For background, see:
Steve Weissman | Dead Messengers: How the US Military Threatens Journalists .
http://www.truthout.org/docs_2005/022405A.shtml
Kill the Messenger, Hide the News
By Steve Weissman
t r u t h o u t | Perspective
http://www.truthout.org/docs_2005/062205B.shtml
Wednesday 22 June 2005
When truthout boss Marc Ash asked me earlier this year to look into the
Pentagon's killing of journalists, I didn't know what to expect. Many
reporters at the time believed that American soldiers were purposely targeting
them. But, as I soon found, the crime was larger and more systemic.
The 4-part investigation "Dead Messengers: How the US Military Threatens
Journalists" appeared in February and March. Readers responded positively and
in overwhelming numbers, and the series won a prestigious award from Project
Censored as one of the year's top under covered news stories.
Everyone who worked on the story here was pleased. But none of us celebrated.
The Pentagon did not change its policies. Journalists remain at risk. And - no
surprise - the mainstream media continues to miss the story.
As far as anyone has yet proved, no US commanding officer ever ordered a
subordinate to fire on journalists as such. Not at Baghdad's Palestine Hotel
in April 2003. Not at the highway checkpoint where soldiers wounded Italian
journalist Giuliana Sgrena and killed her Secret Service protector in March
2005. And, not anywhere else in Iraq or Afghanistan.
How, then, did the US military end up killing journalists?
It started with a simple decision - the Pentagon's rejection of responsibility
for the lives of journalists who choose to work independently rather than
embed themselves in a British or American military unit. Despite repeated
requests from Reuters and other major news organizations, Pentagon officials
still refuse to take a few simple steps needed to reduce the threat to
independent journalists.
It's not all that difficult:
* 1. The entire military must be forced to respect the work that independent
journalists do, protect them where possible, and train soldiers to recognize
the obvious differences between rocket launchers and TV cameras.
* 2. Commanders need to pass on information about the whereabouts of
journalists, with a direct order not to shoot at them. If commanders fail to
do so, the military must punish them.
* 3. When soldiers do kill a journalist, the Pentagon needs to hold them
responsible, something that no military investigation has yet done.
* 4. And the military must stop forcibly excluding journalists, detaining
them, or otherwise preventing them from reporting on its operations,
especially in unsavory situations like the destruction of Fallujah.
One other problem needs urgent attention. Military intelligence regularly
monitors the uplink equipment that reporters use to transmit their stories and
communicate by satellite phone. But, as the BBC's Nik Gowing discovered, the
electronic intelligence mavens make no effort to distinguish between
journalistic communications and those of enemy forces. All the sensing devices
do is look for electronic traffic between the monitored uplinks and known
enemies.
In Gowing's view, this led the Americans to order a rocket attack on the Kabul
office of the Arab broadcaster Al Jazeera, whose journalists kept regular
contact with the Taliban as part of their journalistic coverage.
No military believes in free speech or a free press. Every general wants to
control every possible element of the battlefield, including what the folks
back home see and hear about what their troops are doing. To the military, too
much honesty quickly becomes "hostile information." No one should expect the
generals to change their attitudes.
Change must start from outside. No country claiming to be a democracy can
allow its armed forces to control the flow of information, as the US military
now tries to do, even at the cost of killing journalists. If Congress, the
media, and the American people allow the Pentagon to prevent "hostile
information," we will never get the news we need to evaluate whether a
military action like the ongoing occupation of Iraq is truly worth killing,
dying, and paying for.
A veteran of the Berkeley Free Speech Movement and the New Left monthly
Ramparts, Steve Weissman lived for many years in London, working as a magazine
writer and television producer. He now lives and works in France, where he
writes for t r u t h o u t.
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truthout - Steve Weissman | America's Religious Right: Saints or ...
Lets get the Truth Out, changing things for the better through information.
http://www.truthout.org/docs_2005/040605B.shtml
Steve Weissman: The Anti-Christ and I
Scoop.co.nz (press release), New Zealand - Jun 8, 2005
... A veteran of the Berkeley Free Speech Movement and the New Left monthly
Ramparts, Steve Weissman lived for many years in London, working as a magazine
writer ...
http://www.scoop.co.nz/stories/HL0506/S00121.htm
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