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Orville Schell on our failed press

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On June 24th, on the eve of the President’s visit to Ireland, Carole Coleman, a reporter for RTE, Irish public television, arrived at the White House for an interview with George Bush. As part of a general White House policy of tightly controlling the press, questions were submitted in advance and she was not even allowed to use her own cameramen and technicians but “was taped by White House staff television technicians.”

The President, as he is generally used to doing, went on autopilot and began reeling off rambling, somewhat incoherent combinations of “answers” in the way he’s done a million times before without challenge. (“History will judge what I’m about. But I’m the kind of person, I don’t really try to chase popular polls, or popularity polls. My job is to do my job and make the decisions that I think are important for our country and for the world. And I argue strongly that the world is better off because of the decisions I have made — along with others.”) Knowing her time was limited, Coleman refused to let him simply prattle on and, with a certain critical edge, tried to refocus him on answers that might actually interest her Irish audience. He was soon reduced, with the irritation of a child, to offering up versions of, “Let me finish. Let me finish, please. Please. You ask the questions and I’ll answer them, if you don’t mind.” He was, in short, rattled.

This was by no means difficult questioning — except by Bush administration standards. As John Nichols of the Madison Capitol Times later wrote, ” On the eve of his recent sojourn in Europe, President Bush had an unpleasant run-in with a species of creature he had not previously encountered often: a journalist. He did not react well to the experience Unfortunately, it appears that Coleman failed to receive the memo informing reporters that they are supposed to treat this president with kid gloves. Instead, she confronted him as any serious journalist would a world leader.”

Almost immediately, complaints from the White House started flowing to the Irish Embassy and to RTE. An already arranged RTE interview with Laura Bush was subsequently cancelled and then, of course, life went on. But the Coleman incident offered us a modest window into White House media policy and attitudes. It was another little reminder of just how tame — how tamed — our media has been in the face of the Bush White House until recently.

Below Orville Schell, dean of the graduate school of journalism at the University of California, Berkeley, offers an original explanation for why this was so and why when “faith-based truth” met access journalism in the wake of the September 11th attacks, the results were a good deal less than inspiring. His piece is adapted from an introduction to a soon-to-be-released collection of essays Now They Tell Us by Michael Massing, originally written for the New York Review of Books, where Massing took to task the New York Times‘ Judith Miller, among others, for abysmal reportage on the nonexistent weapons of mass destruction in Iraq. Tom

Why the Press Failed
By Orville Schell

When, on May 26, 2004, the editors of the New York Times published a mea culpa for the paper’s one-sided reporting on weapons of mass destruction and the Iraq war, they admitted to “a number of instances of coverage that was not as rigorous as it should have been.” They also commented that they had since come to “wish we had been more aggressive in re-examining claims” made by the Bush Administration. But we are still left to wonder why the Times, like many other major media outlets in this country, was so lacking in skepticism toward administration rationales for war? How could such a poorly thought through policy, based on spurious exile intelligence sources, have been so blithely accepted, even embraced, by so many members of the media? In short, what happened to the press’s vaunted role, so carefully spelled out by the Founding Fathers, as a skeptical “watchdog” over government?

When, on May 26, 2004, the editors of the New York Times published a mea culpa for the paper’s one-sided reporting on weapons of mass destruction and the Iraq war, they admitted to “a number of instances of coverage that was not as rigorous as it should have been.” They also commented that they had since come to “wish we had been more aggressive in re-examining claims” made by the Bush Administration. But we are still left to wonder why the Times, like many other major media outlets in this country, was so lacking in skepticism toward administration rationales for war? How could such a poorly thought through policy, based on spurious exile intelligence sources, have been so blithely accepted, even embraced, by so many members of the media? In short, what happened to the press’s vaunted role, so carefully spelled out by the Founding Fathers, as a skeptical “watchdog” over government?

There’s nothing like seeing a well-oiled machine clank to a halt to help you spot problems. Now that the Bush administration is in full defensive mode and angry leakers in the Pentagon, the CIA, and elsewhere in the Washington bureaucracy are slipping documents, secrets, and charges to reporters, our press looks more recognizably journalistic. But that shouldn’t stop us from asking how an “independent” press in a “free” country could have been so paralyzed for so long. It not only failed to seriously investigate administration rationales for war, but little took into account
the myriad voices in the on-line, alternative, and world press that sought to do so. It was certainly no secret that a number of our Western allies (and other countries), administrators of various NGOs, and figures like Mohamed ElBaradei, head of the International Atomic Energy Agency, and Hans Blix, head of the UN’s Monitoring, Verification and Inspections Commission, had quite
different pre-war views of the “Iraqi threat.”

