The CNN Effect: A Tale of Two Wars
Now that the artillery smoke has lifted and Sarkozy and Medvedev’s 6 point ceasefire plan is imposed on Georgia, it’s time to figure out: what the hell happened between last Thursday and now?
Gary Brecher has the most elegant, if undeniably sociopathic, explanation:
1. The Georgians started it.
2. They lost.
3. What a beautiful little war!
Except, there was more than one war; and which one you were following depended on where you lived.
The US media covered the Russian invasion of Georgia and its airstrikes on Gori, while the Russian media covered the Georgian invasion of South Ossetia and its attacks on Tskhinvali, its capital. And there was no overlap.
For example, on all of last night’s three major CNN news shows - the Election Center, Anderson Cooper 360, and Lou Dobbs Tonight - there was no more than one mention of Ossetia itself, of any Georgian atrocities or Ossetian refugees. It was all pictures of the aftermath of Russian raids on Gori, Russian tanks rolling into Georgia, with captions like “Russia invades”. Yet, as CNN itself reports in a paragraph buried on its website, “up to 100,000 people are thought to have been displaced by the violence, which has left South Ossetia’s capital of Tskhinvali in ruins”. Moreover, as the brilliant journalist Margarita Akhvlediani writes, Reuters has reported that up to 2,000 civilians in Tskhinvali, the South Ossetian capital, are dead.
So why does CNN care more about Russian violence in Gori than Georgian violence in Tskhinvali?
Of course, a mirror-image situation exists in Russia, which has asserted that up to 1500 people have been killed by Georgian forces in South Ossetia as part of an alleged ethnic cleansing operation, and where the media have been largely quiet on the air bombing of the Gori apartment blocks. In the rare event that these reports have appeared on the Russian news (just as a minority of US shows, like Countdown with Keith Olbermann, have reported on Georgian attacks in Ossetia) they remained in the distinct minority. But it is notable that much of this selective coverage has been down to government censorship, with journalists who had been reporting on the sorties, like Russia today’s William Dunbar, being taken off the air.
What is troubling is the US media’s willingness to similarly tow the party line, but in the absence of any of the coercive measures, such as the state censorship, that the Russian press endures. There have been no William Dunbars on CNN, despite the fact that every report I’ve seen on the channel yesterday had been framed as “Russian invasion”, with endless clips of Saakashvili alleging Russian crimes etc, in a loop of totally pro-Georgian coverage. Georgia is a key US ally, the 3rd largest troop contingent in Iraq, and occupies a strategic, oil rich zone. The self-policing in the US media, which has basically been uncritically promoting government talking points, is very disturbing.
To the uninformed viewer, it was Russia, not Georgia, which used the cover of the Olympic games to invade; in reality, they both did. In addition, there have been several mentions of Georgia as a fledgling democracy, but no mention of Saakashvili’s recent crackdown on the media and civil society. The US media has been guilty of a procrustean tendency to distil a messy conflict between two flawed states into a Manichean struggle between good and evil; as Campbell Brown said yesterday: “there’s much more at stake here than the freedom of a former Soviet republic and Russia’s attempt to big-foot itself back onto the World Stage”.
And how’s this for hysteria, from CNN’s breathless hack Ed Henry reporting live from the White House on Monday night:
“…What’s really going on is that Russia is trying essentially to reconstitute the old soviet union.bring back the old spheres of influence. if you take over Georgia today, what’s next? Could they then move into the Ukraine (sic), could they take over the Czech Republic? These are awful options that are on the table, but theres a fear that if they start here and are not stopped, what happens next?”
On distinct occasions, I noticed straight factual inaccuracies. For example, both Campbell Brown and Lou Dobbs consistently asked why Russia was refusing to agree to international demands for a cease fire, when in fact Russia had convened the UN Security Council for just such a ceasefire last week, only to be rebuffed by the United States. As an AP story from August 9th, and quoted in Mark Ames’s excellent article for The Nation, put it:
“At the request of Russia, the U.N. Security Council held an emergency session in New York but failed to reach consensus early Friday on a Russian-drafted statement.
The council concluded it was at a stalemate after the United States, Britain and some other members backed the Georgians in rejecting a phrase in the three-sentence draft statement that would have required both sides “to renounce the use of force,” council diplomats said.”
Of course, there can be no room for such inconvenient nuance on CNN if the Georgian use of force in Ossetia and Abkhazia is not mentioned to begin with and the conflict is framed exclusively in terms of the Russian invasion.
