RSS Feed for This PostCurrent Article

PBS’ Frontline Cop-Out

Frontline: Too Timid, Too Little, Too Late: Frontline’s “Bush’s War” on PBS Monday and Tuesday evening was a nicely put-together rehash of the top players’ trickery that led to the attack on Iraq, together with the power-grabbing, back-stabbing, and limitless incompetence of the occupation.

Except for an inside-the-beltway tidbit here and there—for example, about how the pitiable secretary of state Colin Powell had to suffer so many indignities at the hands of other type-A hard chargers, Frontline added little to the discussion. Notably missing was any allusion to the unconscionable role the Fourth Estate adopted as indiscriminate cheerleader for the home team; nor was there any mention that the invasion was a serious violation of international law. But those omissions, I suppose, should have come as no surprise.

Nor was it a surprise that any viewer hoping for insight into why Cheney and Bush were so eager to attack Iraq was left with very thin gruel. It was more infotainment, bereft of substantive discussion of the whys and wherefores of what in my view is the most disastrous foreign policy move in our nation’s history.

Despite recent acknowledgements from the likes of Alan Greenspan, Gen. John Abizaid, and others that oil and permanent (or, if you prefer, “enduring”) military bases were among the main objectives, Frontline avoided any real discussion of such delicate factors. Someone not already aware of how our media has become a tool of the Bush administration might have been shocked at how Frontline could have missed one of President George W. Bush’s most telling “signing statements.” Underneath the recent Defense Authorization Act, he wrote that he did not feel bound by the law’s explicit prohibition against using the funding:

“(1) To establish any military installation or base for the purpose of providing for the permanent stationing of United States Armed Forces in Iraq,” or

“(2) To exercise United States control of the oil resources of Iraq.”

So the Frontline show was largely pap.

At one point, however, the garrulous former Deputy Secretary of State Richard Armitage did allude to one of the largest elephants in the living room—Israel’s far-right Likudniks—and their close alliance with the so-called neo-conservatives running our policy toward the Middle East. But Armitage did so only tangentially, referring to the welcome (if totally unrealistic) promise by Ahmed Chalabi that, upon being put in power in Baghdad, he would recognize Israel. Not surprisingly, the interviewer did not pick up on that comment; indeed, I’m surprised the remark avoided the cutting room floor.

Courage No Longer a Frontline Hallmark

Frontline has done no timely reportage that might be looked upon as disparaging the George W. Bush administration—I mean, for example, the real aims behind the war, not simply the gross incompetence characterizing its conduct. Like so many others, Frontline has been, let’s just say it, cowardly in real time—no doubt intimidated partly by attacks on its funding that were inspired by the White House.

And now? Well the retrospective criticism of incompetence comes as polling shows two-thirds of the country against the Iraq occupation (and the number is surely higher among PBS viewers). So, Frontline is repositioning itself as a mild ex-post-facto critic of the war, but still unwilling to go very far out on a limb. Explaining the aims behind war crimes can, of course, be risky. It is as though an invisible Joseph Goebbels holds sway.

Too Late

On Monday evening I found myself initially applauding Frontline’s matter- of-fact, who-shot-John chronology of how our country got lied into attacking and occupying Iraq. Then I got to thinking—have I not seen this picture before? Many times?

It took a Hollywood producer to recognize and act promptly on the con games that sober observers could not miss as the war progressed. Where were the celebrated “weapons of mass destruction” (WMD)? Robert Greenwald simply could not abide the president’s switch to “weapons of mass destruction programs,” which presumably might be easier to find than the much-ballyhooed WMD so heavily advertised before the attack on Iraq. You remember—those remarkable WMD about which UN chief inspector Hans Blix quipped that the U.S. had one hundred percent certainty of their existence in Iraq, but zero percent certainty as to where they were.

Robert Greenwald called me in May 2003. He had read a few of the memoranda published by Veteran Intelligence Professionals for Sanity (VIPS) exposing the various charades being acted out by the administration and wanted to know what we thought of the president’s new circumlocution on WMD.

I complimented him on smelling a rat and gave him names of my VIPS colleagues and other experienced folks who could fill him in on the details. Wasting no time, he arrived here in Washington in June, armed simply with copious notes and a cameraman. Greenwald conducted the interviews, flew back to his eager young crew in Hollywood and, poof, the DVD “Uncovered: The War on Iraq” was released at the beginning of November 2003.”

