March 16, 2006
Chris Hedges on the press in time of war
Every
journalist should read (below) this Chris Hedges-penned article. Heck,
Judith Miller ought to be forced to memorize and recite it.
As for FAUX NEWS, well, forget it. They've got the recitation skills
down but it's limited to the Daily Talking Points Memo issued by The
White House.
As the state of the press has become one of triage, let
the hopeless folks at FAUX expire. Focus on the redeemable.
April 21, 2003 issue of The Nation
The Press and the Myths of War
By Chris Hedges
In wartime the press is always
part of the problem. This has been true since the Crimean War, when
William Howard Russell wrote his account of the charge of the Light
Brigade and invented the profession of the modern war correspondent.
When the nation goes to war, the press goes to war with it. The blather
on CNN or Fox or MSNBC is part of a long and sad tradition.
The narrative we are fed about war
by the state, the entertainment industry and the press is a myth. And
this myth is seductive. It empowers and ennobles us. It boosts rating
and sells newspapers-William Randolph Hearst owed his fortune to it. It
allows us to suspend individual conscience, maybe even consciousness,
for the cause. And few of us are immune. Indeed, social critics who
normally excoriate the established order, and who also long for
acceptance and acclaim, are some of the most susceptible. It is what
led a mind as great as Freud's to back, at least at its inception, the
folly of World War I. The contagion of war, of the siren call of the
nation, is so strong that most cannot resist.
War is where I have spent most of
my adult life. I began covering the insurgencies in El Salvador, where
I spent five years, then went to Guatemala and Nicaragua and Colombia,
through the first intifada in the West Bank and Gaza, the civil wars in
Sudan and Yemen, the uprisings in Algeria and the Punjab, the fall of
the Romanian dictator Nicolae Ceausescu, the Gulf War, the Kurdish
rebellions in southeastern Turkey and northern Iraq, the war in Bosnia,
and finally Kosovo. I have been in ambushes on desolate stretches of
Central American roads, shot at in the marshes of southern Iraq,
imprisoned in Sudan, beaten by Saudi military police, deported from
Libya and Iran, captured and held prisoner for a week by the Iraqi
Republican Guard during the Shiite rebellion following the Gulf War,
strafed by MM-21s in Bosnia, fired upon by Serb snipers and shelled for
days in Sarajevo with deafening rounds of heavy artillery that threw
out thousands of deadly bits of iron fragments. I have painful memories
that lie buried and untouched most of the time. It is never easy when
they surface.
War itself is venal, dirty,
confusing and perhaps the most potent narcotic invented by humankind.
Modern industrial warfare means that most of those who are killed never
see their attackers. There is nothing glorious or gallant about it. If
we saw what wounds did to bodies, how killing is far more like
butchering an animal than the clean and neat Hollywood deaths on the
screen, it would turn our stomachs. If we saw how war turns young
people into intoxicated killers, how it gives soldiers a license to
destroy not only things but other human beings, and if we saw the
perverse thrill such destruction brings, we would be horrified and
frightened. If we understood that combat is often a constant battle
with a consuming fear we have perhaps never known, a battle that we
often lose, we would find the abstract words of war-glory, honor and
patriotism-not only hollow but obscene. If we saw the deep
psychological scars of slaughter, the way it maims and stunts those who
participate in war for the rest of their lives, we would keep our
children away. Indeed, it would be hard to wage war.
For war, when we confront it
truthfully, exposes the darkness within all of us. This darkness
shatters the illusions many of us hold not only about the human race
but about ourselves. Few of us confront our own capacity for evil, but
this is especially true in wartime. And even those who engage in combat
are afterward given cups from the River Lethe to forget. And with each
swallow they imbibe the myth of war. For the myth makes war palatable.
It gives war a logic and sanctity it does not possess. It saves us from
peering into the darkest recesses of our own hearts. And this is why we
like it. It is why we clamor for myth. The myth is enjoyable, and the
press, as is true in every nation that goes to war, is only too happy
to oblige. They dish it up and we ask for more.
War as myth begins with blind
patriotism, which is always thinly veiled self-glorification. We exalt
ourselves, our goodness, our decency, our humanity, and in that
self-exaltation we denigrate the other. The flip side of nationalism is
racism-look at the jokes we tell about the French. It feels great. War
as myth allows us to suspend judgment and personal morality for the
contagion of the crowd. War means we do not face death alone. We face
it as a group. And death is easier to bear-because of this. We jettison
all the moral precepts we have about the murder of innocent civilians,
including children, and dismiss atrocities of war as the regrettable
cost of battle. As I write this article, hundreds of thousands of
innocent people, including children and the elderly, are trapped inside
the city of Basra in southern Iraq- a city I know well-without clean
drinking water. Many will die. But we seem, because we imbibe the myth
of war, unconcerned with the suffering of others.
Yet, at the same time, we hold up
our own victims. These crowds of silent dead-our soldiers who made "the
supreme sacrifice" and our innocents who were killed in the crimes
against humanity that took place on 9/11-are trotted out to sanctify
the cause and our employment of indiscriminate violence. To question
the cause is to defile the dead. Our dead count. Their dead do not. We
endow our victims, like our cause, with righteousness. And this
righteousness gives us the moral justification to commit murder. It is
an old story.
In wartime we feel a comradeship
that, for many of us, makes us feel that for the first time we belong
to the nation and the group. We are fooled into thinking that in
wartime social inequalities have been obliterated. We are fooled into
feeling that, because of the threat, we care about others and others
care about us in new and powerful waves of emotion. We are giddy. We
mistake this for friendship. It is not. Comradeship, the kind that
comes to us in wartime, is about the suppression of self-awareness,
self-possession. All is laid at the feet of the god of war. And the
cost of this comradeship, certainly for soldiers, is self-sacrifice,
self-annihilation. In wartime we become necrophiliacs.
The coverage of war by the press
has one consistent and pernicious theme-the worship of our weapons and
our military might. Retired officers, breathless reporters, somber news
anchors, can barely hold back their excitement, which is perverse
and-frankly, to those who do not delight in watching us obliterate
other human beings-disgusting. We are folding in on ourselves, losing
touch with the outside world, shredding our own humanity and turning
war into entertainment and a way to empower ourselves as a nation and
individuals. And none of us are untainted. It is the dirty thrill
people used to get from watching a public execution. We are hangmen.
And the excitement we feel is in direct proportion to the rage and
anger we generate around the globe. We will pay for every bomb we drop
on Iraq.
For the rest of the article, go here.
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