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Madrid 2004




              2
Madrid 2004
• Guardian changes colour




                            3
Madrid 2004
• The Times airbrushes




                          4
Madrid 2004
• The Telegraph airbrushes




                             5
6
7
What can the news actually
        show us?




                             8
9
10
Sodomized with a knife?




                          11
12
What can the news actually
        show us?




                             13
14
Ahmed Chalabi
• Interim oil minister in Iraq April-May 2005 and December-
  January 2006

• Deputy prime minister from May 2005 until May 2006.

• Pre-2003 invasion, under his guidance the Iraqi National
  Congress, supported by lobbyists BKSH & Associates, provided
  substantial info on which U.S. Intelligence based its
  condemnation of Saddam Hussein, including reports of
  weapons of mass destruction and alleged ties to al-Qaeda


                                                              15
Useful material
 Control Room
    (2004, Jehane Noujaim)
 WMD: Weapons of Mass Deception
    (2004, Danny Schechter)
 Panorama Special: In The Line of Fire
    (21st Nov 2004, BBC)

Al- Jazeera on war coverage http://youtu.be/NTo6dbqKlsw
Al- Jazeera discusses the PoWs
   http://youtu.be/mWdDMAH6Kvw
                                                          16
17
Restrepo
(2010, S. Junger & T. Hetherington )




                                       18
Restrepo
• The Korengal Valley
• Embedded with Second
  Platoon, B Company, 2nd
  Battalion, 503rd Infantry
  Regiment (airborne), 173rd
  Airborne Brigade Combat
  Team of the U.S. Army


                               19
‘Grunt documentaries’
• ‘by privileging personal experience over
  historical awareness, these accounts
  construct a version of the war in which it
  becomes impossible to apprehend such
  atrocities as Haditha, Ramadi, Abu Ghraib’
  – Tony Grajeda 2007




                                           20
Misrata, Libya - 20 April 2011




                                 21
Homs, Syria - 21 February 2012




                             22
Homs, Syria - 22 February 2012
• Marie Colvin
• Remi Ochlik




                             23
24
Ofcom: Section 1
•   Violence and dangerous behaviour
•   1.11 Violence, its after-effects and descriptions of violence, whether verbal
    or physical, must be appropriately limited in programmes broadcast before
    the watershed … and must also be justified by the context.

•   1.12 Violence, whether verbal or physical, that is easily imitable by children
    in a manner that is harmful or dangerous:
     –   must not be featured in programmes made primarily for children unless there is strong
         editorial justification;
     –   must not be broadcast before the … unless there is editorial justification.


•   1.13 Dangerous behaviour, or the portrayal of dangerous behaviour, that is
    likely to be easily imitable by children in a manner that is harmful:
     –   must not be featured in programmes made primarily for children unless there is strong
         editorial justification;
     –   must not be broadcast before the watershed (in the case of television) … unless there is
         editorial justification.

                                                                                                    25
Ofcom: Section 2
•   Harm and Offence

•   2.4 Programmes must not include material (whether in individual
    programmes or in programmes taken together) which, taking into account
    the context, condones or glamorises violent, dangerous or seriously
    antisocial behaviour and is likely to encourage others to copy such
    behaviour.

•   2.5 Methods of suicide and self-harm must not be included in programmes
    except where they are editorially justified and are also justified by the
    context.




                                                                                26
Questions to consider
•   Why do some journalists risk their lives to get stories?

•   What can the mainstream media show us? Should there be limits?
    Why/not?

•   To what extent is it possible to separate fact from propaganda/spin?

•   How complicit are journalists in this process during wartime?

•   How might the demands for copy/footage/stories impact upon public
    knowledge?