So Frontline is four and a half years behind a Hollywood producer with appropriate interest and skepticism. (Full disclosure: I appear in “Uncovered,” as do many of the interviewees appearing in Frontline’s “Bush’s War.”)

Actually, the interviewing by Frontline occurred just a few months later. I know because I was among those interviewed for that as well, as was my good friend and former colleague at the CIA, Mel Goodman. I was struck that Mel looked four years younger on this week’s Frontline. It only then dawned on me that he was four years younger when interviewed.

Have a look at “Uncovered,” [http://www.truthuncovered.com/index.php ] and see how you think it compares to Frontline’s “Bush’s War.”

Safety in Retrospectives

It also struck me that producing a Frontline-style retrospective going back several years is a much less risky genre to work with. Chalk it up to my perspective as an intelligence analyst, but ducking the incredibly important issues at stake over the next several months is, in my opinion, unconscionable. The troop “surge” in Iraq, for example.

Only toward the very end of the program does Frontline allow a bit of relevant candor on a point that has been self-evident since Cheney and Bush, against strong opposition from Generals Abizaid and Casey (and apparently even Rumsfeld), decided to double down by sending 30,000 more troops into Iraq. A malleable new secretary of defense would deal with the recalcitrant generals and pick a Petreaus ex Machina of equal malleability and political astuteness to implement this stop-gap plan.

Pulitzer Prize winning journalist/author Steve Coll, with typical candor, put the “surge” into perspective:

“The decision at a minimum guaranteed that his [Bush’s] presidency would not end with a defeat in history’s eyes; that by committing to the surge, he was certain to at least achieve a stalemate.”

Given this week’s fresh surge of violence as the U.S. surge is scheduled to wind down, even a stalemate may be in some doubt. But, okay, small kudos to Frontline for including that bit of truth—however obvious—and for adding the grim background music to its final comment: “Soon Bush’s war will be handed to someone else.”

Rather Not, Thank You

Intimidation of the media is what has happened all around, including with Frontline, which not so many years ago was able to do some gutsy reporting. Let me give you another example about which few are aware.

Do you remember when Dan Rather made his Apologia Pro Vita Sua, admitting that the American media, including him, was failing to reveal the truth about things like Iraq? Speaking to the BBC on May 16, 2002, Rather compared the situation to the fear of “necklacing” in South Africa:

“It’s an obscene comparison,” Rather said, “but there was a time in South Africa when people would put flaming tires around peoples’ necks if they dissented. In some ways, the fear is that you will be neck-laced here, you will have a flaming tire of lack of patriotism put around your neck.”

Talking to another reporter, Dan told it straight about the careerism that keeps US journalists in line. “It’s that fear that keeps [American] journalists from asking the toughest of the tough questions and to continue to bore-in on the tough questions so often.”

The comparison to “necklacing” may be “obscene” but, sadly, it is not far off the mark. So what happened to the newly outspoken Dan Rather with the newly found courage, when he ran afoul of Vice President Dick Cheney and the immense pressure he exerts on the corporate media?

We know about the lies and the cheerleading for attacking Iraq. But there is much more most of us do not know and remain unable to learn if Rather and other one-time journalists keep acting like Bert Lahr’s cowardly lion in the Wizard of Oz before he gets “the nerve” and courage.

For Dan Rather, the fear would simply not go away…even after leaving CBS for HDNet and promising that, on his new “Dan Rather Reports” show, viewers would see hard-hitting and courageous reporting that he said he couldn’t do at CBS.

Will it surprise you that Dan Rather cannot shake the necklace? I refer specifically to a program for “Dan Rather Reports,” meticulously prepared by award-winning producer, Kristina Borjesson. The special included interviews with an impressive string of first-hand witnesses to neocon machinations prior to the US attack on Iraq, and provides real insights into motivations—the kind of insights Frontline did not even attempt.

Nipped in the Bud by the “Dark Side”

Last year Borjesson’s taping was finished and the editing had begun. Borjesson’s requests to interview people working for the vice president had been denied. But, following standard journalistic practice (not to mention common courtesy), she sent an email to John Hannah in Cheney’s office in order to give Hannah a chance to react to what others—including several of the same senior folks on Frontline last evening— had said about him for her forthcoming report.

