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The American
Media in Wartime
by Brit Hume
Brit Hume was named FOX Newss managing editor and chief Washington,
D.C., correspondent in January 1997. He is host of Special Report with
Brit Hume and a regular panelist on FOX News Sunday. Prior to joining
FOX News, he was a broadcast journalist with ABC News for 23 years, including
11 years as Capitol Hill correspondent and eight years as chief White
House correspondent. He began his career as a newspaper reporter with
the Hartford Times, the Baltimore Evening Sun and United Press International.
Mr. Hume was awarded an Emmy for his coverage of the Gulf War in 1991,
and has twice been named The Best in the Business by the American
Journalism Review. A graduate of the University of Virginia, he resides
in Washington with his wife, Kim Schiller Hume, who is bureau chief for
FOX Newss Washington bureau.
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The following is adapted from a speech delivered at a Hillsdale College
seminar in Dearborn, Michigan, on April 28, 2003.
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The American
Media in Wartime
Im going
to begin by reading some samples from the American media coverage of the
Iraq conflict. I admit to finding them delightful. Before the war began,
my colleague and friend, the ever-voluble Chris Matthews of NBC, said
that if we go to war in Iraq, [It] will join the Bay of Pigs, Vietnam,
Desert One, Beirut and Somalia in the history of military catastrophe.
NBC analyst General Barry McCaffrey predicted that, if there were a battle
for Baghdad, the U.S. could take a couple to three thousand casualties.
R. W. Johnny
Apple, the legendary New York Times war correspondent, political correspondent
and food and wine writer, wrote on March 29: With every passing
day, it is more evident that the allies made two gross military misjudgments
in concluding that coalition forces could safely bypass Basra and Nasiriya
and that Shiite Muslims in southern Iraq would rise up against Saddam
Hussein. This, you will recall, was during the time when there was
a slowdown in the conflict, and it was widely being referred to as a quagmire
by those who couldnt tell the difference between a quagmire and
a sandstorm.
Seymour Hersh,
who really did make a name for himself in Vietnam he broke the
My Lai massacre story and who still is read and believed in some
quarters, wrote this in the New Yorker in the April 7 issue (published
on March 31): According to a dozen or so military men I spoke to,
Rumsfeld simply failed to anticipate the consequences of protracted warfare.
He put Army and Marine units in the field with few reserves and an insufficient
number of tanks and other armored vehicles.... Its a stalemate
now, the former intelligence official told me.
Even the normally
sensible Tom Friedman of the New York Times wrote on April 9, relatively
late in the U.S. advance on Baghdad, that America had gone from
expecting applause [by the Iraqi people] to being relieved that there
is no overt hostility.
My favorite
quote and this is one you might have missed was written
by Merissa Marr of Reuters. (Reuters, you recall, cant bring itself
to use the words terrorists or terrorism
even to describe the atrocities of September 11. To do so, it says, would
break the sacred principle of neutrality.) On April 1, she wrote about
the Saddam Hussein spokesman who would come to be known widely as Comical
Ali: Despite poorly-lit surroundings and a sea of microphones
often crowding the view, Iraqi Information Minister Mohammed Saeed al-Sahaf
has become something of a global television star.... As the dream of a
quick, clean war and cheering Iraqis evaporated last week, America and
its allies have been furiously tweaking their media strategy. But how
can they hope to gain the upper hand?
I suppose that
reading these quotes now is a little unfair, like shooting fish in a barrel.
But I do so to illustrate the point that the majority of the American
media who were in a position to comment upon the progress of the war in
the early going, and even after that, got it wrong. They didnt get
it just a little wrong. They got it completely wrong. And many of these
same people had gotten it wrong in much the same way a year-and-a-half
earlier, portraying U.S. forces in Afghanistan as facing the most inhospitable
kind of terrain imaginable, not to mention the most dug-in and difficult-to-find
enemy ever confronted.
I remember
joking on FOX News Sunday during the Afghanistan conflict that pretty
soon someone in the media would report that our bombing of the enemy was
actually helping the enemy. And sure enough, about a week later, there
was a story in the Washington Post based on interviews conducted
in a refugee camp on the Afghanistan-Pakistan border the thrust
of which was that U.S. bombing was making the Taliban more popular! The
underlying point of such a story is that bombing never works. We often
hear that. Of course, bombing did work in Afghanistan, just as it did
in Kosovo and in the Gulf War. But the idea that bombing never works lives
on in the media. This level of imperviousness to reality is remarkable.
It is consistent and it continues over time.
