journal on September 3, 2010. It has
been reprinted here with kind permission of the author.
Author's Note: This essay was written in late March 2003, following the opening weeks of
the war in Iraq, and it has been sitting in the dark recesses of my computer’s
hard drive ever since. Now, as we read each day of the “winding down”
of the Iraq war, I have looked once again at what I had written during those
heady first days of war, and I find that it has as much resonance today as it
did in 2002. Possibly more. Thus, I presume to offer these somewhat vintage
musings:
When, at some time in future, the war in Iraq winds down and, with it, the
daily media coverage of military events, the media community will surely once
again turn their attention to that ancient ritual of self-examination and self-flagellation,
as it has after virtually every major news issue in modern history. Members
of the media have always been their own sharpest critics, which is not a bad
thing. Indeed, in this instance the process began even as events were unfolding,
such as the controversy surrounding the showing of American POWs on Al-Jazeera
and around the dismissal from Iraq of high-profile correspondents Peter Arnet
and Geraldo Rivera.
The real issue, however, is far more subtle than these obvious controversies,
and ultimately far more important. Simply put, the real issue is whether or
not the American public was well served by the news media during time of war.
Of course, one's individual response to this question rests largely on
one's beliefs and expectations—which, in time of war, are often affected
(even determined) by emotions. Given that media outlets are themselves no more
than the compilation of so many individuals, it is fair to ask what role human
emotions played in the coverage of the war in Iraq.
Here, it is important to make a distinction between "coverage" as
it refers to the work of the field reporters—the men and women who have
supplied the images and words that we at home consume—and as it refers
to the true guardians of the news, that is, the editors, publishers, and other
senior decision-makers. It is this latter group who ultimately determined what
Americans actually saw and heard of the war, what they did not see and hear,
and (even more important) who determined the "tone" in which that
information was conveyed. As to the first group, I believe the American public
would largely agree that their work was brave and professional, perhaps even
unprecedented. Indeed, the death and injury of so many journalists is an only
too painful reminder of the price one pays for access to truth.
But what of the presentation of that truth? What of the people here at home
making the decisions as to how we are to experience war reporting? What of the
choice of visual images, such as unfurling American flags? Of stirringly patriotic
background music? Of particular guest commentators? Of carefully scripted narratives
and the "casual chatter" among studio news anchors that have become
such a familiar part of our news broadcasts? Anyone old enough to remember the
daily coverage of the Vietnam War will immediately recognize that there is a
world of difference between the coverage of that war and the war in Iraq. Indeed,
from the very beginning this latest U.S. military action had about it more the
atmosphere of a campaign than a war—the expectation being that it would
be reasonably brief and follow a somewhat predictable script.
So when coverage did begin, it is perhaps not surprising that many of the men
and women sitting behind desks in New York, Atlanta, and elsewhere projected
less the traditional journalistic persona of a Walter Cronkite or an Eric Sevareid
and more the unbridled enthusiasm of sports fans cheering on their favorite
team. The media template for covering the war in Iraq was less Vietnam and more
the NBA playoffs.
While by no means was this true of all who came before the camera, in the early
days of the war—as U.S. troops moved swiftly toward Baghdad—more than
one prominent anchor conveyed the kind of indefatigable energy and perpetual
smile that suggested to this viewer a team captain pleased with the way his
players were doing on the field. Others were even more overt in their personal
demonstrations of patriotic enthusiasm.
Again, was this appropriate? Was it professional? Or, to ask a more fundamental
question, is this even an issue any longer, if we are to subscribe to the increasingly
popular notion that the media’s role is to provide what the public wants,
how it wants it? Is this what we get when we mix Reality Television with public
opinion polls?
The discussion has only begun, and it will certainly continue for a long while
to come. One need not seek an ultimate answer or even a general consensus, nor
it is likely one will emerge. But if we are to remain a truly fee society, with
a free and liberating media, it is imperative that we continue to ask ourselves
these questions, however painful—or even futile—that might seem.