Ivo Skoric on Wed, 10 Oct 2001 22:55:02 +0200 (CEST) |
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[Nettime-bold] Media Watch |
Prompted by the US mainstream electronic media failure to report the anti- war protest from Times Square, New York, on October 7, I decided to start a Media-Watch project, kind of like what we have seen done by the dozen of Western NGO-s with Croatian, Bosnian and Serbian media during the wars of Yugoslav succession. There it was widely perceived that the state-owned mainstream electronic media were used by nationalist governments to manufacture the consent for war. In the words of Noam Chomsky, here in the U.S. the media are used in pretty much the same way right now. On Monday, the second day of the air-strikes against Taliban positions in Afghanistan, I watched news from three major European sources to compare them to the major American TV networks. Here are my findings: Deutsche Welle gave a lot of space to considerations about fate of the aid workers still held prisoners by Taliban in Afghanistan. They went all but unmentioned on American TV on Monday (they were mentioned on Tuesday). Deutsche Welle also noted that among the first casualties of the bombing were aid agencies vital for survival of Afghanistan civilians: UNICEF and UNHCR buildings were burned in Queta by protesters following the first day of bombing. French TV went further, interviewing the doctor working with Medecins Sans Frontieres, who expressed doubts about the real value of air drops, calling them merely a useful propaganda tool. The anchor then went on to mock American networks for showing endless footage of nightly skies, supposedly, over Kabul, where not much could be seen, since they look, indeed, quite the same like nightly skies over Bagdad or over Belgrade. BBC, besides showing the disturbing footage from protests in Queta a day ahead from its American colleagues, has also shown the (even more disturbing) footage of burning Gaza strip, which American colleagues yet have to gain the courage to show. We haven’t yet seen what exactly did American/British attacks destroyed in Afghanistan - the satellite photos did show the targets, but they didn’t look to an average viewer as damaged as the UNICEF building in Queta did. The BBC reporting from Pakistan, Egypt and Gaza, while not explicitly saying so, gave an intelligent viewer the opportunity to imply that the main casualty of the American/British bombing so far was the stability in the Arab world. It is also worth to note that buildings in Gaza were not set aflame by Israelis. They were set aflame by Palestinian protesters and by the PLO police that cracked down on them. In apparent violation of their own religious law that prohibits worshiping images, young Arab protesters in all places carried pictures of Osama Bin Laden, their new messiah. Yasser Arafat, on the other hand, wants to seize the opportunity - At what other time could anybody imagine Syria getting a seat at the UN Security Council? Over Shimon Peres dead body, maybe. - and get a more serious commitment of the US to the Palestinian State. Palestinians carrying pictures of Osama Bin Laden around are not exactly helpful in that process. With each new day of bombing Afghanistan, one more Arab state is a step closer to civil war. The problem with Arab world is demographic and political. And it most certainly won’t be helped with war. Arab countries are full of young people. When half of the population is under 30, it is usually easier to imagine revolutions, protests and violent upheavals. When half of the population is under 20, some sort of change simply MUST happen. It is impossible to believe that the old order may survive. Particularly, if it is a corrupt, authoritarian order with no mandate of the people. Is there any democracy in the Arab world, except for Israel, which is not really an Arab state? No. Arab states are either former Soviet clients like Libya, Iraq and Syria - lead by Soviet style totalitarian regimes, or they are military dictatorships like Pakistan, Egypt or Algeria, or they are anachronistic feudal monarchies like Saudi Arabia, Morocco, Jordan, Oman, Qatar, Kuwait, Bahrein, Yemen, U.A.E. Iran is not an Arab state, but it is geographically a part of the Arab world (just like Israel is), and it is indeed the newest political regime in the region - but, while it does show some promise, it is still an autocratic theocracy, where the Council of Guardians - clerics appointed by the Supreme Leader - has a veto power over the democratically elected president and parliamentarians. Maybe we should start asking ourselves why in the Arab world there is not a single state by the people and for the people. And whether does the quest for the cheap oil has anything to do with floating corrupt autocratic states way past their expiration date. In which case it would be expected that oppressed population there hates those who aid and abate the regime that oppresses them. And are we really prepared to live like Israelis just in order to keep the oil prices low, as they are just to keep on with their settlement policy? Is there a third way? Again, I had to browse foreign press to catch a glimpse of such an angle. Time, Newsweek, People, USA Today, US News & World Report, they were all preoccupied counting the missiles and airplanes their trustees possess to dig deeper for the causes. So, I had to turn to the British The Economist and particularly to the Canada’s Maclean’s with its essay Season Of Change by Arthur Kent that carefully tackled that issue: this is not about winning the war and capturing Bin Laden - this is about winning young Arab world over to “our” side, to the values of freedom, democracy and peace. But, while the US government espoused that rhetoric from the beginning, it did in the end resort to the old fashioned air-war doctrine, and it did impose the control over media reporting unseen of in a democratic state. President Bush even wanted to cut the Congress out of the loop - on the pretext of the leakage of sensitive information - something that even ancient Roman Emperors would think twice before saying (less they wanted to be found with a poisoned dagger in their chest on the next morning). This is not how this war may be won. Osama Bin Laden showed himself healthy, calm and belligerent on TV immediately after the first day of attacks, simply repeating his old call on all Muslims around the world to kill Americans wherever they can. And it works. For every cruise missile fired in the abandoned training camp tent in Afghanistan, there seems to be another young Arab willing to sacrifice his life doing Al Qaeda’s bidding. So far (if we take all recent ‘accidents’ to be connected to Al Qaeda) the network focused on: a) destroying international aid facilities related to Afghanistan - which shows precisely how a war against Afghanistan is misguided: Osama doesn’t give a damn for Afghan civilians, they may