The ADAGE
that there s no such thing as a stupid question took heavy damage in
the Gulf War. Henry Allen said it perfectly in the Washington Post Feb.
21: "The Persian Gulf press briefings are making reporters look
like fools, nitpickers, and egomaniacs . . . dinner party commandos,
slouching inquisitors, college-spitball artists . . . a whining, self-righteous,
upper- middle-class mob...."
Let it be noted that much of the news coverage was very good, and some
of it was excellent. Radio and television carried the briefings from
Riyadh and the Pentagon, uncut and without commercial interruption. For
the most part, their expert analysts really were experts. When reporters
stuck to reporting the news, they generally did a commendable job of
it.
Unfortunately, those qualities were often eclipsed by the arrogance,
incompetence, and bias demonstrated by more than a few reporters, correspondents,
and news show moderators.
Colman McCarthy of the Washington Post staked out the
low ground in a Feb. 17 column that sneered at US airmen as "fearless
warriors" conducting an "aerial massacre" at small risk
to themselves in "a coward's air war."
McCarthy, however, is an extreme example. Such diatribes must be factored
out if one wishes to reach useful conclusions about why workaday journalism
in the Gulf War deteriorated so often into Nitwitness News.
Some of it was the sheer incompetence and ignorance of amateur war correspondents.
The defense world was deeply impressed by the unprecedented feat of a
missile knocking another missile out of the sky, but when one of the
Iraqi Scuds got through, a National Public Radio analyst yawned that "three
out of four is not very good. "
At times the comments from the amateurs were so dumb that they were
funny, but the more important explanations of the Nitwitness News phenomenon
lie in the prevailing psychology of the news media.
Contrary to popular belief, the working press is seldom consumed by
a desire "to sell newspapers." Reporters may be motivated by
idealism, dreams of a Pulitzer Prize, or a few extra minutes of airtime,
but they cultivate an active disregard for circulation, advertising,
and other economic considerations.
Reporters like to envision themselves as champions of the public. Writing
in Newsweek Feb. 25, Walter Cronkite charged that "the US military
in Saudi Arabia is trampling on the American people's right to know." According
to the polls, the public figured the media had all the information they
needed to report the war. That, Mr. Cronkite said, "can only be
because the press has failed to make clear the public's stake in the
matter."
Could it be instead that the public has not appointed Mr. Cronkite to
determine its informational requirements and understands the situation
better than Mr. Cronkite believes? As the Jacksonville, Fla., Times-Union asked
in an editorial, "Why does a farmer in Nebraska or a cabbie in Manhattan
need to know exactly how many A-10 Thunderbolts are stationed northwest
of Jubayl?"
Given their chance to ask questions, reporters went mostly after speculation,
irrelevancies, and excruciating detail. In one instance, they clamored
for a description of the markings by which pilots recognized traffic
on the ground as allied rather than enemy vehicles.
Columnists Jack Anderson and Dale Van Atta argue that media performance
at the briefings was somehow a natural consequence of keeping reporters "corralled" in
Riyadh and limiting press pools in the field to 100 or so, a ratio they
compute at one journalist per 5,000 soldiers.
Whatever the forensic merits of that theory, pool reports and other
sources were obviously providing the basic facts and a great many details
about the war to anyone who wanted them.
As quoted by Editor & Publisher, house organ of the trade,
David Lamb of the Los Angeles Times complained that "pool
reporting tends to dilute individual creativity." In that, Mr. Lamb
came close to spilling the beans.
The road to glory and airtime is not paved with the ordinary facts unless
one has them before the other reporters do. A large portion of the 1,400-member
media contingent in Saudi Arabia and their counterparts operating in
the Pentagon and elsewhere wanted scoops and exclusives. They wanted
to be creative.
The military and the media dislike and distrust each other. The hostility
is deep-rooted and has grown steadily worse over the past 20 years.
Some reporters expected--and obviously wanted--to catch the military
in lies or malfeasance. Many of the military officials expected sabotage
from the media. Some of what we saw on television was sparks from that
friction.
The Nitwitness News drill did not help that relationship. The military
will almost certainly take it as confirmation of its suspicions. That's
a shame, because the media are not a monolithic "They," and
many reporters performed responsibly and well during the Gulf War.
What the media learned from the experience remains to be seen.
Copyright Air Force Association. All rights reserved.
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