Media Language and War: Manufacturing Convenient Realities
by Ramzy Baroud
In the competitive world of media today, swift and conveniently selective reporting is of prime importance. Google News, for example, claim to scan 4,500 news sources, of which only a few are highlighted as main stories. There are thousands of similar services, all competing to produce a story in the fastest time. Thorough - and thus slower - reporting is relegated and crucial information often appears too little too late.
The Iraq story, which has occupied a huge proportion of headline news for years, serves as a good example of this.
On February 1st, only a few minutes apart, two Iraqi women
detonated themselves in two crowded pet markets in the Iraqi capital.
Authorities said that 98 people were reportedly killed and 200 were
wounded. Eyewitnesses reported a grizzly scene where human and animal
body parts littered the streets, hundreds of feet away from the blasts.
Any thorough analysis of the story would have to examine
several related factors. First, it would need to juxtapose the high
death toll with US and Iraqi governments’ reports of ‘calm’ in the
Baghdad area. The claim of a ‘return to normalcy’ in the Iraqi capital
has been propagated for months, as a way of validating US President’s
Bush’s military ‘surge’.
Even if we buy into the questionable
statistics aimed at hyping the positive outcome of the surge –
questionable because they are only promoted by US and Iraqi military
sources, with vested interests in downplaying the seriousness of the
‘insurgency’ – the violence seems to have shifted from the capital into
northern areas, especially Mosul.
Instead of admitting failure
in halting the violence which has plagued Iraq since the US occupation
of 2003, US and Iraqi authorities resort to a continued and violent
language to confuse and distract from the real issues.
This is
how Alissa J. Rubin began her article for the New York Times (January
31):
- “The unsettled situation in northern Iraq continued Wednesday as
Iraqi troops massed in Mosul to fight Sunni Arab extremistsâ€. This is a
brilliant way to divert attention of the story from the failure of the
surge to manipulate other values, and lumping these values to create a
completely fallacious association: “Sunni Arab extremists.â€
Rubin
further quotes an Iraqi defence ministry spokesman as claiming that the
goal of the military operation is to “oust Al-Qaeda in Iraq from the
city and prevent its fighters from returning.â€
The entry
statements contain a dangerously inaccurate linkage between Arabs (an
increasing oppressed monitory in the Iraqi city), Sunnis (the ‘remnants
of the Saddam regime’ as mindlessly parroted by the media), extremists
of the previous group and al-Qaeda. The New York Times story – which
often sets the standards for reporting in other major US publications –
will have laid the prefect foundation to justify future ethnic
cleansings of Sunni Arabs from the city, should the ‘military
operation’ succeed in ‘driving out’ al-Qaeda militants (the numbers of
which are inflated whenever such exaggeration is necessary).
Returning
to the Baghdad markets’ bombings, the response to this tragedy was
predictably misleading. The Iraqi government issued the usual, if
somewhat bizarre statement, and US officials, including Secretary of
State Condoleezza Rice made fiery condemnations. Enough material was
gathered within the hour to inundate us with hundreds of ‘fresh’ news
stories, which were mostly a rehash of the official statements made in
Baghdad’s Green Zone or in Washington.
CNN online opened one
of its articles, made available soon after the market bombings, with:
“Two mentally disabled women were strapped with explosives Friday and
sent into busy Baghdad markets, where they were blown up by remote
control.â€
The allegation was attributed to an Iraqi government official later in the statement.
The
Iraqi official said that “people referred to the bomber at central
Baghdad's al-Ghazl market as the "crazy woman" and that the bomber at a
second market had an unspecified birth disability.â€
Who are these ‘people’? Did the CNN reporter examine the legitimacy of that claim by interviewing any of them’?
The
involvement of women in this sort of violence is often a critical
addition to the story, especially for Western readers. Readers tend to
pause longer when they hear of a suicide bomber who was also a mother.
They may feel an urge to learn more about the life of such a woman. Was
she an inmate in Abu Ghraib? Tortured? Raped? Did she lose a family
member to the US war, to the Iraqi death squads?
What do the
bombings tell us about the security situation in Baghdad, the success
or failure of the ‘surge’ or the war which is driving people to suicide
in its most brutal manifestations?
Apparently, it tells us nothing.
But
Lt. Col. Steve Stover, spokesman for the Multi-National
Division-Baghdad has an explanation that seems, at least from the point
view of CNN much more relevant than the seemingly unimportant questions
above. "By targeting innocent Iraqis, they (those who dispatched the
‘mentally disabled’ women suicide bombers) show their true demonic
character." Thus, CNN headline: “'Demonic' militants sent women to bomb
markets in Iraq.†In Western media language, Arab women are perpetually
oppressed victims, and they must maintain that role for the story to
read right. Thus, the women bombers cannot be viewed themselves as
extremists, but as victims in the hands of extremists.
Within hours the buzz words on online news were ‘mentally disabled’ and ‘demonic’. But
what does ‘demonic’ mean exactly? What real issues does it address? And
why should such an irrelevant outburst define the deadliest bombing in
Baghdad in months?
Focusing on such extraneous associations -
mindless, mad, demonic women, possessed and acting on the behest of
bearded and cunning al-Qaeda ‘Arab Sunni, extremists’ – does much more
than simply distract from the many military and policy failures in
Iraq. It helps create a parallel universe to that of the real world,
thus presenting a substitute image that shapes and reshapes the
perceptions and imaginations of faraway news consumers.
The
‘real world’ - whether that of Iraq, Palestine, Burma, Kenya or any
other - is a world that, although seemingly chaotic, is very much
rational. It is predicated on the values of cause and affect. What may
seem ‘demonic’ and ‘mad’ to a non-media person should not appear the
same to a journalist. The latter’s responsibility is to narrate,
contextualize and deconstruct with an independent and critical eye, not
merely reiterate what has been told to him by ‘official sources’.