                                                                      27
28
Four forms of reportage:
1.   Technical
2.   Official
3.   Ideological
4.   Critical




                                  29
1 - Technical
• Relates to how near or far from the conflict
  journalists can get
• Portability of equipment:
  – 'All the gadgets a reporter needs can be carried
    in a single suitcase that fits in the overhead
    compartment of most planes'.
     • (Peter Johnson, 'Media's war footing looks solid',
       USA Today, 17 February 2003)
• GW1 - drive for ‘newness’
• GW2 – language/technology of war – ‘smart
  bombs’, ‘daisy cutters’, night vision, MOABs,
  Patriots, etc
                                                            30
2 - Official
•   Journalists and the Task Force to the Falklands
•   Thatcher wanted to ‘manage’ journalists
•   Influence on type of news produced
•   Certain news suppressed
•   Misinformation?
    – “The BBC had made it clear there were some things it
      could not reveal. If at the end of the conflict it had to
      confess to the public that it had deliberately misled it,
      rather than withheld certain information in the
      interests of safeguarding life, the BBC’s credibility
      would be gone.” (Former BBC editor)

                                                             31
3 - Ideological
• Whose side should we be on?
• How do we decide?
  – “When one’s nation is at war, reporting
    becomes an extension of the war effort”
    • Max Hastings (former editor of the Telegraph and
      the Evening Standard) quoting his TV reporter
      father’s famous line about WW2




                                                         32
4 - Critical
• Ideals of journalistic objectivity/impartiality
  – reporting the facts?
• Self reflective?




                                                33
34
• WW1:
• DW Griffith’s Hearts
  of the World, 1918




                         35
• WW1:
• Frank Hurley
• Australia’s official war
  photographer
• Melded composites




                             36
• WW2
 – Radio reports central
 – Cecil Beaton images (often staged)
 – Disney/Capra films (Why We Fight)
 – The Empire Marketing Board film unit




                                          37
Propaganda?
• 1st televised crisis – Suez, 1956
• PM Anthony Eden tried to use BBC for
  propaganda
• Vietnam (1957-1975) – myth of the body
  bag
• Falklands (1982) – 2 important factors:
  – Lobby system
  – Pooling system
                                            38
Falklands




            39
• Glasgow University Media Group:
• “There is no absolute unity of interest
  among the media, the government and the
  military”
  – 1985, War and Peace News




                                        40
1. Many journalists like the idea of being a war
   reporter - ITN correspondent:
     ‘There was never any danger that this good
      wonderful war could escalate into anything like The
      Day After (nuclear war film). It was a good gutsy
      war but it was a safe gutsy war.’
1. BBC/ITN/Sky seek to be the nation’s news
   service, so want to appear to be in tune with
   national mood.
2. Normal news reporting features official sources
   anyway, so why would broadcasters,
   journalists change format now?

                                                        41
Gulf War 2
• Present attitude towards
  (mediated) war?
• Civilian deaths?
• Surgical, precise, clean
  strikes?
• ‘Smart’ bombs?
• Information
  leakage/flow?
• www.iraqbodycount.org/
                             42
‘Always on’ media

• 31st August 1997
• 11th September 2001
• 7th July 2005

• Speculation,
  commentary and hourly
  attempt to return to an
  authoritative summary


                            43
Key changes in coverage
1. Increased availability of channels to view news
   and many of these are not ‘home-grown’ –
   e.g., Fox News, CNN, BBC World, Al-Jazeera.

2. Proliferation of news channels might suggest
   news is increasingly important but news is
   expensive and the modern media seek more
   cost efficient soft news and entertainment
   (visuals over analysis?)

                                                  44
Other changes
–   AP & Reuters suffered financially recently – must
    cover wars adequately but can’t increase
    subscription costs
–   Satellite news channels lose ad revenue because
    viewers want non-stop coverage & advertisers don’t
    want to be associated with disasters.
–   News producers cut back on foreign
    correspondents (lack reporters)
–   The attempt to be neutral and balanced can make
    for boring news (Fox News vs Al-Jazeera)
–   Europe’s anti-war sentiment? (Tumber & Palmer,
    2004, point to the lack of space given to anti-war
    voices).


                                                     45
Questions to consider
• To what extent is it possible to separate
  the fact from the propaganda/spin?

• How complicit are journalists in this
  process?

