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TBS 8: Media in the Midst of War
Transnational Broadcasting
Studies is published twice a year by the Adham Center for Television Journalism.
The Spring 2002 issue was titled "Media in the Midst of War," with articles
and interviews exploring the media's coverage of two conflictsSeptember
11 and its aftermath, and the recent Israeli incursions into the West Bankas
explained in the following editorial.
Ten years ago TBS's publisher,
the Adham Center for Television Journalism at the American University in Cairo,
published an obscure book on the second Gulf War called "Media in the Midst of
War." Now in 2002 we return to examining the same topic-this time both post-September
11 and in the face of escalating violence in the Middle East.
The Gulf War is often
cited as one of the key events that brought CNN, with its exclusive coverage from
Baghdad and a viewership around the world that wanted up-to-the-second reports,
to global prominence-as well as making household names of some of its star players
like Peter Arnett and Christiane Amanpour. As we reported in our last issue, the
war in Afghanistan did the same for Al-Jazeera, which had exclusive footage from
inside Kabul and which continues to receive videos from Osama bin Laden's al-Qaeda
group (the latest, accompanied by the last will and testament video of one of
the Sept. 11 hijackers, just days before this issue of TBS was published). Both
CNN and Al-Jazeera were quite well known, of course, before the Gulf War or the
Afghan War, respectively-but these conflicts brought them to a truly global prominence;
in the first case bringing CNN to the Middle East, and in the second, bringing
Al-Jazeera to the forefront of western attention.
The significance of the
media in the midst of these current wars cannot be underestimated. War, for the
media, can boost ratings, it can make names, but there are also much more significant
dynamics. In the Middle East, satellite stations that were already making a name
for themselves for open debate and freedom of expression have now brought to public
view what is shaping up to be an incredibly powerful force in regional politics:
the Arab street. Public opinion has a voice as it never has before, and the implications
of this are potentially wide-reaching. As Tim Golden wrote in the New York Times
("Crisis Deepens Impact of Arab TV News," April 16, 2002): "The television coverage
has been a major factor in stirring Arabs' outrage at Israel and its supporters,
especially the United States. The anger has even spilled over into resentment
of some Arab governments, particularly those allied with Washington or at peace
with Israel. Yet it is a sign of the changes taking place that even some of the
region's more authoritarian leaders have appeared largely powerless to turn down
the volume." In this issue, Abbas Al-Tonsi examines how satellite stations around
the region have responded to the crisis, and argues that many of the region's
channels have diverged from official opinion and turned instead to reflecting
the opinion of the Arab street.
If media is this significant,
then it comes as no surprise that there are indeed attempts to "turn down the
volume." Journalists from media organizations around the world have protested
being barred from areas of the West Bank by Israeli authorities, being harassed
and even shot at by Israeli forces, and in at least one instance being expelled
from the country. TBS spoke with Abu Dhabi TV anchorman and executive producer
Jasim Al-Azzawi, who was escorted by Israeli police from the Abu Dhabi bureau
to Ben Gurion airport and put on a plane to Jordan, and spoke with Abu Dhabi TV
Deputy Director Mohamed Dourrachad about how the channel is covering a difficult
story in difficult circumstances.
As BBC World News Editor
Jonathan Baker told us, covering a story like the conflict in the Middle East
is difficult partly because every word has a pejorative meaning for one side or
the other; everyone is ready to claim that media bias is working against them.
So too after September 11, when the US government pressured Qatar's ruler to tone
down Al-Jazeera's "anti-Americanism" and simultaneously discussed ways to open
new media channels to "reach out to the Arab world," while the Arab world wondered
why they were the constant target of American media stereotypes and how this image
can be combated.
In this issue David Chambers
files a special report from Hollywood on the reaction of the US entertainment
industry to September 11-how TV and movie producers and executives view their
role in promoting a positive view of the West, in dealing with September 11. Jihad
Fakhreddine argues that despite attempts between the West and the Arab and Muslim
worlds over the last six months to start a dialogue, neither has been successful
in getting the message across-or in even learning to speak the same language.
In a transcript of the panel discussion "Covering the War" held by Georgetown
University's Center for Contemporary Arab Studies, former CBS and NBC correspondent
Marvin Kalb and other journalists rate the job the American and Arab media have
done in covering September 11 and the war in Afghanistan.
There is no doubt that
the media is not just a reflection of and vehicle for what's going on in the world
around it. It is a forum for public debate; a battlefield for publicity, propaganda,
or public diplomacy; an arena where policies are shaped, where "the masses" find
a voice. It is an actor. We first saw this in Sadat's ice-breaking trip to Jerusalem,
which was brokered by CBS anchor Walter Cronkite. We see it now in Newsweek magazine's
presenting its own version of a Middle East peace plan. In journalists being treated
as a threat by the Israeli government. In raging debates in support of and against
stations like Al-Jazeera. In new radio and TV initiatives forming part of the
US government's war on terror. In the Arab world's wildly popular call-in shows,
especially those begun in the last few weeks in response to the crisis in Palestine.
Always the critical "fourth estate," the media's power, with the rise of transnational
broadcasting, the Internet, and instant access to global information, is more
in the midst of war than ever before.
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