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Getting half the war story from television
news
Rami G. Khouri, the Daily Star, 3/26/03
The first thing I learned from the early
days of the war in Iraq is not to rely solely on either American or Arab
satellite/cable television channels as primary sources of news and
analysis but one should also watch both sides to get a complete view of
events on the ground and in people’s minds. For different reasons, Arab
and American television with a few notable exceptions that confirm the
rule both broadly provide a distorted incomplete picture of events
while accurately reflecting emotional and political sentiments on both
sides.
Every day I scan through 20 different Arab and American TV services. This
is a painful exercise, because the business of reporting and interpreting
the serious news of war has been transformed into a mishmash of emotional
cheerleading, expressions of primordial tribal and national identities,
overt ideological manipulation by governments, and crass commercial
pandering to the masses in pursuit of the audience share needed to sell
advertising.
American television tends to go heavy on the symbols of patriotism, with
American flags fluttering as integral elements of on-screen logos or
backdrops, while emotional collages of war photos are used liberally as
transitions between live reports and advertising breaks. Other signs of
how American TV tends to reflect the pro-war sentiments of the government
and many in society include the tone of most anchors and hosts, the heavy
emphasis on showcasing America’s weapons technology, the preponderance
of ex-military men and women guests, not showing the worst civilian
casualties in Iraq, highlighting US troops’ humanitarian assistance to
Iraqis, and reporters’ and hosts’ use of value-laden and simplistic
expressions like “the good guys” to refer to American troops.
The most unfortunate and professionally disgraceful aspect of US
television coverage, in my view, has been the widespread double assumption
that Iraqis would offer no resistance and would welcome the American Army
with open arms. Some Iraqis will surely do so, but most people in this
region now see the Americans as an invading force that will become an
occupying force. The American media probably reflects widespread American
ignorance about what it means to have your country invaded, occupied,
administered and retooled in someone else’s image. Americans are correct
to assume that their impressive military might will prevail on the
battlefield in the end; yet they also appear totally and bafflingly
oblivious to the visceral workings of nationalism and national identity. I
have seen no appreciation whatsoever in America for the fact that while
Iraqis generally may dislike their vicious and violent Iraqi regime, the
average Iraqi and Arab has a much older, stronger, and more recurring fear
of armies that come into their lands from the West carrying political
promises and bags of rice.
Arab television channels display virtually identical biases and omissions,
including heavy relaying of film of the worst Iraqi civilian casualties,
interviews with guests who tend to be critical of the US, hosts and
anchors who often seem to see their role as debating rather than merely
interviewing American guests, accepting Iraqi and other Arab government
statements at face value without sufficiently probing their total
accuracy, and highlighting the setbacks to the attacking Anglo-American
forces, by means including showing film of captured or dead troops.
We in the Arab world are slightly better off than most Americans, because
we can see and hear both sides, given the easy availability of American
satellite channels throughout this region; most Americans do not have easy
access to Arab television reports, and even if they did they would need to
know Arabic to grasp the full picture.
Two days ago, I better understood the need to see images from both sides.
Arab television stations showed pictures of dead and captured American
troops, many of which were eventually shown on American television. But
Arab channels the same day also showed a horrifying picture that did not
get into American TV: a small Iraqi child who had died during an American
attack, with the back of the child’s skull and head missing. The picture
was as gut-wrenching and disgusting to Arabs as the pictures of the dead
Americans were to Americans.
You had to see both images simultaneously that day to fully grasp the
three most important dimensions of this conflict, in my view: a) the
terrible tragedy of human loss and suffering on both sides; b) that this
was a deliberately chosen American war that could and should have been
avoided; and c) we have only started to witness the human, economic, and
political costs that will be paid by many people and countries before this
adventure plays itself out.
If you’re getting your news and views from either Arab or American
television, it is now very clear: You’re getting only half the story.
Rami G. Khouri is the executive editor of
The Daily Star
http://www.aljazeerah.info
Opinions
expressed in various sections are the sole responsibility of their authors
and they may not represent Al-Jazeerah's.
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