• How might the demands for copy impact
  upon public knowledge?
                                              46
47
• CentCom (Qatar)
• $1.5m briefing centre
• Plasma screens, mini studious, phone banks
• Designed by Hollywood set designer, George
  Allison
• Platform for truth (US General Tommy Franks)
• Seating arrangements reflected pecking order



                                                 48
• “When Americans wake up in the morning, they
  will first hear from the [Persian Gulf] region,
  maybe from General Tommy Franks, then later
  in the day, they will hear from the Pentagon,
  then the State Department, then later on the
  White House will brief.”
  – Suzy DeFrances, President Bush’s deputy assistant
    for communications cited in Douglas Quenqua, March
    24th 2003, PR Week
    http://www.prweekus.com/White-House-prepares-to-feed-2




                                                    49
50
51
• “Photos of sleek fighter jets, rescued POWs, and
  smiling Iraqis cheering the arrival of U.S. troops
  are easy to find among Combat Camera’s public
  images. Photos of bombed-out Baghdad
  neighborhoods and so-called ‘collateral damage’
  are not.”
  – cited in Heibert, 2003: 252                   52
53
54
• [S]ome of us have led a very different existence
  these past weeks. A daily shuttle, hundreds of
  miles from the action, from a comfortable hotel
  to the press centre at the drab as-Sayliyah
  military base, home to CentCom's forward
  headquarters. And while we allowed ourselves
  to say "here at CentCom", we knew that we
  were being held at arm's length.


                                                     55
• We were rarely allowed to stray from the spartan
  warehouse with its hi-tech briefing room and
  cramped, woefully inadequate work-spaces. The
  real business of running the war was taking
  place in other, equally spartan warehouses
  some distance away in this vast, faceless facility.
  It is an odd way to cover a war, and some
  wondered if it was really worth it.
   – Paul Adams, 2003, ‘Reporters’ log: final thoughts’
     http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/in_depth/world/2003/reporters_lo


                                                         56
• Iraq:
   – 2000-2500 reporters
   – 600-700 embedded (500 US journalists)
• Embeds
   – officially placed with military units
• Unilaterals
   – roving, independent journalists without military
     support taking huge risks to get access to stories


                                                          57
• “The broadcast networks are complicit. With
  their embedded teams producing great visuals,
  what need is there for broader analysis from the
  battlefield? One British network was instrumental
  in getting one of its own unilateral reporters
  kicked out of an embed position for rocking the
  boat…”
                                                 58
• “…ITN, Sky and the BBC all belong to an
  exclusive club: the Forward Transmission Unit,
  based just inside Iraq and attached to the
  military, which allows a select few
  correspondents to package the war. With such
  extreme limits on access, why jeopardise what
  you've got?”
  – Lucy Mangan, April 7 2003, The Guardian
    http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/2003/apr/07/mondaymed
                                                   59
Dangers facing unilaterals?
• “Two weeks into this war, the constraints are
  tightening. Previously slack border points are
  now closed. Those unilateral journalists entering
  Iraq "illegally" do so at higher risk, with no
  expectation of any assistance from a coalition
  army warned away from them”
  – Lucy Mangan, April 7 2003, The Guardian
    http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/2003/apr/07/mondaymed




                                                   60
• Death of ITN journalist Terry Lloyd
• Palestine Hotel attack (Reuters)
• In The Line of Fire (BBC)




                                        61
• “US forces must prove that the incident was not a
  deliberate attack to dissuade or prevent journalists from
  continuing to report on what is happening in Baghdad.”
   – Robert Menard, secretary–general of Paris–based Reporters
     Without Borders. Cited in Ciar Bryne, April 9 2003,
     http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/2003/apr/09/pressandpublishin
     g.iraqandthemedia




                                                                 62
• “There’s nothing sacrosanct about a hotel with a bunch
  of journalists in it.”
   – (Retired Marine Corps Lt. Gen. Bernard E. Trainor, reported by
     Washington Post, April 9)




                                                                      63
• “If you look at what fills newspapers now, it’s the
  equivalent of reality TV – it’s superficial, there’s very little
  news reporting, there’s very little analysis, but there’s a
  lot of conjecture. The media thought they were going to
  get a one-hour-45-minute Hollywood blockbuster and it’s
  not like that. War is a dirty, ugly thing, and I worry about
  it being dignified as ‘infotainment’”
   – (Air Marshall Burridge, Daily Telegraph, April 7 2003)

                                                                64
How should journalists show the
      reality of warfare?




• Clip from C4 show “Iraq: The Hidden Story”
                                               65
The ‘fog’ of war
• The Guardian: April 11, 2003
• See this link for claims and denials at the
  time
  – http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/2003/apr/11/
    pressandpublishing.marketingandpr




                                                66
Questions to consider
• To what extent is it possible to separate the fact
  from the propaganda?

• How complicit are journalists in this process?