At that point all hell broke loose. Borjesson was abruptly told by Rather’s executive producer that by sending the email, Borjesson could have “brought down the whole (‘Dan Rather Reports’) operation.”

The show was killed and Borjesson sacked. For good measure, she was also accused of “coaching” interview subjects and taking their words out of context. Since neither Rather nor his executive producer would provide proof to substantiate that allegation, Borjesson took the unprecedented step of sending her script and transcripts to all her interview subjects, asking them to confirm or deny that she had coached them or taken their words out of context. Not one of them found her script inaccurate or said they were coached. She has the emails to prove this.

This sorry episode and Frontline’s careful avoidance of basic issues like the strategic aims of the Bush administration in invading and occupying Iraq are proof, if further proof were needed, that the White House, and especially Cheney’s swollen office, exert enormous pressure over what we are allowed to see and hear. The fear they instill in the corporate press, and in what once was serious investigative reporting of programs like Frontline, translates into programs getting neutered or killed outright—and massive public ignorance.

Some consolation is to be found in the good news that, in this particular case, Kristina Borjesson is made of stronger stuff; she has not given up, and was greatly encouraged by how many of the very senior officials and former officials she had already interviewed consented to be re-interviewed (since the tapes belonged to the “Rather Not” folks).

Now who looks forward to being re-interviewed?

Borjesson’s original interviewees took into account her problems with the cowards and the censors—and her atypical, gutsy refusal to self-censor—and went the extra mile. A tribute to them as well, and their interest in getting the truth out.

Borjesson is now completing the program on her own. Look for an announcement in the coming months, if you’re interested in real sustenance rather than the pabulum served up, no doubt under duress, by Frontline.

Ray McGovern works with Tell the Word, the publishing arm of the ecumenical Church of the Saviour in inner-city Washington, DC. He was an Army infantry/intelligence officer in the early sixties, then a CIA analyst for 27 years. He now serves on the Steering Group of Veteran Intelligence Professionals for Sanity (VIPS).

This article originally appeared on Consortiumnews.com.

Trackback URL

RSS Feed for This Post16 Comments »

Comment by madamab | 2008-03-26 12:54:32

Too bad they didn’t take a cue from Bill Moyers’ Journal, where he had many “journalists” who became Iraq cheerleaders on to say their mea culpas.

Disinforming voters is a linchpin of Republican domination strategy. Unfortunately, our media is still at it with constant stories about how the “surge” is “working.”

The only news show I can watch now is the Jim Lehrer NewsHour on PBS. I know that some of the reporting is slanted, but at least the stories are more then five seconds long and contain nuggets of real information.

Comment by simon | 2008-03-26 13:05:45

Too bad they didn’t take a cue from Bill Moyers’ Journal, where he had many “journalists” who became Iraq cheerleaders on to say their mea culpas

And for those within the administration who would challenge Cheney, or Bush, who would back them up?

The Press?

Congress?

Of course not.

I feel conflicted about blaming those we hold to higher standards, such as Powell, or even Gates, given they have to fight not only Cheney, and his minions, but also a useless, obsequious press, coupled with an even weaker Congress.

The American press, and the American Congress are not on the side of the American people.

Their members aren’t even very smart.

Comment by apishapa | 2008-03-26 13:49:28

I understand the urge to forgive these people for being cowards, but as you say, we hold them to higher standards.

These people hold themselves up as role models in many instances, and we have held them up to our children as prifiles in courage, only to find out they are something less. So, if they cannot speak the truth, they should at least acknowledge they are cowed by Cheney.

 
 
 

Comment by Marjorie | 2008-03-26 13:26:32

What you are writing has merit, but it wasn’t made for people such as yourself. It was made for people who didn’t understand what happened or came of age after recently. Not everyone reads blogs or journals, or even newspapers. For those people it was a real learning experience. And it will help them understand why this election is so important.

Comment by simon | 2008-03-26 15:25:22

It was made for people who didn’t understand what happened or came of age after recently. Not everyone reads blogs or journals, or even newspapers.

And it is the responsibility of our leaders, good moral ethical leaders, to insure the welfare of this nation.

When it’s David Axelrod, or dick stinking Cheney, we have a problem.

So, the idea is to make those leaders aware, the adman fantasies of “I can take money from Saddam’s former bagman and run for President, and it won’t matter” or “I can sell Obama like Perrier, and ii doesn’t matter (if I put another lazy idiot in the Presidency)” have to end.

