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Embed With The Military

Embed With The Military



April 03, 2003



By David Miller







Embedded journalists are the greatest PR coup of this war. Dreamt up by the Pentagon and Donald

Rumsfeld the 'embeds', as they are now routinely described, are almost completely controlled by the

.

military Embeds as is now well known agree to give up most of their autonomy in exchange for

access to the fighting on military terms. They also gain the advantage the use of facilities such as

transport and accommodation. Reporters who are not embedded are pointedly denied such

.

facilities. Most importantly embeds are afforded protection from physical harm by the military So far

.

in this war the main danger for journalists has come from western military So the protection on offer

is more of a threat than a reassurance for independent reporters.



Each embedded reporter has to sign a contract with the military and is governed by a fifty point plan

issued by the Pentagon detailing what they can and cannot report. The list of what they can report is

significantly shorter than the list of what they cannot.



According to reports there are 903 embedded reporters including 136 with UK forces. There are

.

none embedded with the small contingents of other nations such as the Australian military Only

20% of reporters embedded with the US are from outside the US and 128 of the embed with UK

forces are from the UK. Even countries with military involvement such as Australia have very little

access to the embedding system with only two reporters embedded with US forces. French

journalists in particular have complained about being excluded. The Anglo American dominance of

the reporters is no accident, but a key part of the strategy.



The PR genius of the embed system is that it does allow unprecedented access to the fighting and,

.

also, unprecedented identification by the reporters with the military British minister of Defence Geoff

Hoon has claimed: 'I think the coverage… is more graphic, more real, than any other coverage we

.

have ever seen of a conflict in our history For the first time it is possible with technology for

journalists to report in real time on events in the battlefield.' It is certainly true to say that it is new to

see footage of war so up-close, but, it is a key part of the propaganda war to claim that this makes it

'real'. In fact, the aim of the embedding system is to control what is reported by encouraging

o

journalists to identify with their units. T eat and drink together, to risk danger and to share the

ed

same values. T Koppel of US network ABC, told The W ashington Post that his feelings towards the

soldiers were 'very, very warm'.



This identification with the soldiers works to ensure self censorship is generally effective. Phillip

Rochot a respected reporter for France 2, currently working independently in Iraq ‘Embedded

.

journalists do a fair amount of voluntary self-censorship, controlling what they say In any case their

views are closely aligned with the anglo-american position. They are soldiers of information,

.

marching with the troops and the political direction of their country They won’t say anything

wrong, they feel duty-bound to defend the anglo-american cause in this war.’ Christina Lamb of

the London Times agrees that embedded journalists are: ' giving a more positive side, because

they're with the troops… and they're not out in the streets or out in the countryside seeing what's

actually happening there.' Hoon has himself acknowledged the effect of this reporting in appearing

actually happening there.' Hoon has himself acknowledged the effect of this reporting in appearing

to reduce opposition to the war in the first days: ‘The imagery they broadcast is at least partially

responsible for the public's change of mood.’



But towards the end of the first week of the war US and UK officials started to mutter about too

much access and claimed that it was the pressure of 24hr coverage which was circulating

misinformation. Both US and UK military sources blamed embedded reporters and the pressure of

24 hour news cycles for circulating misinformation. This is a straightforward propaganda manoeuvre

designed to distract attention from the fact that the false stories have all been authorised by

military command structures and also to warn journalists not to get out of line. The proof that this is

propaganda is that they are not proposing to change the embed system which has served them

very well.



Some embedded reporters fell over themselves to explain that they only reported what the military

allow them to. Late at night with very few people watching Richard Gaisford an embedded BBC

reporter said 'If we ran everything that we heard in the camp then certainly there would be a lot of

e

misinformation going around. W have to check each story we have with them. And if they're not

sure at the immediate level above us - that's the Captain who's our media liaison officer - he will

check with the Colonel who is obviously above him and then they will check with Brigade

headquarters as well.'



