‘What we’re seeing is sanitized’

For the better part of 2006, the Bush gang and their allies have decided that the key to public support for the war in Iraq — or what’s left of it — is blaming the media. In March, for example, Dick Cheney said, “There is a constant sort of perception, if you will, that’s created because what’s newsworthy is the car bomb in Baghdad.” Shortly thereafter, Donald Rumsfeld added, “Fortunately, history is not made up of daily headlines, blogs on Web sites or the latest sensational attack.” At a presidential conference in the spring, Bush didn’t note the bad news in Iraq, he noted “the bad news on television.” At one of the president’s sycophantic public events, a Bush supporter won a round of uproarious applause when she insisted that “our major media networks don’t want to portray the good.”

The reality, of course, is that too many on the right have the problem backwards. They’re “working the refs,” hoping that if they whine loudly enough, news outlets will be less likely to report on how disastrous the war has become. To a certain extent, it’s working; many reporters have been cowed.

But we nevertheless get a glimpse, now and then, from a reporter who knows better. NBC correspondent Richard Engel reported earlier this year that the situation on the ground “is actually worse than the images we project on television.” Over the weekend, CNN’s John Roberts shared a similar perspective.

CNN’s John Roberts, recently returned from a month-long visit to Iraq, was interviewed by The Washington Post’s Howard Kurtz for his CNN “Reliable Sources” program on Sunday. Much of the talk concerned media treatment of the war, starting with complaints by U.S. soldiers, and then the overall media coverage.

Roberts revealed that despite some charges to the contrary, military personnel did not have a problem with the coverage and, in fact, the situation on the ground is an “absolute mess,” worse than the media has shown. “The amount of death that’s on the streets of Baghdad for U.S. forces and for the Iraqi people is at an astronomical level,” he said. “So, to some degree, what we’re seeing is sanitized.”

Kurtz, unfortunately, approached the issue by stacking the deck, telling Roberts, “The conventional wisdom is that American troops resent the media’s coverage of this war as too negative.” It was an unhelpful way to start the discussion — it’s only the “conventional wisdom” because media figures like Kurtz keep repeating it as if it were fact. Fortunately, Roberts would have none of it.

ROBERTS: You know, I spent a lot of time with U.S. troops. In the month that I was there, I spent probably two weeks or a little bit more than that on the ground with them, north of Baghdad, in Baghdad, traveling with a lot of the Stryker units who had been there for 16 months now.

They were very optimistic on the unit level about what they were doing. They believed in the mission that they were undertaking — you know, clearing operations, trying to secure thee streets of Baghdad, trying to get some of the weapons off the streets, trying to deal with these militia members who are the cause of so much of this sectarian violence.

When they stepped back, though, and took a look at the larger picture, there were a lot of questions about where the direction was headed, where they were going to go in the future…

KURTZ: And did they think…

ROBERTS: … whether the plan immediately was the right plan.

KURTZ: And did they think the coverage, generally, on balance, was fair or unfair?

ROBERTS: You know, they didn’t seem to have too many complaints about the coverage. They appreciated the fact that we were there, and anytime you’re embedded with U.S. forces, you’re going to see the bad along with the good.

They were always trying to put a positive spin on things from a command level. You know, taking us to certain areas to show us certain things they thought would play well. But by and large, I didn’t hear any complaints about the coverage.

So, why aren’t news outlets reporting on the actual conditions? Why is it even worse than it seems?

ROBERTS: Because television can’t — and even print — can’t fully capture the scope of what’s going on in Iraq. And to some degree, too, over the last three-and-a-half years, Howie, it’s become the daily traffic report, the daily drumbeat.

When you get there and you see it on a personal level, when you watch somebody die before your eyes, it gives you a much different perspective on it than it does being a half a world away, reading about it or watching it on television. Also, you know, the pictures on television are sanitized compared to what they are on the ground.

For example, when we came across that IED attack, we did not shoot pictures that we would show on television of the carnage. We showed pictures of people carrying litters, et cetera, because it’s, A, it’s too raw for television. B, it’s too personal for the families who were involved, because the fellow who I saw on the ground, Howie, he was ripped apart. And that’s just not the sort of thing that you want a family to know.

If a loved one died in Iraq, they died in Iraq. You don’t need to show them the graphic pictures of it. So, to some degree, what we’re seeing is sanitized.

The video of Roberts’ interview is online. It’s worth remembering for the next time conservatives start blaming the media for the public’s opposition to the war.

They’re teeing up the stab-in-the-back theory. The media – the Democrats – the moderates – everyone’s going to get blamed for this disaster except the people who created it.

You can see it coming a mile away. Listen to Hinderaker blame Chuck Hagel – yes, Chuck Hagel, the guy with approximately zero influence over the Bush administration – in this quote cited by TBogg:

Hagel insists that “there will be no victory or defeat for the United States in Iraq.” But if the U.S. leaves Iraq and, with our soldiers gone, al Qaeda establishes a base for terrorist operations, that sure sounds like defeat. And if our forced exit, to which Hagel will have contributed, becomes a huge morale victory and recruiting tool for terrorists, as less dramatic past U.S. exits have, surely that would be a defeat too.
(http://tbogg.blogspot.com/2006/11/no-war-for-us-please.html – sorry, I didn’t click through to the original PowerLine post because I don’t want to have to disinfect my computer).