• How might the demands for copy impact upon
  public knowledge?

• Can embedded journalism be balanced?
                                                   67
• ‘The most obvious casualty has been the distinction
  between warrior and correspondent. First-person plural
  is now the pronoun of choice, whether subconscious or
  not. Take Mark Franchetti in the Sunday Times: "Back in
  Kuwait, as we had edged towards the border ready for
  the advance, we had been dozing in our assault
  vehicle... [Now] we were racing across the lunar
  landscape in attack formation...To the occasional
  stunned shepherds, we invaders must have seemed
  like ghosts out of a Mad Max movie.”’
   – Lucy Mangan, April 7 2003, The Guardian




                                                        68
• Sometimes the urge to identify subsumes gender. A
  report by Sarah Oliver in the Mail on Sunday opened
  with the arresting line: "We rode at dawn, the men of
  the 1st Royal Irish," before going on to describe how
  "our column thundered through the Rumailah oilfield"
  and closed with the news that "Last night we were
  holding 37 officers, 277 men and expecting another
  200".’
   – Lucy Mangan, April 7 2003, The Guardian




                                                          69
Questions?
1. So we have ‘nowness’, we have immediate coverage,
   we have words and images but what do we know about
   war?
2. Should war reporting be for information or an extension
   of the war effort?
3. As viewers we can watch the news non-stop – does this
   mean that we understand the news as a construction
   (as provisional, disputed, happening as journalists
   speak)?
4. Does news become reduced to narrative with points of
   closure – do we stop viewing when the statue is pulled
   down? When do we start to watch again, or really listen,
   or even think?
5. How long did our interest in Iraq last? Are we concerned
   with it today? Should we be?
                                                         70
• How does the press cover war today?




                                        71
Additional resources
• David Leigh, 2003, ‘False Witness’-
  examples of military disinformation and
  the media. Available at
  – http://www.guardian.co.uk/Iraq/Story/0,2763,9
    29319,00.html
• Report of faked war report from Sky News.
  Actual footage available at:
  – http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/3078693.stm


                                                72
The DA-Notice system
• http://www.dnotice.org.uk/




                               73
Non-voluntary alternatives
• Criminal law
  Official Secrets Act(s)
  Terrorism Act 2000/2006
  Prosecution follows publication




                                     74
• Tension between free speech and national
  security/media and government

• DA-Notice system is voluntary and extra
  legal

• Arrangement between government and
  media not to publish certain information

                                             75
Free Speech
• Various theories justifying free speech –
  ‘free speech as an argument from
  democracy’ most relevant here

• Not an absolute right – national security is
  a legitimate reason for limiting free speech



                                              76
DA-Notices: Still Useful?
• No
   the internet has increasingly changed the way the
    public accesses news and information
   increased information available in the ‘public domain’
    (international news, war bloggers, www.arrse.co.uk)
• Yes
   System still useful for old technology – hard copy print
    media, radio & television (also have internet platforms
    that need policing)
   Represents an alterative conciliatory approach

                                                          77
78
Princely PR
•   Caroline Gammell, March 1 2008, The Telegraph, ‘How the Prince Harry
    blackout was broken’
    http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/1580111/How-the-Prince-Harry-
    blackout-was-broken.html
•   Non attributed, March 2, 2008, The Independent, ‘The people's prince: with
    Harry in Afghanistan. Dog of war or PR pawn?’
    http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/home-news/the-peoples-prince-with-
    harry-in-afghanistan-dog-of-war-or-pr-pawn-790323.html
•   Peter McKay, March 2 2008, Mail, ‘Prince Harry in Afghanistan: Oh! What a
    lovely PR stunt’ http://www.dailymail.co.uk/debate/columnists/article-
    524341/Prince-Harry-Afghanistan-Oh-What-lovely-PR-stunt.html
•   Peter Wilby, March 3 2008, The Guardian, ‘'Harry's war' - it's just a blatant
    PR stunt’
    http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/2008/mar/03/royalsandthemedia.pressand
    publishing