Those idiots started a war they can’t handle.

 
 

Comment by simon | 2008-03-26 13:29:36

Another point Ray made had to do with the marketing of the war, and I say this in relation to the swiftboating Hillary and the blogs are undergoing, also, I think, a tool of the PR set.

Marketing led to a war in Iraq, marketers sold a war, a horrifically incompetent President, but marketers can’t solve a war, can’t end it with a brand, or a new advertising campaign, marketers can’t even UNDERSTAND the war.

So now what?

You bring the ad men into politics, and they, like Karl Rove, overstep their bounds, drowning themselves, and the country.

This is very real, these men are horrifically mediocre, men like Rove, and Axelrod, they can’t even BEGIN to address the problems facing this country, yet, somehow they still feel compelled to undermine true talent, for the sake of their simplistic narcissism.

Why, for what?

 

Comment by DCMediagirl | 2008-03-26 14:15:24

Ray - much as I admire you and your work, I have to disagree with your assessment of the Frontline special. I took the two nights to be a kind of primer for those who may have gaps in their knowledge or may have forgotten one or two of the more egregious episodes before, during and “after” the war. I agree with the point that the role of the media should have been addressed - at length, mind you, focusing on the particularly egregious behavior of the Pentagon “press corps”. I’m also of the school that is less inclined to cut Colin Powell too much slack. He knew that he was being asked to present the case before the UN because of his popularity resulting from his perceived integrity; in essence, he was the lipstick on the pig. Given the magnitude of the scandal of disinformation, arm twisting, loss of life and other misdeeds, all those involved should have been chased out of Washington like poisoned dogs. Just my two cents.

 

Comment by rjj | 2008-03-26 14:20:15

… Cheney’s swollen office, exert enormous pressure over what we are allowed to see and hear. The fear they instill in the corporate press …

How do they do this? People who buck Cheney are professionally disappeared. Glass half full: it is better than dropping them out of helicopters. Glass half empty: it is the slippery slope to having them dropped out of helicopters.

Comment by rjj | 2008-03-26 14:21:42

But HOW do they do this? What can/will Cheney do to people who do not oblige him?

Comment by simon | 2008-03-26 15:31:58

How do they do this? People who buck Cheney are professionally disappeared

So, yeah, money is more important than liberty, and the destruction of the US, I can see your point.

They’re cowards, bottom line.

If they wanted to buck Cheney, they’d let themselves be professionally disappeared, and start a blog, fighting the good fight.

Cheney is temporary, as is his crew, only temporary, and failures, at that.

Look at all the military men who stood up to those cretins.

What, the corporate class all full of pu$$5&s, weak, no integrity?

Why, yes.

And they did a great job, too, didn’t they?

 
 
 

Comment by DCMediagirl | 2008-03-26 14:21:41

And a followup comment. As to your observation “Nor was it a surprise that any viewer hoping for insight into why Cheney and Bush were so eager to attack Iraq was left with very thin gruel. It was more infotainment, bereft of substantive discussion of the whys and wherefores of what in my view is the most disastrous foreign policy move in our nation’s history”, I am reminded of the fable of the scorpion and the frog:

One day, a scorpion looked around at the mountain where he lived and decided that he wanted a change. So he set out on a journey through the forests and hills. He climbed over rocks and under vines and kept going until he reached a river.
The river was wide and swift, and the scorpion stopped to reconsider the situation. He couldn’t see any way across. So he ran upriver and then checked downriver, all the while thinking that he might have to turn back.

Suddenly, he saw a frog sitting in the rushes by the bank of the stream on the other side of the river. He decided to ask the frog for help getting across the stream.

“Hellooo Mr. Frog!” called the scorpion across the water, “Would you be so kind as to give me a ride on your back across the river?”

“Well now, Mr. Scorpion! How do I know that if I try to help you, you wont try to kill me?” asked the frog hesitantly.

“Because,” the scorpion replied, “If I try to kill you, then I would die too, for you see I cannot swim!”

Now this seemed to make sense to the frog. But he asked. “What about when I get close to the bank? You could still try to kill me and get back to the shore!”

“This is true,” agreed the scorpion, “But then I wouldn’t be able to get to the other side of the river!”

“Alright then…how do I know you wont just wait till we get to the other side and THEN kill me?” said the frog.

