By Shawn Macomber on 10.17.05 @ 12:09AM
When tragedy failed to materialize in Iraq Saturday, CNN's Christiane Amanpour, for one, rewrote history.
The cognitive dissonance on display whenever the media attempts
to cover an election gone right is truly a sight to see. Watching
the vote progress in Iraq throughout the day on Saturday, one was
left with the unfortunate impression that there would have been a
lot less squirming in the anchor chairs if there had been mass
bloodshed in the streets of Baghdad rather than a marked decrease
in violence since the last election or if five percent of Sunnis
had come out to vote instead of 65 percent.
Even in the absence of tragedy, some reporters were unwilling to
dwell too long on the positive and instead used their imaginations
to conjure up assertions that were not only willfully ignorant in
historical context, but also suspect journalistically. For example,
during CNN's coverage of the election Christiane Amanpour got off
on a riff about a Sunni she had met who was opposed to the new
constitution.
"Never before did we talk about Sunni, Shia, Kurd," Amanpour
directly quoted the man as saying without referring to a
tape or any notes. "For many, many years, despite our difficulties,
despite the oppression under Saddam Hussein, Iraqis never really
talked about their ethnic differences. They were Iraqis first and
foremost."
Then without a clear line separating the two -- "our" somehow
became "their" in a single sentence -- Amanpour continued on with
her analysis.
"Many people are very concerned, they say, that it is only since
the war that these differences have reared their very ugly heads,"
she said, adding moments later, "People are very, very concerned
about the possibility that somehow in the future their country will
lose its unity and will be fragmented."
If this were true, then why did U.S. warplanes spend the better
part of 12 years patrolling the skies over Northern Iraq to prevent
further genocide of the Kurds or over Southern Iraq to protect
Shiites as well as Kuwaitis from the same unscrupulous Sunni
minority running the country?
It's a curious bit coming from CNN's "Chief International
Correspondent," who it has to be assumed must have some rudimentary
understanding of the history of Iraq. If the role of the news media
is to enlighten and educate, Amanpour's statement that "it is only
since the war" that ethnic differences "have reared their very ugly
heads" borders on criminal negligence.
To hear Amanpour relay it, during Operation Anfal when Iraq was
bombarding Kurd villages with chemical weapons and hauling untold
thousands of men, women, and children off to mass graves, the Kurds
must have been thinking, "Well, at least we are all Iraqis. At
least, God forbid, our nation has not lost its unity or is
fragmented." And when Saddam Hussein drained the southern
marshlands as retaliation against Muslim Shiites that had rebelled
in the aftermath of the first Gulf War, killing or making refugees
out of all but 40,000 of the 450,000 inhabitants, Amanpour seems to
believe it was not Sunnis killing Shiites, but simply Iraqis
killing Iraqis. (The marshlands, according to the United Nations
Environment Program, are recovering at a "phenomenal rate" in the
aftermath of this divisive war. Surely Amanpour doesn't believe
Shiites would prefer to be unified as dead Iraqis rather than
fragmented as living Shiites.)
Further, when the Kurds rose up in 1961 and again in 1975 to
demand some semblance of the autonomy robbed of them by the
arbitrary British imperial arrogance that created Iraq's borders in
1922, they must have been somehow confused about their ethnic
identity. After all, how could the Kurds not have seen themselves
as Iraqis back then? How could they have wanted out? The
imperialist neocons hadn't even upset the authoritarian apple cart
at that point.
Fifteen minutes later, Amanpour allowed sans irony that
"the constitution is seen as a big victory for the Shiites and the
Kurds who were very much oppressed certainly in the last years of
the Saddam Hussein rule."
Hold the presses. I thought none of these sorts of identity
politics had reared their heads until the Americans showed up. I
thought Iraq had long been unified and was only now coming apart?
If Amanpour is willing to acknowledge the oppression of Kurds and
Shiites under Saddam Hussein, it only serves to make her earlier
argument all the more ridiculous. Is unity enforced by the
mechanisms of a police state really unity?
IGNORING THE SURPRISINGLY SUCCESSFUL vote in favor of on-air
hand-wringing over the sectarian violence that has been promised
for more than two years yet failed to materialize despite
al-Qaeda's best murderous efforts was not merely the order of the
day at CNN. On MSNBC correspondent Mike Boettcher attempted a
one-way conversation with an anchor about the "significant"
enthusiasm he was seeing on the ground in Iraq, even in Sunni
areas, for the democratic process and to a lesser degree, the
constitution.
Without pause, the next question put to Boettcher after this
descriptive first-hand account was, "But did you get a chance to
ask any of the Sunni voters how they voted. Would that have been
'No'?"
"No, no, I did," Boettcher repeated immediately. "I asked
several of them. I would say easily over half in areas we were in
voted 'Yes'."
There was a storyline embraced before the first Iraqi stepped
into a polling place, as made clear by the fact that even an
eyewitness -- a professional journalist on the ground, no less --
has difficulty coaxing an anchor in a studio in D.C. or New York
City to believe anything that fails to fit what is apparently the
conventional "wisdom."
The truth is that it is sad enough that both pro-war and
anti-war partisans insist on ignoring good or bad news to create a
reality more to their liking. When the mainstream press engages in
similar intellectual dishonesty, however, it is inexcusable.
topics:
Environment, Constitution, Iraq, United Nations