How media makes impact of US forever wars invisible
A new book by Norman Solomon breaks down the ways the
devastation suffered by civilians rarely comes into public view.
JULY 20, 2023
Written by
Robert Crawford
https://responsiblestatecraft.org/2023/07/20/how-media-makes-impact-of-us-forever-wars-invisible/
Norman Solomon’s new book, “War Made
Invisible: How America Hides the Human Toll of its Military Machine,” discusses
components of what the public is allowed to know and what is carefully excluded
from view about the perpetual wars of the post-9/11 period.
Beyond this principal topic, the book also touches on
a range of subjects related to American militarism. Solomon is a journalist who
has written previously about U.S. wars, most notably “War Made Easy,” a book
that focused on deceitful justifications for war.
Solomon’s undertaking provides a necessary perspective
for comprehending post-9/11 wars. Sustaining public support is a requirement
for a global power that regularly employs its coercive instruments and is
occasionally subject to democratic checks. The work of legitimation is ongoing,
demanding not only a high level of concealment but also efforts to shape that
which is accepted without question and considered unworthy of attention and
concern.
Dissenting views challenging dominant narratives are
ignored or ridiculed. Information
that counters official accounts is denied, minimized, and neutralized. Leakers
and even news organizations that report “top secrets” are vilified as
threatening national security and face potential prosecution. The recent death
of Daniel Ellsberg reminds us of the occasional courageous insider who risks
everything to tell the truth about war.
Solomon
demonstrates how in recent U.S. wars the violent consequences for civilians are
hidden from public view. The toll — counted in deaths, injuries, destroyed
infrastructure and related malnutrition and disease — is far more extensive
than Americans are led to believe. Harms inflicted on civilians and their
immediate environment can last for generations. Solomon is at his best in
discussing how the media ignores or is complicitous in defusing these
consequences. I will briefly summarize four of his most significant topics.
First,
unless large numbers of U.S. troops are deployed, killed, and injured, the
media pays minimal attention to the ongoing violence of America’s military
operations. This includes secretive actions undertaken by Special Operations
Command or the intelligence agencies, the increasing reliance on drone warfare
and other kinds of airstrikes, and the expanding utilization of contractors.
America’s wars without end are waged largely out of sight and out of mind.
Second, even
in wars extensively covered by the media, journalists rarely report the
consequences for civilians living in target nations. Solomon reviews several
reasons for media complicity, including editorial control, the perceived duty
among journalists to support the war effort and support the troops,
journalists’ dependence on information provided by the military, and the risk
of alienating their sources.
Third, and
more extensively, Solomon provides documentation for media participation in
promulgating a Manichean view of America’s wars. The language of good and evil,
humane and inhumane, is pervasive, applied to both the necessity for war and
how the enemy uses barbaric tactics in contrast to America’s civilized conduct
of war. The enemy kills civilians purposely and commits other war crimes; the
U.S. kills civilians only by accident, a matter of “collateral damage” — the
claimed unintended, accidental, and regrettable byproduct of defeating the
enemy.
Solomon
counters that in fact, military strategists expect large numbers of civilian
deaths as the inevitable result of war tactics and the lethality of the weapons
employed in war.
In a chapter
entitled “‘Humane’ Wars,” Solomon demolishes the assumption that the U.S.
occupies the moral high ground. He illustrates his argument by examining the
tragedy of lost lives and forced displacement resulting from two decades of war
in Afghanistan and how the continuing sanctions, including freezing Afghan
government accounts, are responsible for the many
millions of Afghans who face life-threatening malnutrition and
starvation. Solomon argues that the near total silence among the political and
media establishment about these direct consequences of war by other means
should undermine any claim about how the U.S. intervention was about protecting
Afghan human rights.
Fourth,
media personalities, coerced by editors or acting on their own, become
cheerleaders for war. Celebrating war and the soldiers who “sacrifice” with
life and limb often follows from journalists’ own nationalistic impulses and
their infatuation with the “shock and awe” of American military power or from
what they expect that their viewers or readers want to hear.
Beyond his
important discussion of media-political-military collusion in sanitizing
America’s wars, Solomon also touches on some other ways that America’s
seemingly endless wars are legitimized and their harmful consequences ignored.
For example,
he links the pervasive discounting of harms to civilians with the enduring
effects of racism applied on a global scale. He comments on the contradiction
between the outsized
media attention given to the suffering of Ukrainian victims of Russia’s
aggression in contrast to how wars and their tragic consequences outside of
Europe are thought to be normal and expected. He mentions other double
standards in a world of friends and enemies, such as claims about defending a
“rules-based international order,” “territorial integrity” and sovereignty,
citing the example of billions of dollars of military aid going to Israel
despite its “systematically inhuman treatment of Palestinian people.”
Solomon also
argues that the “costs of war” on American society are marginalized by the
media. He includes the extent of traumatic brain injury among U.S. soldiers,
domestic violence in families of post-9/11 veterans, the increase in violence
more broadly, right-wing political violence, the rise of MAGA populism, the
militarization of the police, and the detrimental effects of outsized military
budgets on needed social spending.
American
militarism depends on a culture of compliance with war. Solomon provides a
valuable account through the lens of what is made invisible. His account helps
readers grasp the mechanisms of invisibility and the moral consequences of
refusing to grapple with the harms inflicted. Yet explaining the war culture is
no easy task and requires more sustained attention than offered in this book.
If we can
ever hope to dismantle this nation’s attachment to militarism, the larger
challenge remains — illuminating the deep cultural and historical roots of
Americans’ disposition toward war. We need to better comprehend how, despite
all their horrific consequences, wars come to be seen as necessary and good,
and commemorated and remembered. From myth creation (such as idolizing the
warrior and the nation at war or the “indispensable” or “exceptional” qualities
attributed to this nation’s global role) to the violence that has coursed
through American culture from the beginning, war-making, both visible and
invisible, requires and is made possible by a culture invested in war.
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