                                                                               79

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med312 Imagey, taste and war reporting

  • 1. 1
  • 3. Madrid 2004 • Guardian changes colour 3
  • 4. Madrid 2004 • The Times airbrushes 4
  • 5. Madrid 2004 • The Telegraph airbrushes 5
  • 6. 6
  • 7. 7
  • 8. What can the news actually show us? 8
  • 9. 9
  • 10. 10
  • 11. Sodomized with a knife? 11
  • 12. 12
  • 13. What can the news actually show us? 13
  • 14. 14
  • 15. Ahmed Chalabi • Interim oil minister in Iraq April-May 2005 and December- January 2006 • Deputy prime minister from May 2005 until May 2006. • Pre-2003 invasion, under his guidance the Iraqi National Congress, supported by lobbyists BKSH & Associates, provided substantial info on which U.S. Intelligence based its condemnation of Saddam Hussein, including reports of weapons of mass destruction and alleged ties to al-Qaeda 15
  • 16. Useful material  Control Room  (2004, Jehane Noujaim)  WMD: Weapons of Mass Deception  (2004, Danny Schechter)  Panorama Special: In The Line of Fire  (21st Nov 2004, BBC) Al- Jazeera on war coverage http://youtu.be/NTo6dbqKlsw Al- Jazeera discusses the PoWs http://youtu.be/mWdDMAH6Kvw 16
  • 17. 17
  • 18. Restrepo (2010, S. Junger & T. Hetherington ) 18
  • 19. Restrepo • The Korengal Valley • Embedded with Second Platoon, B Company, 2nd Battalion, 503rd Infantry Regiment (airborne), 173rd Airborne Brigade Combat Team of the U.S. Army 19
  • 20. ‘Grunt documentaries’ • ‘by privileging personal experience over historical awareness, these accounts construct a version of the war in which it becomes impossible to apprehend such atrocities as Haditha, Ramadi, Abu Ghraib’ – Tony Grajeda 2007 20
  • 21. Misrata, Libya - 20 April 2011 21
  • 22. Homs, Syria - 21 February 2012 22
  • 23. Homs, Syria - 22 February 2012 • Marie Colvin • Remi Ochlik 23
  • 24. 24
  • 25. Ofcom: Section 1 • Violence and dangerous behaviour • 1.11 Violence, its after-effects and descriptions of violence, whether verbal or physical, must be appropriately limited in programmes broadcast before the watershed … and must also be justified by the context. • 1.12 Violence, whether verbal or physical, that is easily imitable by children in a manner that is harmful or dangerous: – must not be featured in programmes made primarily for children unless there is strong editorial justification; – must not be broadcast before the … unless there is editorial justification. • 1.13 Dangerous behaviour, or the portrayal of dangerous behaviour, that is likely to be easily imitable by children in a manner that is harmful: – must not be featured in programmes made primarily for children unless there is strong editorial justification; – must not be broadcast before the watershed (in the case of television) … unless there is editorial justification. 25
  • 26. Ofcom: Section 2 • Harm and Offence • 2.4 Programmes must not include material (whether in individual programmes or in programmes taken together) which, taking into account the context, condones or glamorises violent, dangerous or seriously antisocial behaviour and is likely to encourage others to copy such behaviour. • 2.5 Methods of suicide and self-harm must not be included in programmes except where they are editorially justified and are also justified by the context. 26
  • 27. Questions to consider • Why do some journalists risk their lives to get stories? • What can the mainstream media show us? Should there be limits? Why/not? • To what extent is it possible to separate fact from propaganda/spin? • How complicit are journalists in this process during wartime? • How might the demands for copy/footage/stories impact upon public knowledge? 27
  • 28. 28
  • 29. Four forms of reportage: 1. Technical 2. Official 3. Ideological 4. Critical 29
  • 30. 1 - Technical • Relates to how near or far from the conflict journalists can get • Portability of equipment: – 'All the gadgets a reporter needs can be carried in a single suitcase that fits in the overhead compartment of most planes'. • (Peter Johnson, 'Media's war footing looks solid', USA Today, 17 February 2003) • GW1 - drive for ‘newness’ • GW2 – language/technology of war – ‘smart bombs’, ‘daisy cutters’, night vision, MOABs, Patriots, etc 30