The
corporate media’s depiction of the Gaza story which has been unfolding
for months might be summed up in one overriding headline: Hordes of
Palestinian Breach Gaza Border with Egypt, Israel Concerned over Its
Security.
The imprisonment of 1.5 million Palestinians in Gaza
– where poverty stands at 79 percent and unemployment hovers around a
similar number, and where the majority of the population is ‘food
insecure’ according to United Nations agencies – should have been
depicted first and foremost as a humanitarian disaster compelled by an
Israeli siege. The dates related to the successive stages of the siege
follow a line of Israel’s political, not ‘security’ logic. Any
reasonable timeline of recent events could easily verify that (the
formation of the Hamas government in March 2006, the ousting of the
pro-Israeli Palestinian security apparatus in June 2007 and so on being
followed by dramatic Israeli moves to tighten the siege on Gaza, Hamas’
stronghold).
But little of that seemed relevant to the way the
Gaza story was amply reported. Like the Iraq story, where the two main
trusted sources are the occupation and its puppet Iraqi government, any
story of relevance to Israel and Palestine has to be validated by the
official Israeli source and to a lesser but growing extent by their
allies among Palestinians. The rest are ‘extremist’, radical and
hell-bent on the destruction of the ‘Jewish state.’ Note how the
Jewishness of Israel is often emphasised whenever the word
‘destruction’ or similar words are infused.
This is what
Bridget Johnson wrote in the Seattle PI (January 29) chastising the
United Nations’ Human Rights Council for its condemnation of Israel’s
siege on Gaza:
- “There was zero mention of Hamas' continued rocket
attacks on Israel -- which preceded the cutoff of supplies that has
caused such an uproar -- or Hamas' refusal to renounce violence against
and attempted destruction of the Jewish state.â€
The claims were
preposterous – especially that of a small group’s ‘attempted
destruction’ of a country saturated with nuclear arms. The words
‘destruction’ and ‘Jewish state’ are simply passed as an innocent
‘opinion’, read by thousands of Americans.
There are many notable
omission as well. Hamas has repeatedly called for a mutual ceasefire,
that was also repeatedly rejected or simply ignored by Israel (in the
guise of ‘not negotiating with terrorists’). The siege followed the
democratic elections of Hamas, not the rocket attacks, the intensity of
which corresponded with the number of Palestinians killed in Gaza. Also
conveniently missed is the fact that Palestinians rockets have killed
10 Israelis in several years.
The killing of any civilian anywhere is
tragic, but the facts are rarely contextualised by the media. The
number of Palestinians killed in Gaza as a result of Israeli army
attacks since the Annapolis ‘peace’ conference two months ago is
estimated at 149. Several folds were killed in Gaza since the siege
started early 2006.
Over 60 have died since June 2007 as a result of
either lack of medicines or Israel’s refusal to allow them entry to
better equipped hospitals in the West Bank. This is only the tip of the
iceberg since human suffering cannot only be measured by those who die,
but also those who continue to live in perpetual suffering.
For
Johnson, this is irrelevant, since this is not about right and wrong,
but a war of language. To win the, one must have command over language
– and the way it’s manipulated – and access to platforms that reach the
largest number of readers.
An easy recipe to victory is an intentional
mix of such words as Islamic extremism, al-Qaeda, Hamas, Jewish state,
security, destruction, right to exist, juxtaposed with images or clips
of angry Palestinian youth burning Israeli and American flags,
‘side-by-side’, and you will have an American public and government
standing in eternal solidarity with Israel.
While most US
politicians are self-seeking, power hungry and would do whatever it
takes to be elected, the average American, unlike what it may seem, is
not born ‘pro-Israel’, and ‘anti-Palestinian.’ Most Americans are pro
the manufactured, yet misleading image of Israel that reaches their
homes through television, wait at their doorsteps in the morning and is
beamed to them through the web. Israel has mastery over the language of
the Western media, which, again, helped create a paralleled universe
that has little relation to reality. That alternative universe only
exist on the pages of New York Times, the images of CNN, and the
blabber of Fox News ‘experts’. According to that narrative,
Palestinians, are, like the Iraqi women suicide bombers, ‘demonic’,
‘mad’, ‘extremist’, ‘irrational’, self hating, and all the rest.
To
recognize reality the way it is, one has to re-examine language. While
a critical reader is essential, the task starts in the hand of a
journalist, who must understand his topic not based on simple ‘facts’
and perceptions. Simple facts lead to simple conclusions: Sunnis
extremists, mad Mullah, unruly Palestinians, besieged Israel.
Every
story can be told in three different ways: two by the two main
conflicting parties, and a third by the journalist himself. The
journalist must not compromise on his independence, must not buy into
jargons, mantras, and turn into another official spokesperson.
To
convey a version of a story that is as close the true story as
possible, a media person has to comprehend the context himself, analyse
the motives and follow the line of logic: cause and affect, then,
impart his new realizations - free of self-censorship, coercion or
intimidation. Otherwise, the true story will always be shelved in
favour of re-written official statements and repackaged government and
military press releases, falsely presented as ‘accurate’, ‘independent’
and ‘impartial’.
Mindlessly repeating these official discourses may be
easier and more profitable, but it will make no helpful contribution to
the field of journalism, and to any possibility of truth and justice.
Ramzy
Baroud (www.ramzybaroud.net) is an author and editor of
PalestineChronicle.com. His work has been published in many newspapers
and journals worldwide. His latest book is The Second Palestinian
Intifada: A Chronicle of a People's Struggle (Pluto Press, London).
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