all starve, freeze to death in brutal Afghan winter, bleed to death in hemorrhagic fever or burn to death in American napalm for all does he care; b) raising the general fears in developed world - by random and colossal destruction of property, sudden cases of rare contagious diseases, bus hijacking, etc., and; c) raising in particular the fear of traveling by airplane - more than a half of all recent ‘accidents’ were air travel related (including the Cessna that rammed the passenger airplane on the Milan airport). Of the developed world the countries that depend most on the air-travel are the English speaking former “white” colonies of British Empire, that, together with its old master, today form the vaguely defined cultural empire that ‘guides’ rather than rules the world. With the exception of Japan, all other industrialized, developed nations are today connected by roads or railroads (including the U.K. after the tunnel was built). The U.S., Canada, Australia and New Zealand, unlike the U.K. and Japan, are also dependent on air-travel not only to reach other countries but also for domestic travel - due to the large distances and poorly developed railroad network. The air travel became not only preferred perk but also an inevitable part of life of a Western business professional. If business people remain scared to fly - as they currently are - not only the airlines will suffer: with the lack of personal contact the business in general will become slower and less ebullient. This was well known to terrorist groups in 1970s. Europe responded with high security on airports (what we see now in the U.S.) and by building a high-speed rail network as an alternative (although the train can also be hijacked and run into another train, which at that speeds is not much less deadly). Al Qaeda did not come up with a new idea, here. They just perfected an old one: by using suicide pilots that crash planes, they eliminated the need for firearms and explosives, which can be detected by the modern airport security. I am also not sure whether the U.S. intelligence even considered a remote possibility that other, perhaps even non-Arab, states might have an interest in dragging the U.S. into this kind of war - despite their unequivocal support that they publicly express now. It is hardly a secret that it has been a while since Americans had to watch their “boys” dying at evening news. Yet, CNN was bringing carnage to the American dinner table often from another parts of the world: Bosnia, Croatia, Kosovo, Serbia, East Timor, Rwanda, Congo, Iraq, Kuwait, Israel, Chechnya, Kashmiri, Algeria, Spain (ETA), Britain (IRA), etc. The perception is that the American viewer must have acquired the blaze feeling that Roman public once had watching, after a good meal, the gladiator fights in the Colosseum. This feeling, if it had existed, was brutally and severely shattered by the September 11 events. And the polls (although I am not sure how much could we believe them) are strongly suggesting that Americans are now ready and prepared to watch their soldiers die in a war that would eventually destroy Al Qaeda. Well, the public in other countries is more than prepared - in some places the public is relieved - to watch American ‘boys’ die in war. Even more perversely, they can’t wait to see how well will American public cope with the sight. For example, although we saw the genuinely touchy candle-lit vigil for the victims of September 11 attacks, in downtown Zagreb (capital of Croatia), on Friday, September 14, we were spared from hearing how the minute of silence was broken by the group of football hooligan youth shouting: “Vukovar, Vukovar....” The city was leveled by the Yugoslav army, while Croatia was under the Western imposed arms embargo, unable to defend it. This is definitively a part of the reason why we don’t see anything interesting on the major U.S. news networks: the authorities don’t think American public would cope well with the sight, and the public support for the campaign might wane, so the media are obviously restricted in what they can show, i.e. the media, indeed, became manufacturers of the consent for war, just as Chomsky said, with the story of Dick Cheney “at the secret location” rivaling ‘the best’ of what we used to hear about ailing Soviet and Chinese leaders in the days of cold war. Therefore, I was shocked, when, yesterday (Tuesday, October 9), at around 8:30 pm I’ve heard this lyrics on the K-Rock, a commercial, alternative-rock radio station in New York: “War is not the answer. We should not escalate.” I was stretching, and it took at least two repetitions of that lyrics to sink into me that it was the first time since September 11 that I’ve heard a song with anti-war lyrics on the American radio station. As I thought - “what’s going on?” - the song went into the chorus part, singing: “what’s going on?” It was hilarious. Someone called to have that song played. And for a while the D.J. deliberated publicly should they or should they not play that particular song. Then they played it. It was a tribute to Marvin Gaye by Papa-Roach. For some reason (?), the D.J. couldn’t play the entire song up until the end - the repetitions of the ‘war is not the answer’ were blocked out of the song - but, cleverly, with playing Nirvana’s ‘Lythium’ over it - “I am so happy...” - the most potent sedative available on the American market. Upon the end of this, the D.J. announced how he received an amazing number of phone calls, and he didn’t want to discuss them - he just exclaimed “who are these people?” - and played a jingle “Freedom” before proceeding to the next song. The jingle ‘Freedom’ is K-Rocks sales pitch for free tickets for concerts - it ends like this: “...in some countries the freedom is not possible, but we live in America and we have the freedom to chose.” Thanks, dude. If you lived in Serbia, you’d be considered for the U.S. based Committee to Protect Journalists ‘Freedom of Press Award’ - but we shall at least hope that you would be able to keep your job in America after this. Of course, earlier in the day, K-Rock did exactly what Croatia’ Radio 101 did during the war in Croatia: engage in some OBL-bashing, like encouraging listeners to go to certain Yahoo forum and ‘kick some ass’ of alleged Islamic fundamentalist supporters there. Later in the evening I watched an intelligent show with Charlie Rose on channel 13 and I’ve heard Lennon’s “Imagine” played on 90.7 FM. I think the real battle is here, not in Afghanistan. Also, a couple of days ago I’ve listened to opinions of hip-hop artists, and they were strikingly outspoken. That’s good, because if the freedom is lost here, then the ultimate results of bombing Afghanistan will be quite irrelevant. Ivo Skoric _______________________________________________ Nettime-bold mailing list Nettime-bold@nettime.org http://amsterdam.nettime.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/nettime-bold