  • 31. 2 - Official • Journalists and the Task Force to the Falklands • Thatcher wanted to ‘manage’ journalists • Influence on type of news produced • Certain news suppressed • Misinformation? – “The BBC had made it clear there were some things it could not reveal. If at the end of the conflict it had to confess to the public that it had deliberately misled it, rather than withheld certain information in the interests of safeguarding life, the BBC’s credibility would be gone.” (Former BBC editor) 31
  • 32. 3 - Ideological • Whose side should we be on? • How do we decide? – “When one’s nation is at war, reporting becomes an extension of the war effort” • Max Hastings (former editor of the Telegraph and the Evening Standard) quoting his TV reporter father’s famous line about WW2 32
  • 33. 4 - Critical • Ideals of journalistic objectivity/impartiality – reporting the facts? • Self reflective? 33
  • 34. 34
  • 35. • WW1: • DW Griffith’s Hearts of the World, 1918 35
  • 36. • WW1: • Frank Hurley • Australia’s official war photographer • Melded composites 36
  • 37. • WW2 – Radio reports central – Cecil Beaton images (often staged) – Disney/Capra films (Why We Fight) – The Empire Marketing Board film unit 37
  • 38. Propaganda? • 1st televised crisis – Suez, 1956 • PM Anthony Eden tried to use BBC for propaganda • Vietnam (1957-1975) – myth of the body bag • Falklands (1982) – 2 important factors: – Lobby system – Pooling system 38
  • 39. Falklands 39
  • 40. • Glasgow University Media Group: • “There is no absolute unity of interest among the media, the government and the military” – 1985, War and Peace News 40
  • 41. 1. Many journalists like the idea of being a war reporter - ITN correspondent:  ‘There was never any danger that this good wonderful war could escalate into anything like The Day After (nuclear war film). It was a good gutsy war but it was a safe gutsy war.’ 1. BBC/ITN/Sky seek to be the nation’s news service, so want to appear to be in tune with national mood. 2. Normal news reporting features official sources anyway, so why would broadcasters, journalists change format now? 41
  • 42. Gulf War 2 • Present attitude towards (mediated) war? • Civilian deaths? • Surgical, precise, clean strikes? • ‘Smart’ bombs? • Information leakage/flow? • www.iraqbodycount.org/ 42
  • 43. ‘Always on’ media • 31st August 1997 • 11th September 2001 • 7th July 2005 • Speculation, commentary and hourly attempt to return to an authoritative summary 43
  • 44. Key changes in coverage 1. Increased availability of channels to view news and many of these are not ‘home-grown’ – e.g., Fox News, CNN, BBC World, Al-Jazeera. 2. Proliferation of news channels might suggest news is increasingly important but news is expensive and the modern media seek more cost efficient soft news and entertainment (visuals over analysis?) 44
  • 45. Other changes – AP & Reuters suffered financially recently – must cover wars adequately but can’t increase subscription costs – Satellite news channels lose ad revenue because viewers want non-stop coverage & advertisers don’t want to be associated with disasters. – News producers cut back on foreign correspondents (lack reporters) – The attempt to be neutral and balanced can make for boring news (Fox News vs Al-Jazeera) – Europe’s anti-war sentiment? (Tumber & Palmer, 2004, point to the lack of space given to anti-war voices). 45
  • 46. Questions to consider • To what extent is it possible to separate the fact from the propaganda/spin? • How complicit are journalists in this process? • How might the demands for copy impact upon public knowledge? 46
  • 47. 47
  • 48. • CentCom (Qatar) • $1.5m briefing centre • Plasma screens, mini studious, phone banks • Designed by Hollywood set designer, George Allison • Platform for truth (US General Tommy Franks) • Seating arrangements reflected pecking order 48
  • 49. • “When Americans wake up in the morning, they will first hear from the [Persian Gulf] region, maybe from General Tommy Franks, then later in the day, they will hear from the Pentagon, then the State Department, then later on the White House will brief.” – Suzy DeFrances, President Bush’s deputy assistant for communications cited in Douglas Quenqua, March 24th 2003, PR Week http://www.prweekus.com/White-House-prepares-to-feed-2 49
