http://www.opinionjournal.com/federation/feature/?id=110009203

 

The Press at War
What ever happened to patriotic reporters?

BY JAMES Q. WILSON
Monday, November 6, 2006 12:01 a.m.

 <http://www.city-journal.org/> We are told by careful pollsters that half
of the American people believe that American troops should be brought home
from Iraq immediately. This news discourages supporters of our efforts
there. Not me, though: I am relieved. Given press coverage of our efforts in
Iraq, I am surprised that 90% of the public do not want us out right now. 

Between Jan. 1 and Sept. 30, 2005, nearly 1,400 stories appeared on the ABC,
CBS and NBC evening news. More than half focused on the costs and problems
of the war, four times as many as those that discussed the successes. About
40% of the stories reported terrorist attacks; scarcely any reported the
triumphs of American soldiers and Marines. The few positive stories about
progress in Iraq were just a small fraction of all the broadcasts. 

When the Center for Media and Public Affairs made a nonpartisan evaluation
of network news broadcasts, it found that during the active war against
Saddam Hussein, 51% of the reports about the conflict were negative. Six
months after the land battle ended, 77% were negative; in the 2004 general
election, 89% were negative; by the spring of 2006, 94% were negative. This
decline in media support was much faster than during Korea or Vietnam. 

Naturally, some of the hostile commentary reflects the nature of reporting.
When every news outlet struggles to grab and hold an audience, no one should
be surprised that this competition leads journalists to emphasize bloody
events. To some degree, the press covers Iraq in much the same way that it
covers America: it highlights conflict, shootings, bombings, hurricanes,
tornadoes, and corruption. 



But the war coverage does not reflect merely an interest in conflict. People
who oppose the entire war on terror run much of the national press, and they
go to great lengths to make waging it difficult. Thus the New York Times ran
a front-page story about President Bush's allowing, without court warrants,
electronic monitoring of phone calls between overseas terrorists and people
inside the U.S. On the heels of this, the Times reported that the FBI had
been conducting a top-secret program to monitor radiation levels around U.S.
Muslim sites, including mosques. And then both the New York Times and Los
Angeles Times ran stories about America's effort to monitor foreign banking
transactions in order to frustrate terrorist plans. The revelation of this
secret effort followed five years after the New York Times urged, in an
editorial, that precisely such a program be started. 

Virtually every government official consulted on these matters urged that
the press not run the stories because they endangered secret and important
tasks. They ran them anyway. The media suggested that the National Security
Agency surveillance might be illegal, but since we do not know exactly what
kind of surveillance is undertaken, we cannot be clear about its legal
basis. No one should assume that the 1978 Foreign Intelligence Surveillance
Act requires the president to obtain warrants from the special FISA court
before he can monitor foreign intelligence contacts. Though the Supreme
Court has never decided this issue, the lower federal courts, almost without
exception, have held that "the Executive Branch need not always obtain a
warrant for foreign intelligence surveillance." 

Nor is it obvious that FISA defines all of the president's authority. Two
assistant attorneys general have argued that when the president believes
that a statute unconstitutionally limits his powers, he has the right not to
obey it unless the Supreme Court directs him otherwise. This action would be
proper even if the president had signed into law the bill limiting his
authority. I know, you are thinking, That is just what the current Justice
Department would say. In fact, these opinions were written in the Clinton
administration by assistant attorneys general Walter Dellinger and Randolph
Moss. 

The president may have such power either because it inheres in his position
as commander in chief or because Congress passed a law authorizing him to
use "all necessary and appropriate force" against nations or people that
directed or aided the attack of 9/11. Surveillance without warrants may be
just such an "appropriate force." In any event, presidents before George W.
Bush have issued executive orders authorizing searches without warrants, and
Jamie Gorelick, once Bill Clinton's deputy attorney general and later a
member of the 9/11 Commission, said that physical searches may be done
without a court order in foreign intelligence cases. Such searches might
well have prevented new terrorist attacks; if they are blocked in the
future, no doubt we will see a demand for a new commission charged with
criticizing the president for failing to prevent an attack. 

In August 2006, when the British arrested the conspirators in the plot to
blow up commercial aircraft in flight, evidence suggested that two leads to
them were money transactions that began in Pakistan and American intercepts
of their electronic chatter. Unfortunately, the New York Times and the ACLU
were not able to prevent the British from learning these things. But they
would have tried to prevent them if they had been based in London. 



