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US families are mourning the deaths of their loved ones in
Iraq. |
Media outlets have been spinning
the information on US casualties in a most curious way. Instead
of regularly updating viewers and listeners concerning the
number of killed and injured US servicemen and women since the
beginning of the war in Iraq, an insidious and disingenuous
distinction is being emphasized more than ever: that of the
“combat deaths” and the “non-combat deaths.” Phrases
like “hostile fire,” “friendly fire,” and “in-action
deaths” are now commonplace in Washington’s and the
media’s handbook of propaganda and euphemisms.
News
agencies are constantly making the above distinction, reporting
the number of US soldiers killed by “hostile fire” as well
as those killed in other ways but only keeping a running
tabulation of those who have lost their lives in combat. Updates
are almost unheard of regarding the number of casualties
resulting from non-fatal injuries.
As of July 21st, 233 US soldiers have died and over
1000 have been injured since Operation Iraqi Freedom began. Yet
the media focuses only on those killed by “hostile fire” as
if those killed in other ways or those simply injured are less
important. An Internet search will reveal a thousand stories
about the numbers killed by “hostile fire” to every one that
offers the complete details.
For
example, Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty ran a story by Charles
Recknagel on July 15th that began, “As the number of US troops
killed by hostile fire steadily grows, Washington is becoming
increasingly preoccupied with the poor security situation in
Iraq and what it means for efforts to stabilize the country. The
toll now stands at 32 US soldiers killed since US President
George W. Bush declared major combat over in Iraq on 1 May. Most
of the soldiers’ deaths have occurred in attacks on patrols
and convoys by unidentified men firing rocket-propelled
grenades.” Nowhere in the remainder of the article is the
total number killed or wounded mentioned, though the pressures
faced by Washington are the focus of the story.
Such
articles are misleading because they exclude important
information to the point of being conspicuously incomplete. One
of the reasons for concern in Washington is due to the
ever-increasing domestic criticism directed towards it by its
own soldiers and their families both in Iraq and at home. Much
of the time, such criticism emanates from the families, friends,
and comrades who have lost friends and loved ones in
Washington’s war.
More
US soldiers have been killed in “non-hostile” situations
than in actual combat since May 1st. This is significant because
it is many of these individuals’ friends and families –
those not killed in combat – who are now critical of the Bush
administration. So the tension now looming over the occupation
of Iraq, whether one is in a firefight in Baghdad or waiting for
one’s son to return, is caused by the totality of all the dead
and injured, not just those from “hostile fire.”
In
another, more glaring example, National Public Radio reported on
July 20th about new casualties in Iraq and, in a
logical manner, closed the report with a tally of the dead.
The
newsreader said, “That brings the number of US soldiers killed
in the war in Iraq to 150.” So not only does NPR make the same
distinction as their less palatable media brethren (because 233
US soldiers have actually been killed), but they don’t even
inform the listener when giving updated casualty figures that
their numbers don’t include those killed in any other way
except from “hostile fire” – a clear breach of
journalistic integrity.
However,
unlike in the first case, this obviously incomplete and vaguely
presented information is clearly fallacious. A listener who does
not follow international events or politics that closely may
have no idea what is really happening in Iraq. Following this
NPR report, then, they may believe that only 150 US soldiers
have lost their lives while serving in Iraq, that only 150
families are now grieving for their fallen loved ones. They may
even refer to such a “fact” in a conversation with a fellow
citizen – and once they have, the radiation of misinformation
has begun.
Another
half-truth being perpetuated by various news agencies is that
more US soldiers have died in the current war in Iraq than in
the first. This is true for “hostile fire” deaths only but
not for total deaths: as already mentioned, 233 have died so far
in Operation Iraqi Freedom while 299 died in Operation Desert
Storm. While many reporters do make this distinction, many
don’t. The most conspicuous example again took place on NPR on
July 21st when Diane Rehm, host of the eponymously
named talk show, said in a painstakingly clear and simple
sentence that more US soldiers have died this time around than
in Desert Storm. And then she stopped speaking and the show went
to a break. No qualifying statement, no explanation, no
insidious distinctions, nothing. Maybe she was unaware of these
facts, but a host of a popular, national talk show has no excuse
for such ignorance. So, at the very least, she passed on false
information to millions of listeners.
The
importance of these partial truths and media spin are
significant for two reasons: one apolitical, one political.
First
and foremost, the obfuscation of US casualties by very wide
swaths of the media is a disservice to the US armed forces,
their families, and the American public. Whether or not one
considers US servicemen and women heroes without equal,
respectable people just doing their jobs, or patriots who have
been duped to serve the geopolitical interests of a fairly
undemocratic bureaucracy called the US government, shouldn’t
change the fact that all of their lives are of equal value.
How
does the mother who lost her son to friendly fire or a truck
accident feel as the media constantly chatters about “combat
deaths” and about how “these deaths” are putting pressure
on President Bush and Paul Bremer? Does she wonder if her
son’s death is putting pressure on anyone or has forced others
to reconsider what’s happening in Iraq? Does her son’s life
matter as much? Or is her son half way in between an Iraqi and
an American killed by hostile fire on a scale of their worth?
And
what about all the injured who go unmentioned? It’s hard to
imagine a soldier claiming that his life was not changed forever
because of the war, but many have had their lives changed in the
most horrible ways. These soldiers are now paraplegics and
cripples, blind and deaf, or learning to live with artificial
limbs. Are not these victims part of the “cost of war” as
well?
Secondly,
and finally, this deception is significant for the anti-war
movement and, more broadly and accurately, the large and
inherently diverse cross-ideological, international resistance
to US hegemonic bullying in the Middle East, if only because it
seeks to lessen the perceived impact of the war – and now
occupation – upon the feelings and beliefs of the American
public and, to a much lesser degree, the international
community. All individuals opposed to the US occupation of Iraq
should highlight this “oversight" on the part of the
media so as to make others more aware of the actual impact of
this poorly conceived, designed, and executed unnecessary war
and occupation.
Matthew
Riemer writes about philosophy, religion, psychology, culture, and
politics. He studied the Russian language for five years and traveled in
the former Soviet Union. He is also a member of the executive team in the
online magazine YellowTimes.Org. You can reach him at mriemer@YellowTimes.org
*This
article was originally published in YellowTimes.Org