I think about this phenomenon a lot. I worry and wonder about the fact
that so many people can get things so wrong, so badly, so often, so consistently
and so repeatedly. And I think that there are ideas lurking under the
surface that help to explain why this happens. In brief, when it comes
to the exercise of American power in the world, particularly military
power, there seems to be a suspicion among those in the media indeed,
a suspicion bordering on a presumption of illegitimacy, incompetence
and ineffectiveness.
The Medias
Response to 9/11
Think about
the cycle weve just been through. The U.S., attacked on September
11, 2001, by a terrorist gang, was immediately assailed by speculative
ruminations in the media about why they hate us. You see,
the idea that those who attacked America were themselves illegitimate
indeed, even evil is not the kind of thing that springs
to the minds of the people responsible for Newsweek cover stories. What
springs to their minds is that weve done something wrong.
After that
initial period of hand-wringing, we suffered through quite a bit of media
discussion about how 9/11 was really about the Israelis and the Palestinians,
and about how the President really has to solve that problem in order
to win the war on terrorism. This is a little like saying that before
he can push a domestic agenda, hes got to find a cure for cancer.
The next thing
we heard was all the bad news about how, if we tried to overthrow the
Taliban in Afghanistan by force of arms, the Arab street would
rise up. Has anything in contemporary history ever been more overrated
than the Arab street? I remember Peter Jennings telling me at the beginning
of the Gulf War that a likely outcome of that war would be the overthrow
of President Mubarak in Egypt, because there would be an uprising in the
Arab street. Well, there was no such uprising and Mubarak is still in
place. Nor was there an uprising in the Arab street during the war in
Afghanistan. Nor was there such an uprising during the war in Iraq
in spite of some of the most over-hyped coverage of civilian casualties
and of American military miscalculations that you can imagine, especially
on the Arab network al-Jazeera.
The attitude
of the media in times of war is all the more puzzling when considered
in the context of what America has done in the world over the last century
and in particular, what the American military has done. It entered
World War I toward the end, tipped the balance, and saved our friends
and allies. In World War II, it led the free world to victory against
genuinely monstrous evils. After that war, it gave aid and comfort to
defeated enemies on a scale never before seen. Considering its actions
in Japan alone, the U.S. should go down in history as one of the most
benevolent victorious powers in history. Japan owes its economy and democracy
to Douglas MacArthur, and to the leaders of the American government who
put him there to do what he did. But it didnt stop with Japan. There
was the Marshall Plan. During the entire 45-year Cold War, America projected
military power over western Europe and in many far-flung outposts elsewhere,
such as South Korea. It protected the people who had been our allies,
and many who had been our enemies, from the next great evil, Soviet communism
an evil, I might add, which many in our media refused to recognize
as such. Then, upon the victorious end of the Cold War, one of the first
things the U.S. did was work feverishly to make sure that the reunification
of Germany went forward in a way that would work and be effective.
Skepticism
or Cynicism?
This is the
record. It is available and known to the world. Its not particularly
controversial. Yet even within this context, ideas have somehow germinated
among those in the media such that when America embarks on something like
the Iraq war, there are all kinds of tremulous suspicions and fears about
what we might really be doing. How many times have we heard it suggested
that were in Iraq for the oil? Does this make any sense at all?
If we are there for the oil, why didnt we keep Kuwaits oil
after the Gulf War? The best and simplest explanation is that were
just not that kind of country. Indeed, it turns out that its very
difficult in todays world to get a democracy behind the invasion
and annexation of another country even for oil! Democratic people
simply arent very enthusiastic about that kind of undertaking.
This is an
important political distinction, often lost on the media. Democratic countries
operate within the restraints imposed by the will of their people. The
truly dangerous countries on this earth are all dictatorships, which,
needless to say, are common in the Middle East. Dictatorships, for example,
are behind terrorism. Sometimes they export it, sometimes they support
it, and sometimes as in the case of Saudi Arabia they do
both. Thats what were dealing with in the war on terror. And
yet, when the fats in the fire and conflict arises with some dictatorship
in that part of the world or with another member of the Axis of
Evil the doubts and suspicions in the American media (and in the
Western media generally) all seem to attach to the U.S.
Ted Koppel,
one of the finest journalists of our generation, said something the other
day that quite astonished me. Ted was an embedded reporter in Iraq, and
after he came home he had this fascinating conversation at Harvard,
I believe with Marvin Kalb. He spoke with real generosity about
the American officers and enlisted men that he dealt with, and how able
they were and how good they were and how effective they were. But he went
out of his way to make a point of distinguishing between them and the
policy makers in Washington. About the latter he said, Im
very cynical, and I remain very cynical, about the reasons for getting
into this war.