Few in our media, it seemed, remembered I. F. Stone’s hortatory admonition, “If you want to know about governments, all you have to know is two words: Governments lie.” Dissenting voices in the mainstream were largely buried on back pages, ignored on op-ed pages, or confined to the margins of the media, and so denied the kinds of “respectability” that a major media
outlet can confer.

As reporting on the lead-up to war, the war itself, and its aftermath vividly demonstrated, our country is now divided into a two-tiered media structure. The lower-tier — niche publications, alternative media outlets, and Internet sites — hosts the broadest spectrum of viewpoints. Until the war effort began to unravel in spring 2004, the upper-tier — a relatively small number of major broadcast outlets, newspapers, and magazines — had a far more limited bandwidth of critical views, regularly deferring to the Bush Administration’s vision of the world. Contrarian views below rarely bled upwards.

As Michael Massing pointed out recently in the New York Review of Books, Bush administration insinuations that critics were unpatriotic — White House Press Secretary Ari Fleischer infamously warned reporters as war approached, “People had better watch what they say” — had an undeniably chilling effect on the media. But other forms of pressure also effectively inhibited the press. The President held few press conferences and rarely submitted to truly open exchanges. Secretive and disciplined to begin with, the administration adeptly used the threat of denied access as a way to intimidate reporters who showed evidence of independence. For reporters, this meant no one-on-one interviews, special tips, or leaks, being passed over in press conference question-and-answer periods, and exclusion from select events as well as important trips.

After the war began, for instance, Jim Wilkinson, a 32 year-old Texan who ran Centcom’s Coalition Media Center in Qatar, was, according to Massing, known to rebuke reporters whose copy was deemed insufficiently “supportive of the war,” and “darkly warned one correspondent that he was on a ‘list’ along with two other reporters at his paper.” In the play-along world of the Bush Administration, critical reporting was a quick ticket to exile.

A media world of faith-based truth

The impulse to control the press hardly originated with George W. Bush, but his administration has been less inclined than any in memory to echo Thomas Jefferson’s famous declaration that, “The basis of our government being the opinion of the people, the very first object should be to keep that right; and were it left to me to decide whether we should have a government without
newspapers or newspapers without government, I should not hesitate a moment to prefer the latter.”

The Bush Administration had little esteem for the watchdog role of the press, in part because its own quest for “truth” has been based on something other than empiricism. In fact, it enthroned a new criterion for veracity, “faith-based” truth, sometimes corroborated by “faith -based” intelligence. For officials of this administration (and not just the religious ones either), truth seemed to descend from on high, a kind of divine revelation begging no further earthly scrutiny. For our President this was evidently literally the case. The Israeli paper Ha’aretz reported him saying to Mahmoud Abbas, the Palestinian Prime Minister of the moment, “God told me to strike Al Qaeda and I struck, and then he instructed me to strike Saddam, which I did.”

It is hardly surprising, then, that such a President would eschew newspapers in favor of reports
from other more “objective sources,” namely, his staff. He has spoken often of trusting “visceral
reactions” and acting on “gut feelings.” For him as for much of the rest of his administration,
decision-making has tended to proceed not from evidence to conclusion, but from conclusion to evidence. Reading, facts, history, logic and the complex interaction between the electorate, the media, and the government have all been relegated to subsidiary roles in what might be called “fundamentalist” policy formation.

Just as the free exchange of information plays little role in the relationship between a fundamentalist believer and his or her God, so it has played a distinctly diminished role in our
recent parallel world of divine political revelation. After all, if you already know the answer to a question, of what use is the media, except to broadcast that answer? The task at hand, then, is
never to listen but to proselytize the political gospel among non-believers, thereby transforming a once interactive process between citizen and leader into evangelism.

Although in the Bush political universe, “freedom has been endlessly extolled in principle, it has
had little utility in practice. What possible role could a free press play when revelation trumps fact and conclusions are preordained? A probing press is logically viewed as a spoiler under such conditions, stepping between the administration and those whose only true salvation lies in becoming part of a nation of true believers. Since there was little need, and less respect, for an opposition (loyal or otherwise), the information feedback loops in which the press should have played a crucial role in any functioning democracy, ceased operating. The media synapses which normally transmit warnings from citizen to government froze shut.