In addition, there have also been no mentions of Kosovo, despite the fact that Russia widely sees the West’s sponsorship of Kosovo breaking from Serbia as a precedent for Ossetia breaking from Georgia.
As I have pointed out in my last post, the US and, to a lesser extent, British media have been very quick to jump on the Russia bashing, jingoist bandwagon, hungry for the reinstatement of the Cold War narrative. Here are two excellent articles exposing this tendency:
http://blogs.guardian.co.uk/news/2008/08/how_russia_became_a_bear_again.html
http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2008/aug/11/georgia.russia1
Even more unnervingly, are we in fact witnessing the crystallisation of a ‘CNN effect’? On both Lou Dobbs and the Election Centre, Obama was criticised for not taking a strong enough stance on Russia in the wake of its invasion. Here is a sample quote from Campbell Brown from yesterday’s programme:
“John McCain…saw an opportunity here. He was quick to condemn Russia, he’s been keeping up the sort of steady drum beat. Obama a little more cautious, at least initially, in his statements. He’s since toughened up his stance. Should he have come out stronger right from the get-go?”
Yes, you are not mistaken: that was the word ‘drum-beat’, as in ‘drum-beat to war‘, used in a positive way, by a news host. Of course, McCain’s stance was to be expected, writes Mark Ames,
“considering McCain’s raving Russophobia, and his campaign team’s financial and ideological ties to Saakashvili. As has been reported, McCain’s top foreign policy advisor, neocon Randy Scheunemann, has a long financial relationship with Saakashvili to lobby his interests in the United States.
On Monday, only Obama had made any reference to Ossetia, and only Obama had called on Georgia to rein in its offensive there. Yet, some time after his comments were circulated, Obama made another press conference, this time being much harder on Russia.
While it is impossible to establish causality, I can’t help thinking that the press was at least partly responsible for pushing him into a more hard-line position. McCain’s hawkish position has been almost universally derided by the independent strategic and foreign policy community as irresponsible and inflammatory, yet it seemed to be endorsed by the mainstream media, who seem to love their drum-beating!
The press’s credulity of official US government positions, easy embrace of jingoism and susceptibility to hawkishness reminded me queasily of its very similar performance in run up to the Iraq war. Have any lessons been learned? More importantly, is there some structural feature of the free press that explains this effortless falling-into-line? Does the Obama/McCain vignette show that press pressure can in fact actually escalate conflict?
So is it any wonder that, despite the fact that, as Mikhail Gorbachev writes in the Washington Post, that Georgian leaders badly miscalculated when “they could get away with a “blitzkrieg” in South Ossetia”, no matter how much “the quick and easy victory exposes the west’s lack of leverage over a resurgent Russia despite years of heavy American political investment in Georgia”, the war will have been a military victory for Russia, but a PR defeat.
In fact, so successful has been Saakashvili’s wooing of the Western media that, according to Mark Ames,
No one’s bothering to ask what the Ossetians themselves think about it, or why they’re fighting for their independence in the first place. That’s because the Georgians–with help from lobbyists like Scheunemann–have been pushing the line that South Ossetia is a fiction, a construct of evil Kremlin neo-Stalinists, rather than a people with a genuine grievance.
In an article headlined “Russia has Lost the War”, the online daily Gazeta ru reaches very similar conclusions, after an analysis of Russian, Georgian and Western press treatment of the conflic.t It suggests that another reason for Western press’s favourable treatment of Georgia was the relatively greater access and support it gave to foreign journalists, where Russia’s propaganda effort focused much more heavily on its own media.
Modern conflicts are fought in the ‘courtroom of public opinion’, as Adlai Stevenson said at the UN during the Cuban Missile Crisis. It’s time for Russia to get media-savvy.
—— —– —– —– —– —– —– —– AND ALSO —– —– —– —– —– —– —– —– —– —– —–
FOLLOW THE OIL:
Something that surprised me was the candid (and frankly, quite callous) mention of oil interests as motivators of US interest. Here is CNN Anchor Campbell Brown explaining why Americans should care about Georgia:
Georgia is a vital gateway to the rich and untapped oil and natural gas fields around the caspian sea.to get to that energy market, you really have to go to Georgia. and look to the south - you have to go through Iran, not good. Go east or south, you run into Kazakhstan, Turkmenistan and Afghanistan, countries that to say the least are not known for stable governments. Go North, you hit Russia, which already controls much of the oil and natural gas being sold to Europe, and wouldn’t mind controlling more. That leads a little path to the north west across Georgia. Whoever controls Georgia controls the flow of oil and gas.