The only way to combat this is to force those who made the mess to clean it up. You know, take responsibility. What an old-fashioned concept.

  • On NBC’s Today program this morning, Matt Lauer explained that NBC News was now calling the conflict in Iraq “a civil war”–over the objections of the White House, which has released a statement disputing the characterization.

  • Being rather sarcastic and not suffering fools like Kurtz very well, I probably would have been a little more snide to Kurtz’s line of jackass questioning and would have said something like this:
    “They probably have “slightly” more important things to deal with like, you know, survival and keeping their buddies alive.”

    I wonder what the world looks like to many conservatives. I can only imagine that it is a happy world where they appear smarter, fitter, sexier and straighter than those of us who live in reality. Where the optimism, faith, belief and hope of rank idiot amateurs can make better results in than listening to skilled and experienced professionals.

    Considering the champions of this war like Rummy and Cheney, who really are the Moonbats here?

  • It’s good to see the media start to stand up to the White House, although it would have been nice for them to do so before the Democrats took control of Congress.

  • Somewhere in Bagdad there’s a freshly-painted school, and obviously the media really should spend just as much airtime on THAT as the story about hundreds of killings on Thanksgiving.

    It’s amazing and frightening how many wingnuts believe that Vietnam was “lost by the media”. As if we could have won if we had just hidden all the bad news.

    BC is almost right, responsibility should be duly assigned (we are WAY overdue for that process), but I murderers are not allowed to clean up their own messes, we pretty much have to do that for them (and put them in jail to partially pay for their crimes).

    If it’s not a civil war, why can’t any of the warmongers go there for anything but sneak and peak visits?

  • “it’s too raw for television”

    I know what he means. I hope CNN truly sanitizes the war coverage by not showing Iraq at all, period. That would help Americans call for 20,000 more troops with a much clearer conscience.

  • “They’re teeing up the stab-in-the-back theory.” – BC

    Only too true. Boy George II has decided he’s the Moses in this story, not going to get to cross over into the promised land of Victory in Iraq. So he shoves it off onto the next President.

    The problem with that scenario is the best of the Republican’t crop of 2008 aren’t going to like the idea and they, far more than the Democrats, will be demanding the solution to Iraq before then.

    I don’t know which will prevail. Will the candidates demand we get out or will BG2 resist “losing” Iraq to the end.

    The next two years are going to be interesting.

  • People like to think that pictures and video show the whole picture, but they don’t. Like Robert’s says, there are things you don’t and frankly, for a number of reasons shouldn’t, show on a nightly news segment. There are things that video and pictures can’t capture.

    When I went home to New Orleans last Christmas I took a drive in the Lakeview area. No pictures or video can really capture this silence and stillness I experienced. Sure pictures capture the water lines and moved houses, the dead trees and grass, and video can capture the silence, but the fact that there were no birds and no squirrels and generally little/no movement is something that you would really likely only notice if you were there. You would also likely only get the full impact if you knew and could picture what should have been there but wasn’t.

    For many Republicans if it isn’t in front of their face or brought to them by Fox and other trusted news sources, all evidence, no matter how overwhelming, is not to be trusted. They have to believe things are better than they are shown on TV, bucause of they were as show or worse than shown, the house of cards that they rest their assumptions on would crumble and they would have nothing.

  • Loved ones my arse. US media can’t show what it’s really like because the biggest supporters of the war are the same people who squeal like rats when they are confronted with icky images. People in Europe (I’m sure other places are like this too) think we’re a bunch of panty-waists because when it comes to the effects of violence, our news images have always been sanitized. Is he suggesting the British don’t care when one of their own is blown apart? What crap.

    This is a perfect set up for the Bush League Cheerleaders. They want to think things aren’t that bad and they get to insist the media refrain from contradicting them. (Coffins? What coffins?) I’d like to swap their daily paper for one from Germany or beam the Beeb into their TVs for a day. It would blow their tiny minds right out of their thick skulls.

  • The conservative argument that the media is only showing the bad news in Iraq is like a husband complaining to his wife that she should be complimenting him on a great job he did painting the tool shed, and stop worrying about the house being on fire.

  • The “stab in the back” campaign after WW1 in Germany was why the Allies wouldn’t let the Germans surrender until they had been thoroughly and completely whacked in WW2.

    Unfortunately for us, the Empire needs to be thoroughly whacked and defeated, to de-fang the righties. According to Juan Cole’s posts over the weekend, that might just happen sooner rather than later, since according to his sources the Iraqi Resistance they think they can hit the Green Zone good now.

    What we need is the inability of helicopters to do an evacuation. Let the Army and Marines fight their way out like Xenophon did, and leave the Republican civilians behind to meet their well-deserved fates.

    That is the only way this imperial bullshit is going to stop.

  • A very simple way of conveying some of what’s gone on in Iraq — simple enough for TeeVee even — is with a graph showing the constant, almost relentless pile-up of American deaths in the Iraq quagmire, a graph dotted with a number of supposed turning points which never materialized. A graph line such as this.

  • Did anyone else channel the image of Jack Nicholson screaming “You can’t handle the truth,” when Roberts referred to the need for sanitizing the video images portraying the Iraqi civil war?

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