Suppose the current media posture about American military and security
activities had been in effect during World War II. It is easy to imagine
that happening. In the 1930s, after all, the well-connected America First
Committee had been arguing for years about the need for America to stay out
of "Europe's wars." Aware of these popular views, the House extended the
draft by only a one-vote margin in 1941. Women dressed in black crowded the
entrance to the Senate, arguing against extending the draft. Several hundred
students at Harvard and Yale, including future Yale leader Kingman Brewster
and future American president Gerald Ford, signed statements saying that
they would never go to war. Everything was in place for a media attack on
the Second World War. Here is how it might have sounded if today's customs
were in effect: 

December 1941. Though the press supports America's going to war against
Japan after Pearl Harbor, several editorials want to know why we didn't
prevent the attack by selling Japan more oil. Others criticize us for going
to war with two nations that had never attacked us, Germany and Italy. 

October 1942. The New York Times runs an exclusive story about the British
effort to decipher German messages at a hidden site at Bletchley Park in
England. One op-ed writer criticizes this move, quoting Henry Stimson's
statement that gentlemen do not read one another's mail. Because the
Bletchley Park code-cracking helped us find German submarines before they
attacked, successful U-boat attacks increased once the Germans, knowing of
the program, changed their code. 

January 1943. After President Roosevelt and Prime Minister Churchill call
for the unconditional surrender of the Axis powers, several newspapers
criticize them for having closed the door to a negotiated settlement. The
press quotes several senators complaining that the unconditional surrender
policy would harm the peace process. 

May 1943. A big-city newspaper reveals the existence of the Manhattan
Project and its effort to build atomic weapons. In these stories, several
distinguished scientists lament the creation of such a terrible weapon.
After Gen. Leslie Groves testifies before a congressional committee, the
press lambastes him for wasting money, ignoring scientific opinion, and
imperiling the environment by building plants at Hanford and Oak Ridge. 

December 1944. The German counterattack against the Allies in the Ardennes
yields heavy American losses in the Battle of the Bulge. The press gives
splashy coverage to the Democratic National Committee chairman's assertion
that the war cannot be won. A member of the House, a former Marine, urges
that our troops be sent to Okinawa. 

August 1945. After President Truman authorizes dropping the atomic bomb on
Japan, many newspapers urge his impeachment. 



Thankfully, though, the press did not cover World War II the way it covered
Vietnam and has covered Iraq. What caused this profound change? Like many
liberals and conservatives, I believe that our Vietnam experience created
new media attitudes that have continued down to the present. During that
war, some reporters began their coverage supportive of the struggle, but
that view did not last long. Many people will recall the CBS television
program, narrated by Morley Safer, about U.S. Marines using cigarette
lighters to torch huts in Cam Ne in 1965. Many will remember the picture of
a South Vietnamese officer shooting a captured Viet Cong through the head.
Hardly anyone can forget the My Lai story that ran for about a year after a
journalist reported that American troops had killed many residents of that
village. 

Undoubtedly, similar events occurred in World War II, but the press didn't
cover them. In Vietnam, however, key reporters thought that the Cam Ne story
was splendid. David Halberstam said that it "legitimized pessimistic
reporting" and would show that "there was something terribly wrong going on
out there." The film, he wrote, shattered American "innocence" and raised
questions about "who we were." 

The changes came to a head in January 1968, when Communist forces during the
Tet holiday launched a major attack on South Vietnamese cities. According to
virtually every competent observer, these forces met a sharp defeat, but
American press accounts described Tet instead as a major communist victory.
Washington Post reporter Peter Braestrup later published a book in which he
explained the failure of the press to report the Tet offensive accurately.
His summary: "Rarely has contemporary crisis-journalism turned out, in
retrospect, to have veered so widely from reality." 

Even as the facts became clearer, the press did not correct its false report
that the North Vietnamese had won. When NBC News producer Robert Northshield
was asked at the end of 1968 whether the network should put on a news show
indicating that American and South Vietnamese troops had won, he rejected
the idea, because Tet was already "established in the public's mind as a
defeat, and therefore it was an American defeat." 

In the opinion of Mr. Braestrup, the news failure resulted not from ideology
but from economic and managerial constraints on the press--and in his view
it had no material effect on American public opinion. 

Others do not share his view. When Douglas Kinnard questioned more than 100
American generals who served in Vietnam, 92% said that newspaper coverage
was often irresponsible or disruptive, and 96% said that television coverage
on balance lacked context and was sensational or counterproductive. 

