A bit weak, especially for Krugman... but it's a start, maybe about 
the maximum-sized bite the average cable-viewer could chew on without 
choking.

Keith


http://www.nytimes.com/2003/02/18/opinion/18KRUG.html

Behind the Great Divide
By PAUL KRUGMAN

There has been much speculation why Europe and the U.S. are suddenly 
at such odds. Is it about culture? About history? But I haven't seen 
much discussion of an obvious point: We have different views partly 
because we see different news.

Let's back up. Many Americans now blame France for the chill in 
U.S.-European relations. There is even talk of boycotting French 
products.

But France's attitude isn't exceptional. Last Saturday's huge 
demonstrations confirmed polls that show deep distrust of the Bush 
administration and skepticism about an Iraq war in all major European 
nations, whatever position their governments may take. In fact, the 
biggest demonstrations were in countries whose governments are 
supporting the Bush administration.

There were big demonstrations in America too. But distrust of the 
U.S. overseas has reached such a level, even among our British 
allies, that a recent British poll ranked the U.S. as the world's 
most dangerous nation - ahead of North Korea and Iraq.

So why don't other countries see the world the way we do? News 
coverage is a large part of the answer. Eric Alterman's new book, 
"What Liberal Media?" doesn't stress international comparisons, but 
the difference between the news reports Americans and Europeans see 
is a stark demonstration of his point. At least compared with their 
foreign counterparts, the "liberal" U.S. media are strikingly 
conservative - and in this case hawkish.

I'm not mainly talking about the print media. There are differences, 
but the major national newspapers in the U.S. and the U.K. at least 
seem to be describing the same reality.

Most people, though, get their news from TV - and there the 
difference is immense. The coverage of Saturday's antiwar rallies was 
a reminder of the extent to which U.S. cable news, in particular, 
seems to be reporting about a different planet than the one covered 
by foreign media.

What would someone watching cable news have seen? On Saturday, news 
anchors on Fox described the demonstrators in New York as "the usual 
protesters" or "serial protesters." CNN wasn't quite so dismissive, 
but on Sunday morning the headline on the network's Web site read 
"Antiwar rallies delight Iraq," and the accompanying picture showed 
marchers in Baghdad, not London or New York.

This wasn't at all the way the rest of the world's media reported 
Saturday's events, but it wasn't out of character. For months both 
major U.S. cable news networks have acted as if the decision to 
invade Iraq has already been made, and have in effect seen it as 
their job to prepare the American public for the coming war.

So it's not surprising that the target audience is a bit blurry about 
the distinction between the Iraqi regime and Al Qaeda. Surveys show 
that a majority of Americans think that some or all of the Sept. 11 
hijackers were Iraqi, while many believe that Saddam Hussein was 
involved in Sept. 11, a claim even the Bush administration has never 
made. And since many Americans think that the need for a war against 
Saddam is obvious, they think that Europeans who won't go along are 
cowards.

Europeans, who don't see the same things on TV, are far more inclined 
to wonder why Iraq - rather than North Korea, or for that matter Al 
Qaeda - has become the focus of U.S. policy. That's why so many of 
them question American motives, suspecting that it's all about oil or 
that the administration is simply picking on a convenient enemy it 
knows it can defeat. They don't see opposition to an Iraq war as 
cowardice; they see it as courage, a matter of standing up to the 
bullying Bush administration.

There are two possible explanations for the great trans-Atlantic 
media divide. One is that European media have a pervasive 
anti-American bias that leads them to distort the news, even in 
countries like the U.K. where the leaders of both major parties are 
pro-Bush and support an attack on Iraq. The other is that some U.S. 
media outlets - operating in an environment in which anyone who 
questions the administration's foreign policy is accused of being 
unpatriotic - have taken it as their assignment to sell the war, not 
to present a mix of information that might call the justification for 
war into question.

So which is it? I've reported, you decide.


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