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US Press Was 'in Coma' in Run up to Iraq War: Book
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In
the book, 21 reporters reflect on the Bush administration's case
for the preemptive invasion of
Iraq
in 2003.
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WASHINGTON, November 22 (IslamOnline.net & News Agencies) –
US
media organizations are now skewering President George W. Bush over
his case for ousting Saddam Hussein, but few questioned the pro-war
juggernaut in the run-up to battle.
Now,
with the White House's once feared public relations machine misfiring,
Bush's approval ratings plumbing their lowest depths,
US
troops still dying in foreign fields and suddenly bold Democratic
rivals trade bilious charges over Iraq
with Republicans, a new book demands an accounting from the media on
its own pre-war errors, reported Agence France-Presse (AFP).
"Feet
to the Fire, the Media after 9/11," by award winning journalist
Kristina Borjesson, features a roll-call of Washington
reporters and war correspondents, including veterans Peter Arnett,
Walter Pincus, and ABC News correspondent Ted Koppel.
It
prompts questions over whether the US
media was duped by the White House, was negligent or complicit in the
rush to war, and whether senior reporters were too close to government
sources.
In
the book, 21 reporters reflect on the Bush administration's case for
the preemptive invasion of Iraq
in 2003, on the grounds Saddam could offer weapons of mass destruction
to terrorists.
A
recent
US
presidential report revealed that the
United States
was "dead
wrong" on Iraq’s weapons of mass destruction and its officials made the case for
invading the oil-rich country despite intelligence doubts and strong
voices of dissent.
Debate
over the roots of the Iraq
war has been further fanned
by the indictment last month of senior White House aide I. Lewis
'Scooter' Libby in a CIA leak case.
Fake
News
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"There
is propaganda and fake news masquerading as real news courtesy of
the
US
government," says Borjesson.
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Many
of those interviewed in the book penned questioning reports before the
war, but were muffled by a drumbeat of bombastic television and
newspaper coverage.
"The
bottom line is that in this era of twenty-four hour cable news, there
is less hard news and real information than ever on television about
what is going on in this nation's arena of power and around the
world," Borjesson writes.
"There
is propaganda and fake news masquerading as real news courtesy of the US
government," she wrote of a media establishment in which many
luminaries seemed as keen to wage war as anyone in the White House.
Independent
intelligence expert and reporter James Bamford blasted in the book the
"entrenched mindset" of reporters before the war.
"The
problem was, these people were fighting an entrenched mind-set that
was accepting the Bush administration's rationales for going to war,
when they should have been doubting," he said, referring to a few
exceptions like Washington Post's Pincus and the Knight
Rider operation which feeds regional
US
papers.
No
Excuse
Some
argued that as the administration began to argue for war with
Iraq, the country was still wallowing in wounded patriotism after the 9/11
attacks.
Helen
Thomas, grande dame of the White House press corps, argues in the book
the media was cowed by the fallout from the September 11 strikes in
2001.
"From
9/11, the American press suddenly had to be the superpatriots,"
she said. "The press went into a coma."
But
that was no excuse for journalists not to ask awkward questions about
the expansion of the "war on terror" to Iraq, said John MacArthur, president and publisher of Harper's Magazine.
"It
was just pathetic, it was the worst it's been since before Vietnam," Borjesson quotes him as saying.
Several
top reporters, including former New York Times correspondent
Judith Miller, stand accused of allowing themselves to be used by top
officials peddling now discredited intelligence.
The
Times and some other newspapers have published reviews and
clarifications of their coverage, following the failure to find
weapons of mass destruction in Iraq.
The
paper admitted in an unusual mea culpa substantial problems with its
coverage of Iraq’s alleged weapons of mass destruction and links to terrorism,
saying it was misled by Iraqi exiles and American intelligence.
"We
have found a number of instances of coverage that was not as rigorous
as it should have been," said a message from the editors,
entitled "The Times and Iraq."
"Looking
back, we wish we had been more aggressive in re-examining the claims
as new evidence emerged -- or failed to emerge."
Courting
Officials
Some
observers told AFP they believe the
US
press, its freedoms enshrined in the US
constitution, is less inclined to challenge power than more
adversarial colleagues abroad.
"Nobody
wants to be isolated socially," said MacArthur, drawing a
comparison between modern day Washington
and the court of France's King Louis XIV.
"Everybody
wants to be at Versailles. Versailles is Washington ... they want to be part of the power
structure, and if taking the leak from the official source gets you
credit within your news organization ... getting close to Cheney,
getting close to Rumsfeld ... if that brings you credit and gets you
more promotions, it's a great way to live."
Borjesson
argued in an interview with AFP that the lessons of the last few years
show the media needs to change.
"Official
source reporting needs to be given less emphasis, reporting from first
hand sources who are lower down than official sources is the way to
go."
Borjesson,
an independent producer and writer for almost twenty years, has won an
Emmy and a Murrow Award for her investigative reporting on "CBS
Reports: Legacy of Shame" with correspondents Dan Rather and
Randall Pinkston.
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