An analysis of CBS's Vietnam coverage in 1972 and 1973 supports their views.
The Institute for American Strategy found that, of about 800 references to
American policy and behavior, 81% were critical. Of 164 references to North
Vietnamese policy and behavior, 57% were supportive. Another study, by a
scholar skeptical about the extent of media influence, showed that televised
editorial comments before Tet were favorable to our presence by a ratio of 4
to 1; after Tet, they were 2 to 1 against the American government's policy. 

Opinion polls taken in 1968 suggest that before the press reports on the Tet
offensive, 28% of the public identified themselves as doves; by March, after
the offensive was over, 42% said they were doves. 

Sociologist James D. Wright directly measured the impact of press coverage
by comparing the support for the war among white people of various social
classes who read newspapers and news magazines with the support found among
those who did not look at these periodicals very much. By 1968, when most
newsmagazines and newspapers had changed from supporting the war to opposing
it, backing for the war collapsed among upper-middle-class readers of news
stories, from about two-thirds who supported it in 1964 to about one-third
who supported it in 1968. Strikingly, opinion did not shift much among
working-class voters, no matter whether they read these press accounts or
not. Affluent people who read the press apparently have more changeable
opinions than ordinary folks. Public opinion may not have changed much, but
elite opinion changed greatly. 



There are countless explanations for why the media produced so many stories
skeptical of or hostile to the American military involvement in Vietnam. But
many of these explanations are largely myths. 

First myth. Media technology had changed. Vietnam was the first war in which
television was available to a mass audience, and, as both critics and
admirers of TV unite in saying, television brings the war home in often
unsettling graphic images. But the Second World War also brought the
struggle home through Pathé and Movietone newsreels shown in thousands of
theaters nationwide at a time when Americans went to the movies remarkably
often. Moreover, television accounts between 1962 and 1968 were not critical
of the American effort in Vietnam, and public support for the war then
actually increased. 

Second myth. The war in Vietnam was conducted without censorship. As a
result, the press, with trivial exceptions, could report anything it wanted.
Moreover, the absence of a formal declaration of war made it possible for
several Americans, including important journalists, to travel to Hanoi,
where they made statements about conditions there that often parroted the
North Vietnamese party line. But the censorship rules in the Second World
War and in Korea, jointly devised by the press and the government, aimed at
precluding premature disclosure of military secrets, such as the location of
specific combat units and plans for military attacks. The media problem in
Vietnam was not the disclosure of secrets but the conveying of an attitude. 

Third myth. The press did not report military matters with adequate
intelligence and context because few, if any, journalists had any military
training. But that has always been the case. One veteran reporter, S.L.A.
Marshall, put the real difference this way: once upon a time, "the American
correspondent . . . was an American first, a correspondent second." But in
Vietnam, that attitude shifted. An older journalist in Vietnam, who had
covered the Second World War, lamented the bitter divisions among the
reporters in Saigon, where there were "two camps": "those who wanted to win
the war and those who wanted to lose it." The new reporters filed exciting,
irreverent copy, which made it to the front pages; the veteran reporters'
copy ended up buried way in back. 



In place of these three myths, we should consider three much more plausible
explanations: the first is the weak and ambivalent political leadership that
American presidents brought to Vietnam; the second is the existence in the
country of a vocal radical movement; and the third is the change that has
occurred in the control of media organizations. 

First, Presidents Kennedy and Johnson both wanted to avoid losing Vietnam
without waging a major war in Asia. Kennedy tried to deny that Americans
were fighting. A cable that his administration sent in 1962 instructed
diplomats and soldiers never to imply to reporters any "all-out U.S.
involvement." Other messages stressed that "this is not a U.S. war." When
David Halberstam of the New York Times wrote stories criticizing the South
Vietnamese government, Kennedy tried to have him fired because he was
calling attention to a war that we did not want to admit we were fighting. 

Johnson was willing to say that we were fighting, but without any cost and
with rosy prospects for an early victory. He sought to avoid losing by
contradictory efforts to appease doves (by bombing halts and peace feelers),
satisfy hawks (with more troops and more bombing), and control the tactical
details of the war from the Oval Office. After the Cam Ne report from Morley
Safer, Johnson called the head of CBS and berated him in language I will not
repeat here. 

When Richard Nixon became president, he wanted to end the war by pulling out
American troops, and he did so. None of the three presidents wanted to win,
but all wanted to report "progress." All three administrations instructed
military commanders always to report gains and rely on suspect body counts
as a way of measuring progress. The press quickly understood that they could
not trust politicians and high-level military officers. 