BEST SUMMING UP OF THE WAR:
Gary Brecher:
The bottom line will be simple: the Georgians overplayed their hand and got slapped, and we caught a little of the follow-through, which is what happens when you waste your best troops—and Georgia’s, for that matter—on a dumb war in the wrong place. We detatched Kosovo from a Russian ally; they detached South Ossetia from an American ally. It’s a pawn exchange, if that. If it signals anything bigger, it’s the fact that the US is weaker than it was ten years ago and Russia is much, much stronger than it was in Yeltsin’s time. But anybody with sense knew all that already.
A QUESTION OF RUSSOPHOBIA?
As I was thinking about the reasons for US media coverage of the conflict, I read a very compelling and thoughtful rumination on Russophobia and the media from Timothy Post, an American buinessman and blogger living in Krasnodar.:
There’s a significant disconnect between what I see daily with my own eyes and what I read in the Western media. The question keeps bumping around in my brain, Why do so many people in the West hate Russia?
NOT ALL MAINSTREAM MEDIA COVERAGE WAS RUBBISH:
Post also has on his site a valuable run down of some of the best mainstream media coverage of the conflict, which is very much worth reading especially after hearing all the above tales of woe.
August 13th, 2008 at 7:10 am
now the Russian media is launching another offensive in cyber… http://www.enewsreference.com/newspaper/russi.htm
August 15th, 2008 at 2:31 pm
[…] on Tskhinvali, its capital. And there was no overlap”. Posted by Elia Varela Serra Print Version ShareThis […]
August 17th, 2008 at 8:54 am
[…] There’s a very interesting post at the Russia Foreign Policy blog that suggests a somewhat divergent view of the (I guess) still ongoing Russia-Georgia conflict—that Russia won a military victory but has lost the public relations battle: So is it any wonder that, despite the fact that, as Mikhail Gorbachev writes in the Washington Post, that Georgian leaders badly miscalculated when “they could get away with a “blitzkrieg” in South Ossetia”, no matter how much “the quick and easy victory exposes the west’s lack of leverage over a resurgent Russia despite years of heavy American political investment in Georgia”, the war will have been a military victory for Russia, but a PR defeat. […]
August 17th, 2008 at 8:12 pm
Great write-up. We’ll link to this from our blog at Ushanka.us.
August 18th, 2008 at 1:15 am
[…] Of course, for the Georgian invasion of S. Ossetia, U.S. corporate news media — already well-versed in going along with the state terror against Iraq, Afghanistan, Iran, and of course the IOPTs — didn’t have to be told what their role was. U.S. “allies” and puppet regimes are to be “covered,” while the chosen enemies of the state are to be “exposed” (i.e., hyped as criminal threats via lies and omissions). […]
August 18th, 2008 at 10:42 am
[…] The Western media is in truly high dudgeon, these days, inveighing against Putin and newly “authoritarian” Russia, but this narrative is belied by the facts. As one analyst writing on the blog of the Foreign Policy Association put it: […]
August 18th, 2008 at 6:09 pm
[…] Russia A Great Decisions 2008 Blog « The CNN Effect: A Tale of Two Wars […]
August 18th, 2008 at 6:55 pm
[…] UPDATE III: Something to think about… Of course, a mirror-image situation exists in Russia, which has asserted that up to 1500 people have been killed by Georgian forces in South Ossetia as part of an alleged ethnic cleansing operation, and where the media have been largely quiet on the air bombing of the Gori apartment blocks. In the rare event that these reports have appeared on the Russian news (just as a minority of US shows, like Countdown with Keith Olbermann, have reported on Georgian attacks in Ossetia) they remained in the distinct minority. But it is notable that much of this selective coverage has been down to government censorship, with journalists who had been reporting on the sorties, like Russia today’s William Dunbar, being taken off the air. […]
August 18th, 2008 at 8:28 pm
Great article, with one HUGE mistake.
“To the uninformed viewer, it was Russia, not Georgia, which used the cover of the Olympic games to invade; in reality, they both did.”
That is simply a lie.
Georgia used the cover of the Olympic Games (the start of them; the first day) to bombard Ossetian villages, towns and Ossetian capital city into ruins a la WW2; all the Russians did was intervene to save the Ossetians from this war crime.
One must remember that Russian peacekeepers also died in this Georgian attack.
In no way can Russian intervention be termed as anything but a humanitarian mission of mercy.
And I say this as a born in Eastern Europe Russophobe, who hated, hates, and will hate Russian government (but find Russian women incredibly sexy
August 20th, 2008 at 2:19 am
To suggest that somehow Russia planned some kind of “evil invasion” is to be completely ignorant of the facts.
