The Pledge of Resistance has been working with peace groups around the country to first send Obama a letter bringing to his attention that the escalation witl be met with increased nonviolent resistance and second to organize protests in response. The Pledge and Baltimore United For Peace and Justice will host a demonstration.
WHEN: Wednesday, December 2, 2009 starting at 5:30 PM
WHERE: Outside the
http://www.commondreams.org/headline/2009/12/01-1
Published on Tuesday, December 1, 2009 by Fairness and Accuracy In Reporting (FAIR)
In Afghan Debate, Few Antiwar Op-Eds
Elite papers marginalize public opposition
The Obama administration, having increased the number of troops in
US film director Michael Moore speaks about his latest movie "Capitalism: A Love Story" at the
Meanwhile, polls throughout 2009 show a
So where's the wide-ranging
The need for broad public debate over
But according to a new FAIR study of the op-ed pages of the two leading
FAIR's study looked at all opinion columns in the New York Times and the Washington Post during the first 10 months of 2009 that addressed what the U.S. should do in the Afghanistan War. Columns were counted as antiwar if they called for withdrawal or clearly called into question the need or rationale for the war. Columns that supported continuing the war were counted as pro-war; these were divided into those that endorsed the idea of escalating the war and those that advocated some sort of alternative strategy, including reducing the number of troops.
Both newspapers marginalized antiwar opinion to different degrees. Of the New York Times' 43 columns on the
In the
At times the Post's editors seemed unaware that an antiwar position even existed. For instance, in an op-ed roundtable (9/27/09) appearing in its recurring "Topic A" feature, the section's editors, in their words, "asked foreign policy experts whether President Obama should maintain a focus on protecting the population and rebuilding the country, or on striking terrorists."
Excluding withdrawal from the discussion was a theme echoed by Post columnist Fareed Zakaria, who began a column (9/14/09): "It is time to get real about
Some columnists changed positions during the study period, which spanned two separate escalation discussions. Zakaria, for instance, supported the first escalation but opposed the one debated in the fall of 2009. The Post's David Ignatius mostly opposed escalation, calling instead for continuing the war while paying more attention to humanitarian concerns, but he wrote one column that supported sending additional troops (10/30/09).
Pro-war columns opposing escalation included a variety of views. The Post's Ignatius argued (10/4/09) that the U.S. should "[keep] our troop levels firm and reliable, until the Afghans acquire the tools and political consensus to secure their country"; Ignatius' Post colleague George Will (9/1/09) wanted to replace ground troops in Afghanistan with more long-distance aerial attacks-which are notoriously hazardous to civilian populations:
So, instead, forces should be substantially reduced to serve a comprehensively revised policy:
Calls for a scale-back or drawdown but not an end to the war were counted as pro-war, including columns that expressed some antiwar sentiments but suggested that the war should continue at some level-such as Times columnist Bob Herbert's January 6 op-ed, which criticized the war but ultimately seemed to call merely for scaling down the troop commitment, arguing that "our interest in Afghanistan is to prevent it from becoming a haven for terrorists bent on attacking us," a mission that he said "does not require the scale of military operations that the incoming administration is contemplating" or "a wholesale occupation."
Herbert's five subsequent columns on Afghanistan policy, on the other hand, made him by far the loudest antiwar voice in the study period, and the author of the majority of the Times' seven antiwar columns. His October 26 column was a clear example, concluding: "Let's explore creative alternatives to endless warfare and start bringing the weary troops home."
Only one of the Times' antiwar columns was written by a guest columnist (Leslie Gelb, 3/13/09); by contrast, only one of the Post's antiwar columns was written by a regular columnist (Eugene Robinson, 10/27/09). And three of the Post's six antiwar columns were short "Topic A" responses rather than full-length columns.
The voices the papers featured on the
Only two columns in the study period were written or co-written by Afghan nationals (New York Times, 4/20/09;
As hawkish advocates are ramping up their pro-war campaigns-including on the country's leading op-ed pages-opposition to the war is not diminishing. In fact, according to the latest poll from AP/GfK, the opposite is happening: Its November 5-9 survey [1] found 57 percent opposed to the war and just 39 percent in support.
So the American public's majority view is a decidedly minority view on the op-ed pages on the country's most prestigious newspapers. That's good and bad news for democracy: It's good news that the public is not entirely captive to the narrow, elite range of debate prescribed by newspapers.
It's bad news because, however diminished their roles as opinion leaders may be, the New York Times and the Washington Post continue to wield an unmatched influence in the nation's capital and in newsrooms across the country. One can only imagine what public opinion would be, and what policy might result, if these papers truly offered a wide-ranging debate on the
Research assistance by Valerie Doescher and Taylor Moore.
© 2009 FAIR
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"The master class has always declared the wars; the subject class has always fought the battles. The master class has had all to gain and nothing to lose, while the subject class has had nothing to gain and everything to lose--especially their lives." Eugene Victor Debs
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