Second, unlike either World War II or the Korean conflict, there was a
radical peace movement in America, much of it growing out of the New Left.
There has been domestic opposition to most of our wars (Karlyn Bowman and I
have estimated the size of the "peace party" to be about one-fifth of the
electorate), but to this latent public resistance was added a broad critique
of American society that opposed the war as not only wrong as policy but
immoral and genocidal--and, to college students, a threat to their exemption
from the draft. Famous opponents of the war traveled to Hanoi to report on
North Vietnam. Attorney General Ramsey Clark said that there was neither
crime nor internal conflict there. Father Daniel Berrigan described the
North Vietnamese people as having a "naive faith in human goodness." Author
Mary McCarthy said these folks had "grace" because they lacked any sense of
"alienation." 

I repeated for the Iraq War the analysis that Professor Wright had done of
the impact of the media on public opinion during the Vietnam War. Using 2004
poll data, I found a similar effect: Americans who rarely watched television
news about the 2004 political campaign were much more supportive of the war
in Iraq than were those who watched a great deal of TV news. And the falloff
in support was greatest for those with a college education. 

Third, control of the press had shifted away from owners and publishers to
editors and reporters. During the Spanish-American War, the sensationalist
press, led by Joseph Pulitzer's New York World and St. Louis Post-Dispatch,
William Randolph Hearst's New York Journal, and Joseph Medill's Chicago
Tribune all actively supported the war. Hearst felt, perhaps accurately,
that he had helped cause it. His New York paper printed this headline: "How
Do You Like the Journal's War?" Even the New York Times supported the
Spanish-American War, editorializing that the Anti-Imperialist League was
treasonable and later that the Filipinos "have chosen a bloody way to
demonstrate their incapacity for self-government." 

Today, strong owners are almost all gone. When Henry Luce died, Time
magazine's support for an assertive American foreign policy died with him.
William Paley had worked hard to make CBS a supporter of the Vietnam War,
but he could not prevent Walter Cronkite from making his famous statement,
on the evening news show of Feb. 19, 1968, that the war had become a
"stalemate" that had to be ended, and so we must "negotiate." On hearing
these remarks, President Johnson decided that the country would no longer
support the war and that he should not run for reelection. Over three
decades later, Mr. Cronkite made the same mistake: We must, he said, get out
of Iraq now. 

There are still some family owners, such as the Sulzbergers, who exercise
control over their newspapers, but they have moved politically left. Ken
Auletta has described Arthur Sulzberger Jr., publisher of the New York
Times, as a man who has "leaned to the left," but "leaned" understates the
matter. Mr. Sulzberger was a passionate opponent of the war in Vietnam and
was arrested more than once at protest rallies. When he became publisher in
1997, he chose the liberal Howell Raines to control the editorial page and
make it, Mr. Sulzberger said, a "more assertive, populist page." 

Other media companies, once run by their founders and principal owners, are
now run by professional managers who report to directors interested in
profits, not policy. Policy is the province of the editors and reporters,
who are governed by their personal views, many of them acquired not by
having once covered the police beat but from a college education. By 1978,
93% of the top reporters and editors had college degrees. 



These three factors worked in concert and have carried down to the present.
The ambivalent political leadership of three presidents during Vietnam made
the press distrust American leaders, even when, as during the Iraq War,
political leadership has been strong. The New Left movement in the 1960s and
1970s slowly abandoned many of its slogans but left its legacy in much of
the press and Democratic Party elites. The emergence of journalism as a
craft independent of corporate owners reinforced these trends. As one
journalist wrote, reporters "had come to reject the idea that they were in
any sense part of the American 'team.' " This development happened slowly in
Vietnam. Journalists reported most events favorably for the American side
from August 1965 to January 1968, but that attitude began shifting with
press coverage of Sen. J. William Fulbright's hostile Senate hearings and
climaxed with the Tet offensive in January 1968. Thereafter, reporters and
editors increasingly shared a distrust of government officials, an
inclination to look for coverups, and a willingness to believe that the
government acted out of bad motives. 

A watershed of the new attitude is the New York Times's coverage of the
Pentagon papers in 1971. These documents, prepared by high officials under
the direction of Defense Secretary Robert McNamara, were leaked to the Times
by a former State Department staffer, Daniel Ellsberg. The Times wrote major
stories, supposedly based on the leaked documents, summarizing the history
of our Vietnam involvement. 