  • 50. 50
  • 51. 51
  • 52. • “Photos of sleek fighter jets, rescued POWs, and smiling Iraqis cheering the arrival of U.S. troops are easy to find among Combat Camera’s public images. Photos of bombed-out Baghdad neighborhoods and so-called ‘collateral damage’ are not.” – cited in Heibert, 2003: 252 52
  • 53. 53
  • 54. 54
  • 55. • [S]ome of us have led a very different existence these past weeks. A daily shuttle, hundreds of miles from the action, from a comfortable hotel to the press centre at the drab as-Sayliyah military base, home to CentCom's forward headquarters. And while we allowed ourselves to say "here at CentCom", we knew that we were being held at arm's length. 55
  • 56. • We were rarely allowed to stray from the spartan warehouse with its hi-tech briefing room and cramped, woefully inadequate work-spaces. The real business of running the war was taking place in other, equally spartan warehouses some distance away in this vast, faceless facility. It is an odd way to cover a war, and some wondered if it was really worth it. – Paul Adams, 2003, ‘Reporters’ log: final thoughts’ http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/in_depth/world/2003/reporters_lo 56
  • 57. • Iraq: – 2000-2500 reporters – 600-700 embedded (500 US journalists) • Embeds – officially placed with military units • Unilaterals – roving, independent journalists without military support taking huge risks to get access to stories 57
  • 58. • “The broadcast networks are complicit. With their embedded teams producing great visuals, what need is there for broader analysis from the battlefield? One British network was instrumental in getting one of its own unilateral reporters kicked out of an embed position for rocking the boat…” 58
  • 59. • “…ITN, Sky and the BBC all belong to an exclusive club: the Forward Transmission Unit, based just inside Iraq and attached to the military, which allows a select few correspondents to package the war. With such extreme limits on access, why jeopardise what you've got?” – Lucy Mangan, April 7 2003, The Guardian http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/2003/apr/07/mondaymed 59
  • 60. Dangers facing unilaterals? • “Two weeks into this war, the constraints are tightening. Previously slack border points are now closed. Those unilateral journalists entering Iraq "illegally" do so at higher risk, with no expectation of any assistance from a coalition army warned away from them” – Lucy Mangan, April 7 2003, The Guardian http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/2003/apr/07/mondaymed 60
  • 61. • Death of ITN journalist Terry Lloyd • Palestine Hotel attack (Reuters) • In The Line of Fire (BBC) 61
  • 62. • “US forces must prove that the incident was not a deliberate attack to dissuade or prevent journalists from continuing to report on what is happening in Baghdad.” – Robert Menard, secretary–general of Paris–based Reporters Without Borders. Cited in Ciar Bryne, April 9 2003, http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/2003/apr/09/pressandpublishin g.iraqandthemedia 62
  • 63. • “There’s nothing sacrosanct about a hotel with a bunch of journalists in it.” – (Retired Marine Corps Lt. Gen. Bernard E. Trainor, reported by Washington Post, April 9) 63
  • 64. • “If you look at what fills newspapers now, it’s the equivalent of reality TV – it’s superficial, there’s very little news reporting, there’s very little analysis, but there’s a lot of conjecture. The media thought they were going to get a one-hour-45-minute Hollywood blockbuster and it’s not like that. War is a dirty, ugly thing, and I worry about it being dignified as ‘infotainment’” – (Air Marshall Burridge, Daily Telegraph, April 7 2003) 64
  • 65. How should journalists show the reality of warfare? • Clip from C4 show “Iraq: The Hidden Story” 65
  • 66. The ‘fog’ of war • The Guardian: April 11, 2003 • See this link for claims and denials at the time – http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/2003/apr/11/ pressandpublishing.marketingandpr 66
  • 67. Questions to consider • To what extent is it possible to separate the fact from the propaganda? • How complicit are journalists in this process? • How might the demands for copy impact upon public knowledge? • Can embedded journalism be balanced? 67