“Ahh…,” crooned the scorpion, “Because you see, once you’ve taken me to the other side of this river, I will be so grateful for your help, that it would hardly be fair to reward you with death, now would it?!”

So the frog agreed to take the scorpion across the river. He swam over to the bank and settled himself near the mud to pick up his passenger. The scorpion crawled onto the frog’s back, his sharp claws prickling into the frog’s soft hide, and the frog slid into the river. The muddy water swirled around them, but the frog stayed near the surface so the scorpion would not drown. He kicked strongly through the first half of the stream, his flippers paddling wildly against the current.

Halfway across the river, the frog suddenly felt a sharp sting in his back and, out of the corner of his eye, saw the scorpion remove his stinger from the frog’s back. A deadening numbness began to creep into his limbs.

“You fool!” croaked the frog, “Now we shall both die! Why on earth did you do that?”

The scorpion shrugged, and did a little jig on the drownings frog’s back.

“I could not help myself. It is my nature.”

Then they both sank into the muddy waters of the swiftly flowing river.

Why did they do it? It’s in their nature.

 

Comment by bob h | 2008-03-27 07:40:49

I thought the superb program was a devastating indictment of Rumsfeld and Rice, particularly.

In Japan, officials who had fucked up so badly would jump in front of the subway train or take a knife to their bowels. But Rice actually expects a promotion in the form of the McCain VP slot.

Comment by salo | 2008-03-27 11:53:41

but they knew all this in real time. This was not reported on at the time but it was all out there.

 
 

Comment by Centrocitta | 2008-03-27 12:45:35

Now, today, we have Bush scolding Congress about Iraq. Why doesn’t that unelected idiot shut up for a change? Who does he think is listening to him now? Yeah, the world does understand that the United States of Israel is scared, especially when European tourists have to wait two hours to go through customs in Atlanta. But those same Europeans ask me if I’m scared walking around my Italian city or in Rome or Florence or Milano or was I scared in Paris? Of course not. I’ve never been scared to be anywhere in the European Union. Oh, but I remember a time not so long ago when the United States of Israel was trying to make Europe believe it should be scared too. But Europe never bought the BS. Remember, Britain is in the UK — not in Europe!

 

Comment by snafubar | 2008-03-27 13:44:23

Ray, I take exception to your assertion

“Notably missing was any allusion to the unconscionable role the Fourth Estate adopted as indiscriminate cheerleader for the home team;”

There was a four-part Frontline series called “News War” that aired almost a year ago that addressed this.

http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/newswar/

These four episodes were entirely dedicated to the “Fourth Estate” and it’s selling of the war to the American public too lazy or too gullible to check anything out. They ran examples of their own complicity and laid bare the best narrative of the story I have seen yet.

So as much as I admire and solute your efforts in every place I have seen them, Ray, in this case I think you have not given credit where credit is due by taking too narrow a focus on one of the good guys. You can’t legitimately call someone else’s efforts insufficient if indeed those efforts are there but in someplace easily found that you did not see.

 

Comment by incompetence theories - ha! | 2008-03-27 20:29:30

The Frontline show didn’t seem to use the word OIL, as in petroleum, as in most of the remaining oil on Earth is located around the Persian Gulf.

The “Uncovered” documentary “forgot” to mention oil considerations, too.

Richard Nixon coined the term “limited hang out” - it refers to disclosing part of a scandal to avoid exposing the whole thing.

The biggest lie is the false claim that 9/11 was a surprise attack even though about 15 countries warned the White House that it was about to happen. There’s lots of disinformation about this, but it’s also well documented that France, Germany, Egypt, Jordan, Russia, Israel, and numerous other allies provided specific warnings about what, when and where. Without the “attack,” the neo-cons could not have been able to mobilize to grab Iraqi oil fields and Afghan poppy fields.

“we are witnessing a sequential war to control the largest reserves on a planet that is running out of oil.”
– Michael Ruppert, From the Wilderness http://www.fromthewilderness.com

“The poor countries will bear most of the burden [of high oil prices]. But the United States will be in serious difficulties. There is, I fear, a strong danger of some ill-considered military intervention to try to secure oil.”
– Colin Campbell, petrogeologist,
Association for the Study of Peak Oil, December 2000 http://www.peakoil.net

 

RSS Feed for This PostPost a Comment

Name (required)
E-mail (required - never shown publicly)
URI
Your Comment (smaller size | larger size)
noq-adbutton1.gif