Russia’s Military only entered the War in South Ossetia nearly 14 hours after it began(with Georgia launching a night long Artillery bombardment). In no way can this be called an organized invasion. Literally all equipment that was working was sent into South Ossetia, and this was barely 100 vehicles. There was not even a Regiment of Troops ready to be deployed. The Air Force sent up the first aircraft that could take off. It took days to organize and mobilize a Division of troops and send it across the border. It was a mess, not an invasion. Russia’s Military was just lucky the South Ossetians are combat hardened Veterans and resisted against overwhelming odds to the last bullet.
August 20th, 2008 at 3:15 pm
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August 22nd, 2008 at 7:43 am
[…] The winning non-Council post was Daniel Pipes’s “The West’s Islamist Infiltrators”. Second place honors went to Russian Foreign Policy Blog’s “The CNN Effect: A Tale of Two Wars”, which I nominated. […]
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September 2nd, 2008 at 3:19 pm
The Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe has accumulated evidence pointing to “numerous wrong decisions” made by Georgian leaders that led to a military crisis with Russia, Der Spiegel said on Saturday.
In a report to be published in its Monday edition, OSCE military observers in the Caucasus described detailed planning by Georgia to move into South Ossetia which contributed to the crisis, the German magazine said.
The report also backed up Russian claims that the Georgian offensive was already in full swing by the time Russian troops and armored vehicles entered the Roksky Tunnel, on the border with Russia and South Ossetia, to protect its peacekeepers and the civilian population.
The OSCE report also contains suspected war crimes committed by Georgians, who ordered attacks on sleeping South Ossetian civilians.
Georgia attacked South Ossetia on August 8, Russia moved in only 1.5 days later…the aggressor is Georgia. Why is US media not picking up on this report?
September 8th, 2008 at 9:31 pm
I am quite disturbed, as I’m sure many of you are, regarding the recent developments in Russia and it’s neighboring countries. The consensus seems to be that Russia has become needlessly agressive in Georgia, Abkhasia, and Southern Ossetia. Part of this consensus is that the issue is one-fold- oil. This was indeed a wake-up call to the civilized world that the Russian bear is far from asleep. We are suddenly reminded of sound bites in the 1980’s about the Soviet Union being the number one sponsor of terrorism in the world ‘at that time.’ Now let us move to the recent announcement of upcoming “war games” in the Carribean in November with Argentina; they incidentally are a socialist state, who, also have a lot of oil. Now for some analysis. It is interesting to note that historically, Russia has taken a proxy role in the Vietnam and Korean Wars. In those days, the mission was clear, “to fight the spread of communism.” To risk being redundant, the Russians barely lost a soul in those wars. Let us now look at the relationship between Venezuela and Iran- similar propaganda(not to be disregarded) and the surprise new connection with Venezuela, a socialist state. Now let us examine the recent sales of sophisticated weapons to Iran and Syria. These last two have been referred to as “sponsors of terrorism” in the world. Is anybody making a connection here? Am I naive. Am I alone? Or am I missing something? Is Russia, and has it been all along, a behind-the-scenes sponsor of world terrorism? Can anyone answer this? Now let’s turn to the Arab, specifically the Muslims. Please note, who is actually dying(besides the Americans and the Israelis). Yes, friends, the Arabs people themselves. Notice also the absolute minimal loss of life by Russian soldiers and ordinary citizens. What shall we conclude. Hmmm, ‘let’s you and him fight.’ Can we really go out n a limb and say the we, the Americans, all Westerners, and, guess who, the Arabs are all victims and pawns? Whose idea was paradise and seventy two virgens? Whose schools are teaching toddlers to hate Americans and Jews, Russia? Not on your life. Everyone in the Arab world, but not them else but them. They are preserving themselves while the rest of us fight among ourselves. Can Russia dominate the world? You bet it can. Does Russia have a large, very expendible population and military? You bet it does. Do the Russians have time on their side? You bet they do. Do we? Not really. Do we have many friends in the world? Not really. Have we been told by the proxy Iran that they intend to destroy the Israel and the United States? You bet we have. What role will the Russians have? Do you think that they have started to carry this out?
Your answer please.
May G-d preserve us.
October 23rd, 2008 at 11:14 am
[…] The role of energy in US democracy promotion is openly admitted even on Fox News, as I note in this article about the US media response to the Georgia conflict. […]
November 18th, 2008 at 7:34 pm
[…] Now, in light of this joint culpability (if anything, Georgia’s was active - shelling civilians 0 and Russia’s passive -failing to rein in allies), the question that I asked in August remains: […]