Television networks continued to broadcast and papers continued to publish, but, dismissed and
ignored, they became irrelevant, except possibly for their entertainment value. As the press has withered, the government, already existing in a self-referential and self-deceptive universe, was
deprived of the ability to learn of danger from its own policies and thus make course corrections.

A Universe in Which News Won’t Matter

Andrew Card, the president’s chief of staff, bluntly declared to New Yorker writer Ken Auletta that members of the press “don’t represent the public any more than other people do. I don’t believe you have a check-and-balance function.” Auletta concluded that, in the eyes of the Bush Administration, the press corps had become little more than another special-interest lobbying group. Indeed, the territory the traditional media once occupied has increasingly been deluged by administration lobbying, publicity, and advertising — cleverly staged “photo ops,” carefully produced propaganda rallies, preplanned “events,” tidal waves of campaign ads, and the like. Afraid of losing further “influence,” access, and the lucrative ad revenues that come from such political image-making, major media outlets have found it in their financial interest to quietly yield.

What does this downgrading of the media’s role say about how our government views its citizens, the putative sovereigns of our country? It suggests that “we the people” are seen not as political constituencies conferring legitimacy on our rulers, but as consumers to be sold policy the way
advertisers sell product. In the storm of selling, spin, bullying, and “discipline” that has been the Bush signature for years, traditional news outlets found themselves increasingly drowned out,
ghettoized, and cowed. Attacked as “liberal” and “elitist,” disesteemed as “trouble makers” and “bashers” (even when making all too little trouble), they were relegated to the sidelines, increasingly uncertain and timid about their shrinking place in the political process.

Add in a further dynamic (which intellectuals from Marxist-Leninist societies would instantly recognize): Groups denied legitimacy and disdained by the state tend to internalize their exclusion as a form of culpability, and often feel an abject, autonomic urge to seek reinstatement at almost any price. Little wonder, then, that “the traditional press” has had a difficult time mustering anything like a convincing counter-narrative as the administration herded a terrified and all-too-trusting nation to war.

Not only did a mutant form of skepticism-free news succeed — at least for a time — in leaving large segments of the populace uninformed, but it corrupted the ability of high officials to function. All too often they simply found themselves looking into a fun-house mirror of their own making and imagined that they were viewing reality. As even the conservative National Review noted, the Bush administration has “a dismaying capacity to believe its own public relations.”

In this world of mutant “news,” information loops have become one-way highways; and a national security advisor, cabinet secretary, or attorney general, a well-managed and programmed polemicist charged to “stay on message,” the better to justify whatever the government has already done, or is about to do. Because these latter-day campaigns to “dominate the media environment,” as the Pentagon likes to say, employ all the sophistication and technology developed by communications experts since Edward Bernays, nephew of Sigmund Freud, first wed an understanding of psychology to the marketing of merchandise, they are far more seductive than older-style news. Indeed, on Fox News, we can see the ultimate marriage of news and PR in a fountainhead of artful propaganda so well-packaged that most people can’t tell it from the real thing.

For three-plus years we have been governed by people who don’t view news, in the traditional sense, as playing any constructive role in our system of governance. At the moment, they are momentarily in retreat, driven back from the front lines of faith-based truth by their own
faith-based blunders. But make no mistake, their frightening experiment will continue if Americans allow it. Complete success would mean not just that the press had surrendered its essential watchdog role, but — a far darker thought — that, even were it to refuse to do so, it might be shunted off to a place where it would not matter.

As the war in Iraq descended into a desert quagmire, the press belatedly appeared to awaken and adopt a more skeptical stance toward an already crumbling set of Bush administration policies. But if a bloody, expensive, catastrophic episode like the war in Iraq is necessary to remind us of the important role that the press plays in our democracy, something is gravely amiss in the way our political system has come to function.

Orville Schell is Dean of the Graduate School of Journalism at the University of California, Berkeley. This piece is adapted from the preface to a collection of New York Review of Books articles on the media’s coverage of the war in Iraq by Michael Massing. It will be published soon as a short book, Now They Tell Us (The New York Review of Books, 2004).

Copyright C2004 Orville Schell