This open acknowledgement of the system of control is rare and was provoked by official criticism. It

illustrates the tight censorship imposed by the military but not acknowledged in US or UK reporting.

News bulletins in the UK are full of warnings about Iraqi 'monitoring' and 'restrictions' on movement

in reports from Baghdad. The closest that they get to this on the UK/US side is to note that

journalists cannot report on where they are and other security details. In fact the embed controls

are, if anything, stricter than the system imposed by the Iraqi regime.



Gaisford's comments is also interesting for the acknowledgement it makes that reporters are

actually fully integrated into military commands structures. This complements the identification

revealed by phrases such as 'we' and 'our' in reports of military action. Reference to the 'level above'

as the press officer does indicate a fundamental subordination to military propaganda needs. But

this is hardly surprising since the contract that reporters sign explicitly requires reporters to 'follow

the direction and orders of the Government' and prohibits them from suing for injury or death even

where this 'is caused or contributed to' by the military.



wo

The unprecedented access is the carrot, but the stick is always on hand. T embedded journalists

who have allegedly strayed over the line have been expelled and during the second weekend of the

war 'many embedded reporters found their satellite phones blocked for unexplained reasons'.

Moreover, - and much less discussed in the global media, with the military a rung above the

.

journalists' in the command hierarchy Some embeds are, according to Christian Lowe of US military

magazine Army Times, being 'hounded by military public affairs officers who follow their every move

and look over their shoulders as they interview aviators, sailors, and maintainers for their stories.'



Each military division in the gulf has 40 to 60 embedded journalists, and between five and six public

affairs officers 'behind the scenes'. They report up to the Coalition Press Information Center (CPIC) in

Kuwait and the $1 million press centre at CentCom in Doha. From there the message is co-ordinated

by the Office of Global Communications in the White-house in consort with Alastair Campbell, Blair's

top spin doctor in Downing Street. The fanciful notion that the misinformation of the first weeks of

the campaign were been due to journalists having conversations with 'a squaddie who's shining his

boots', as a British MoD official spun it, is itself a key part of the propaganda war. All of the myriad

misinformation coming out of Iraq in the first two weeks has been fed out by the US/UK global media

operation. As one reporter in Doha noted 'At General T ommy Franks’s headquarters, it is easy to

work out whether the day’s news is good or bad. When there are positive developments, press

officers prowl the corridors of the press centre dispensing upbeat reports from pre-prepared scripts,

declaring Iraqi towns have been liberated and that humanitarian aid is about to be delivered. Y ifet

American and British troops have suffered any sort of battlefield reverse, the spin doctors retreat

into their officers at press centre and await instructions from London and W ashington.'



The threat to independent reporting

If the embeds have been an opportunity, the Pentagon and British military have seen independent

journalists as s threat. There have been a stream of reports of hostility, threats and violence against

independent reporters. UNESCO, The International Federation of Journalists, Reporters Sans

Frontieres and the British National Union of Journalists have all condemned these threats. Some

have been subtle and others less so. On the ground and away from the cameras the threats are

pointed and can include violence as several journalists have already found out. The subtle threats

include those made by British Ministers such as Defence Secretary Geoff Hoon: 'one of the reasons

for having journalists [embedded] is to prevent precisely the kind of tragedy that occurred to an ITN

crew very recently when a well known, hard working, courageous journalist was killed essentially

.

because he was not part of a military organisation. Because he was trying to get a story And in

those circumstances we can't look after all those journalists on this kind of fast moving battlefield.

So having journalists have the protection, in fact, of our armed forces is both good for journalism,

[and] it's also very good for people watching.'



Here, Hoon takes on all the charm and authority of a Mafia boss explaining the benefits of a

protection racket. The message is clear : stay embedded and report what you are told or face the

consequences.



David Miller is a member of the Stirling Media Research Institute, Scotland. David.miller@stir.ac.uk





From: Z Net - The Spirit Of Resistance Lives

URL: http://www.zcommunications.org/embed-with-the-military-by-david-miller



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