WASHINGTON,
April 26 (IsalmOnline.net & News Agencies) - With his decision to
invade and occupy Iraq, U.S. President George Bush took a gamble of
historic proportions. But what is far less acknowledged is that the
same is true for the U.S. media, a leading Japanese newspaper reported
Saturday, April 26.
"American
news reporters and major media outlets used to command great respect
around the globe. However, in the age of "embedded"
reporters, how much longer will that be the case?" asked Japan
Today.
There
have certainly been journalistic heroes with an American passport. Bob
Woodward and Carl Bernstein, for example, are part of the global media
lore. With their courage and relentlessness, they took down the Nixon
Administration during the Watergate scandal in the early 1970s.
Of
course, most U.S. journalists endeavor to live up to that reputation.
They dream that one day, they, too, will score a media coup of similar
proportions.
Unfortunately,
the U.S. journalistic profession as a whole today seems to have a
somewhat exaggerated sense of its own importance, the paper said.
Too
many journalists - in particular many of those based in Washington -
are too docile in not wanting to challenge the powers-that-be. They
much prefer to stay within the general consensus, according to the
paper.
As
a result, the paper said, they regale news-hungry audiences with such
"strategic" insights as the information that Bush gave up
eating sweets on the day the Iraq invasion started - as USA Today
recently reported on its front page.
The
reporter even lamented that even when U.S. reporters go into the field
of battle and risk their lives, they are not necessarily doing a
service to their profession.
"Embedding"
In
fact, the decision by virtually all U.S. media organizations to accept
the Pentagon's offer to "embed" themselves with the
advancing U.S. troops made some of the problems of the media industry
glaringly obvious, said the Japan Today report.
It
referred to what he called the obviously troublesome terminology,
"Embedding" reporters implies that they are "in
bed" with the troops they accompany.
The
fact of the matter is that by embedding themselves, the journalists
have lost much of their independence - at least as far as perceptions
are concerned.
Not
only are they forced to accept some censorship but also a plethora of
restrictions on what they can and cannot report.
By
joining up with individual military units and coming under fire along
with their comrades, they also cannot help but become imbued by the
battlefield solidarity that is the glue of any fighting force. This,
of course, tends to skew their reporting.
And
then there are those "reporters" whose breathlessly
triumphant pieces leave readers and viewers with the distinct
impression that they are being treated to a curious revival of German
battlefield reporting from World War I, noted the paper.
"Of
course, there are embedded reporters, too, who are worth their salt.
But these are the exceptions. As a group, the embedded reporting pool
has gotten dangerously close to reducing its role to supplying
real-time video of the U.S. victory parade - a peculiar kind of
celebration of American might in the joystick era."
"Just
ask yourself how many images U.S. audiences got to see of Iraq's
population in the weeks and months leading up to the war. Virtually
all material that was broadcast involved U.S. military
preparations."
The
Iraqi people were not really present in the U.S. reporting until the
victory parade emerged, said the Japan Today.
"If
you wanted to see images of Iraqi citizens before that, you better
have had access to non-U.S. media like those from "nasty"
France or Britain's unruly BBC."
Most
amazingly of all, the handful of journalists who had the sense of
self-respect to go into Iraq on their own are called, ironically,
"unilateralists.", said the paper.
"They
do provide some of the most informative reporting and even let the
U.S. public get a feel for the story from the Iraqi side as
well,"
"Now,
as lamentable as all of that is in and by itself, what the U.S. media
do not realize is this: Regardless of one's sense of self-importance
and global status, what really matters on the world stage is one's
reputation - and the true respect that one garners in the four corners
of the globe."
And
on that front, the paper said, the U.S. media - in the eyes of many
people around the world - are actually in a position that is very
similar to that of the U.S. military.
"But
with newspaper readership declining, especially among young audiences,
the influence of television on keeping the public informed is clearly
paramount."
The
paper identified the problem as two-fold.
"First,
major corporate media all mimic each other - which means that they are
increasingly less willing to going beyond the implicit consensus on
almost any debate. The reason for this herd mentality is simple.
The
second problem is that the same herd effect also works in reverse,
making the whole U.S. media business, especially in print and cable
news reporting, highly pro-cyclical.
What
this means in practical terms is that the media tend to enhance,
rather than counter, the preconceptions and viewing preferences of the
public-at-large.
"On
a comparative basis, there is relatively little opposition spirit in
them. That's at least how journalists in many democracies would define
the most essential character ingredient in their chosen field."
"The
tragedy in all this is that the American people do not get enough
forward-thinking reporting from their media. Instead, many U.S. media
endeavor to achieve little more than to ratify the consensus. That is
no way to behave if you're the fourth estate in the world's only
remaining superpower."
"Gung-ho
Patriotism"
Joining
the opposition to the U.S. media coverage of the war against Iraq, the
chief of the British Broadcasting Corp. and NBC News reporter Ashleigh
Banfield criticized U.S. cable news networks for overly patriotic
coverage of the war.
"It
was a grand and glorious picture that had a lot of people watching and
a lot of advertisers excited about cable TV news," Banfield said
at Kansas State University, in comments reported by The Topeka
Capital-Journal.
Banfield
said that cable news operators had wrapped themselves in the flag.
BBC
Director-General Greg Dyke also said U.S. broadcasters had undermined
their credibility by supporting the war. He singled out Fox News
Channel's "gung-ho patriotism."
"Personally
I was shocked while in the United States by how unquestioning the
broadcast news media was during this war," he said in a speech at
the University of London on Thursday, April 24.