  • 68. • ‘The most obvious casualty has been the distinction between warrior and correspondent. First-person plural is now the pronoun of choice, whether subconscious or not. Take Mark Franchetti in the Sunday Times: "Back in Kuwait, as we had edged towards the border ready for the advance, we had been dozing in our assault vehicle... [Now] we were racing across the lunar landscape in attack formation...To the occasional stunned shepherds, we invaders must have seemed like ghosts out of a Mad Max movie.”’ – Lucy Mangan, April 7 2003, The Guardian 68
  • 69. • Sometimes the urge to identify subsumes gender. A report by Sarah Oliver in the Mail on Sunday opened with the arresting line: "We rode at dawn, the men of the 1st Royal Irish," before going on to describe how "our column thundered through the Rumailah oilfield" and closed with the news that "Last night we were holding 37 officers, 277 men and expecting another 200".’ – Lucy Mangan, April 7 2003, The Guardian 69
  • 70. Questions? 1. So we have ‘nowness’, we have immediate coverage, we have words and images but what do we know about war? 2. Should war reporting be for information or an extension of the war effort? 3. As viewers we can watch the news non-stop – does this mean that we understand the news as a construction (as provisional, disputed, happening as journalists speak)? 4. Does news become reduced to narrative with points of closure – do we stop viewing when the statue is pulled down? When do we start to watch again, or really listen, or even think? 5. How long did our interest in Iraq last? Are we concerned with it today? Should we be? 70
  • 71. • How does the press cover war today? 71
  • 72. Additional resources • David Leigh, 2003, ‘False Witness’- examples of military disinformation and the media. Available at – http://www.guardian.co.uk/Iraq/Story/0,2763,9 29319,00.html • Report of faked war report from Sky News. Actual footage available at: – http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/3078693.stm 72
  • 73. The DA-Notice system • http://www.dnotice.org.uk/ 73
  • 74. Non-voluntary alternatives • Criminal law Official Secrets Act(s) Terrorism Act 2000/2006 Prosecution follows publication 74
  • 75. • Tension between free speech and national security/media and government • DA-Notice system is voluntary and extra legal • Arrangement between government and media not to publish certain information 75
  • 76. Free Speech • Various theories justifying free speech – ‘free speech as an argument from democracy’ most relevant here • Not an absolute right – national security is a legitimate reason for limiting free speech 76
  • 77. DA-Notices: Still Useful? • No  the internet has increasingly changed the way the public accesses news and information  increased information available in the ‘public domain’ (international news, war bloggers, www.arrse.co.uk) • Yes  System still useful for old technology – hard copy print media, radio & television (also have internet platforms that need policing)  Represents an alterative conciliatory approach 77
  • 78. 78
  • 79. Princely PR • Caroline Gammell, March 1 2008, The Telegraph, ‘How the Prince Harry blackout was broken’ http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/1580111/How-the-Prince-Harry- blackout-was-broken.html • Non attributed, March 2, 2008, The Independent, ‘The people's prince: with Harry in Afghanistan. Dog of war or PR pawn?’ http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/home-news/the-peoples-prince-with- harry-in-afghanistan-dog-of-war-or-pr-pawn-790323.html • Peter McKay, March 2 2008, Mail, ‘Prince Harry in Afghanistan: Oh! What a lovely PR stunt’ http://www.dailymail.co.uk/debate/columnists/article- 524341/Prince-Harry-Afghanistan-Oh-What-lovely-PR-stunt.html • Peter Wilby, March 3 2008, The Guardian, ‘'Harry's war' - it's just a blatant PR stunt’ http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/2008/mar/03/royalsandthemedia.pressand publishing 79

Notes de l'éditeur

  1. http://www.globalpost.com/dispatch/news/regions/middle-east/111024/gaddafi-sodomized-video-gaddafi-sodomy
  2. Not covered by The Guardian? More likely Gaddafi propaganda? Uploaded here first: pro-Gaddafi site: http://libyasos.blogspot.co.uk/2012/02/libyan-liberation-frontline-news_07.html