Already, the American press is expressing its approval of the coverage
of American forces which the US military intends to allow its reporters in
the next Gulf war. The boys from CNN, CBS, ABC and The New York Times will
be “embedded” among the US Marines and infantry. The degree of
censorship hasn’t quite been worked out. But it doesn’t matter how
much the Pentagon cuts from the reporters’ dispatches. A new CNN system
of “script approval” — the iniquitous instruction to reporters that
they have to send all their copy to anonymous officials in Atlanta to
ensure it is suitably sanitized — suggests that the Pentagon and the
Department of State have nothing to worry about. Nor do the Israelis.
Indeed, reading a new CNN document, “Reminder of Script Approval
Policy”, fairly takes the breath away. “All reporters preparing
package scripts must submit the scripts for approval,” it says.
“Packages may not be edited until the scripts are approved... All
packages originating outside Washington, Los Angeles or New York,
including all international bureaus, must come to the ROW in Atlanta for
approval.”
The date of this extraordinary message is Jan. 27. The “ROW” is the
row of script editors in Atlanta who can insist on changes or
“balances” in the reporter’s dispatch. “A script is not approved
for air unless it is properly marked approved by an authorized manager and
duped (duplicated) to burcopy (bureau copy)... When a script is updated it
must be re-approved, preferably by the originating approving authority.”
Note the key words here: “approved” and “authorized”. CNN’s
man or woman in Kuwait or Baghdad — or Jerusalem or Ramallah — may
know the background to his or her story; indeed, they will know far more
about it than the “authorities” in Atlanta. But CNN’s chiefs will
decide the spin of the story.
CNN, of course, is not alone in this paranoid form of reporting. Other
US networks operate equally anti-journalistic systems. And it’s not the
fault of the reporters. CNN’s teams may use cliches and don military
costumes — you will see them do this in the next war — but they try to
get something of the truth out. Next time, though, they’re going to have
even less chance.
Just where this awful system leads is evident from an intriguing
exchange last year between CNN’s reporter in the occupied West Bank town
of Ramallah, and Eason Jordan, one of CNN’s top honchos in Atlanta.
The journalist’s first complaint was about a story by the reporter
Michael Holmes on the Red Crescent ambulance drivers who are repeatedly
shot at by Israeli troops.
“We risked our lives and went out with ambulance drivers... for a
whole day. We have also witnessed ambulances from our window being shot at
by Israeli soldiers... The story received approval from Mike Shoulder. The
story ran twice and then Rick Davis (a CNN executive) killed it. The
reason was we did not have an Israeli Army response, even though we stated
in our story that Israel believes that Palestinians are smuggling weapons
and wanted people in the ambulances.” The Israelis refused to give CNN
an interview, only a written statement.
This statement was then written into the CNN script. But again it was
rejected by Davis in Atlanta. Only when, after three days, the Israeli
Army gave CNN an interview did Holmes’s story run — but then with the
dishonest inclusion of a line that said the ambulances were shot in
“crossfire” (that is, that Palestinians also shot at their own
ambulances).
The reporter’s complaint was all too obvious. “Since when do we
hold a story hostage to the whims of governments and armies? We were told
by Rick that if we do not get an Israeli on-camera we would not air the
package.
“This means that governments and armies are indirectly censoring us
and we are playing directly into their own hands.”
The relevance of this is all too obvious in the next Gulf War. We are
going to have to see a US Army officer denying everything the Iraqis say
if any report from Iraq is to get on air. Take another of the Ramallah
correspondent’s complaints last year. In a package on the damage to
Ramallah after Israel’s massive incursion last April, “we had already
mentioned right at the top of our piece that Israel says it is doing all
these incursions because it wants to crack down on the infrastructure of
terror. However, obviously that was not enough. We were made by the ROW
(in Atlanta) to repeat this same idea three times in one piece, just to
make sure that we keep justifying the Israeli actions...”
But the system of “script approval” that has so marred CNN’s
coverage has got worse. In a further and even more sinister message dated
Jan. 31 this year, CNN staff are told that a new computerized system of
script approval will allow “authorized script approvers to mark scripts
(i.e., reports) in a clear and standard manner.
Script EPs (executive producers) will click on the colored APPROVED
button to turn it from red (unapproved) to green (approved). When someone
makes a change in the script after approval, the button will turn
yellow.” Someone? Who is this someone? CNN’s reporters aren’t told.
But when we recall that CNN revealed after the 1991 Gulf War that it
had allowed Pentagon “trainees” into the CNN newsroom in Atlanta, I
have my suspicions.