Journalist Edward Jay Epstein has shown that in crucial respects, the Times
coverage was at odds with what the documents actually said. The lead of the
Times story was that in 1964 the Johnson administration reached a consensus
to bomb North Vietnam at a time when the president was publicly saying that
he would not bomb the north. In fact, the Pentagon papers actually said
that, in 1964, the White House had rejected the idea of bombing the north.
The Times went on to assert that American forces had deliberately provoked
the alleged attacks on its ships in the Gulf of Tonkin to justify a
congressional resolution supporting our war efforts. In fact, the Pentagon
papers said the opposite: there was no evidence that we had provoked
whatever attacks may have occurred. 

In short, a key newspaper said that politicians had manipulated us into a
war by means of deception. This claim, wrong as it was, was part of a chain
of reporting and editorializing that helped convince upper-middle-class
Americans that the government could not be trusted. 

Reporters and editors today are overwhelmingly liberal politically, as
studies of the attitudes of key members of the press have repeatedly shown.
Should you doubt these findings, recall the statement of Daniel Okrent, then
the public editor at the New York Times. Under the headline, "Is the New
York times a Liberal Newspaper?," Mr. Okrent's first sentence was, "Of
course it is." 

What has been at issue is whether media politics affects media writing.
Certainly, that began to happen noticeably in the Vietnam years. And
thereafter, the press could still support an American war waged by a
Democratic president. In 1992, for example, newspapers denounced President
George H.W. Bush for having ignored the creation of concentration camps in
Bosnia, and they later supported President Clinton when he ordered bombing
raids there and in Kosovo. When one strike killed some innocent refugees,
the New York Times said that it would be a "tragedy" to "slacken the
bombardment." These air attacks violated what passes for international law
(under the U.N. Charter, people can only go to war for immediate
self-defense or under U.N. authorization). But these supposedly "illegal"
air raids did not prevent Times support. Today, by contrast, the Times
criticizes our Guantanamo Bay detention camp for being in violation of
"international law." 

But in the Vietnam era, an important restraint on sectarian partisanship
still operated: the mass media catered to a mass audience and hence had an
economic interest in appealing to as broad a public as possible. Today,
however, we are in the midst of a fierce competition among media outlets,
with newspapers trying, not very successfully, to survive against 24/7 TV
and radio news coverage and the Internet. As a consequence of this struggle,
radio, magazines, and newspapers are engaged in niche marketing, seeking to
mobilize not a broad market but a specialized one, either liberal or
conservative. 

Economics reinforces this partisan orientation. Prof. James Hamilton has
shown that television networks take older viewers for granted but struggle
hard to attract high-spending younger ones. Regular viewers tend to be
older, male, and conservative, while marginal ones are likely to be younger,
female, and liberal. Thus the financial interest that radio and television
stations have in attracting these marginal younger listeners and viewers
reinforces their ideological interest in catering to a more liberal
audience. 

Focusing ever more sharply on the mostly bicoastal, mostly liberal elites,
and with their more conservative audience lost to Fox News or Rush Limbaugh,
mainstream outlets like the New York Times have become more nakedly
partisan. And in the Iraq War, they have kept up a drumbeat of negativity
that has had a big effect on elite and public opinion alike. Thanks to the
power of these media organs, reduced but still enormous, many Americans are
coming to see the Iraq War as Vietnam redux. 



Most of what I have said here is common knowledge. But it is common
knowledge about a new period in American journalistic history. Once,
powerful press owners dictated what their papers would print, sometimes
irresponsibly. But that era of partisan and circulation-building distortions
was not replaced by a commitment to objective journalism; it was replaced by
a deep suspicion of the American government. That suspicion, fueled in part
by the Vietnam and Watergate controversies, means that the government,
especially if it is a conservative one, is surrounded by journalists who
doubt almost all it says. One obvious result is that since World War II
there have been few reports of military heroes; indeed, there have been
scarcely any reports of military victories. 

This change in the media is not a transitory one that will give way to a
return to the support of our military when it fights. Journalism, like so
much scholarship, now dwells in a postmodern age in which truth is hard to
find and statements merely serve someone's interests. 

The mainstream media's adversarial stance, both here and abroad, means that
whenever a foreign enemy challenges us, he will know that his objective will
be to win the battle not on some faraway bit of land but among the people
who determine what we read and watch. We won the Second World War in Europe
and Japan, but we lost in Vietnam and are in danger of losing in Iraq and
Lebanon in the newspapers, magazines and television programs we enjoy.



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