Cynical? We
journalists pride ourselves, and properly so, on being skeptical. Thats
our job. But I have always thought a cynic is a bad thing to be. A cynic,
as I understand the term, means someone who interprets others actions
as coming from the worst motives. Its a knee-jerk way of thinking.
A cynic, it is said, understands the price of everything and the value
of nothing. So I dont understand why Ted Koppel would say with such
pride and ferocity he said it more than once that he is
a cynic. But I think he speaks for many in the media, and I think its
a very deep problem.
The Media and
Iraq
One of the
problems we in the news business face, of course, is that sometimes theres
not much news. And theres an old saying in newsrooms: No news
is bad news, good news is dull news, and bad news makes marvelous copy.
And thats essentially true. Some good news, like Jessica Lynchs
rescue, is spectacular stuff. But generally speaking, news is whats
exceptional, and bad stuff tends to be exceptional in our world. Reporters
have a natural instinct, therefore, to look for the negative. But I sense
something more at work in the media today.
Look at the
assumption behind most of the reporting on the debate over the United
Nations and the legitimacy of American unilateralism, which immediately
preceded the war. The assumption was that the United States, with its
marvelous record of beneficial military action around the world over the
past century, needed to go before a tribunal at the United Nations
where the Human Rights Commission is presided over these days by Libya,
and which has a long list of failures before it, e.g., Rwanda and Kosovo
before taking action against Saddam Hussein. This idea the
idea that we have to go pleading before such a body and receive its stamp
of approval in order for our conduct to be legitimate strikes me
as more than a little nutty.
There is a
reasonable argument that says that international support of our foreign
policy is desirable because we dont want to have to bear the whole
burden of it ourselves. Certainly we should always welcome every bit of
support we can get. For one thing, this argument has nothing to do with
legitimacy. For another, at the end of the day, it is the U.S. military
thats going to get the job done. Our country has made the necessary
investments in its military, although many argue that we need to invest
more, or that we need to rethink the way we do a lot of things militarily.
But those are arguments for another day. We certainly havent taken
a holiday from history like much of Europe has, where military establishments
in countries like France are truly pathetic and not much help.
Media coverage
at the beginning of the Iraq conflict reminded me of the story about the
boy who asked for a pony for Christmas. On Christmas morning, he opened
the door to the room where the present was, found the room filled to the
roof with dung, and immediately and enthusiastically began shoveling away.
Someone asked him what he was doing, and he said that he was optimistic
that he would find a pony in the room somewhere. American reporters are
like that when it comes to looking for negative news in wartime: They
think they are sure to find it if they look hard enough. Only this could
explain their belief that the Fedayeen by shooting at our troops
flanks and attacking our supply convoys posed a serious threat.
I remember when that story came out, and I thought to myself that it just
didnt seem sensible that the Fedayeen were militarily significant.
They were riding around in pickup trucks with machine guns, for heavens
sake! And it turned out, contrary to all the stories, that they werent
a serious threat, and that they succeeded only in getting themselves killed
by the hundreds.
There is a
balance to be struck in journalism. I know that some people would argue
that FOX News was cheerleading on the war, and in some instances, perhaps,
those criticisms are justified. What we didnt do was to announce
early on and repeatedly that all was lost, that nothing could be done,
and that the whole thing was an illegitimate enterprise bound for failure.
Others did, and the beat goes on.
The latest
causes of worried criticism of American efforts in Iraq are the newly
liberated Shiites. They are controlled by Iran, we are told, and all hope
of democratic reform is going to be stymied because theyre going
to set up an Iranian-style theocracy. Never mind that there is a tremendous
history of Iraqi resistance to this very thing, or the fact that the Iraqis
recently fought a long and terrible war with Iran. Never mind that an
Iraqi state on the Iranian model is going to be hard to establish, not
least because the Iranian state is in all kinds of trouble itself. In
fact, the Iranian government is enormously unpopular with the Iranian
people, who love guess what? America. Youd think that
some perspective on this Shiite story would be warranted. But journalists
are still looking for the pony.
If you go back
and look at American military operations beginning with the Grenada invasion
and including Panama, the Gulf War, Kosovo, Afghanistan and Iraq, and
you study what U.S. military spokesmen said about how those conflicts
were going at each stage, youll see that they were right, and that
they told the truth, by and large. No doubt they made some mistakes, but
there was nothing like the large deceptions and misrepresentations that
made so many journalistic careers in Vietnam. The military learned its
lesson in Vietnam, and it has not behaved that way since. Youd think
journalists would have noticed. They havent, but its not too
late: When retired General Jay Garner or his successor says that things
will work out in post-war Iraq, it might be wise for Western journalists
to wait more than a month to declare him wrong.
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