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‘Muscular’ Foreign Policy: Media Codeword for
Violence Abroad
Alan MacLeod
The Washington
Post's Josh Rogin (8/13/20) writes
that "Biden and Harris, if they are elected, will have a chance to
prove that Democratic muscular liberalism is still the right
approach."
Writing in
the Washington Post , pro-war columnist Josh Rogin appeared
relieved that Joe Biden picked Kamala Harris as his running mate for
November—as opposed to a progressive like Elizabeth Warren or Bernie
Sanders, who would have called for cutting military budgets, fewer US
interventions and the withdrawal of troops stationed abroad. Biden and
Harris, he explained, will together pursue a “robust” foreign policy
agenda.
Harris is
described approvingly by one source as “pragmatic” (another media
codeword—FAIR.org, 8/21/19), and
together, Rogin notes, she and Biden can prove that “muscular liberalism
is still the right approach.” What that actually means in practice, he is
a little vague on, though he does suggest that will entail “aggressively”
“confronting” nuclear powers Russia and China.
“Muscular,” along
with similar words like “robust,” are commonly used in political
reporting, especially with regards to foreign policy. They are inherently
positive descriptions, conveying strength and confidence, their opposites
being “weak,” “feeble” or “decrepit.” It is obvious which have the better
connotations. This is a real problem, because all too regularly the words
are used as euphemisms to sugarcoat inflicting violence around the world.
Often the
consequences of such a policy are not stated, as when CBS News (6/17/16) reported
that John Kerry recommended “a more muscular US role in Syria,” or when a
guest on the Rachel Maddow Show (6/18/14) described
former Vice President Dick Cheney as wishing for a more “muscular policy”
for the US in Iraq. Thus, when CBS’s Face the Nation (3/23/18) aired a
segment entitled, “Trump Surrounding Himself With ‘More Muscular’ Foreign
Policy Team,” a naif or a foreigner might be forgiven for thinking Jesse
Ventura or Arnold Schwarzenegger was advising the president. And when the
BBC (12/18/17) reported
on the US’s “muscular engagement” with the world, they were not
describing a new workout plan.
CBS (3/23/18) described
Trump's hiring hyper-interventionist John Bolton as signaling a
"more muscular" foreign policy team.
Sometimes,
however, journalists made explicit what such a foreign policy would
consist of. The New York Times (5/14/15), for
instance, described Republican presidential hopeful Marco Rubio as
offering “a robust and muscular foreign policy,” including the end of
normalization with Cuba, a hike in military spending and reauthorizing
the PATRIOT Act. The Times is a repeat offender in whitewashing
the Florida senator’s often disturbing policies; in 2019 it described his
advocacy for further sanctions and military intervention in Venezuela as
“muscular policy tools” (New York Times, 1/29/19). By this
time, the sanctions had already killed an estimated 40,000 people and
would go on to kill over 100,000. What
about blocking the
import of medicines is “muscular”? “Sociopathic” might be a better
adjective. Support for regime change in Venezuela is bipartisan, however,
with Bloomberg’s Eli Lake (8/3/20) recently
noting that support for a “democratic transition” there would be more
“steadfast” under a Biden administration.
The result
of “muscular” and “robust” policies can also be seen all over the Middle
East. In 2017, Trump reversed his earlier promise to pull US troops out
of Afghanistan, instead announcing his own surge, having just dropped the
largest non-nuclear bomb in human history on the country. The Washington
Post (8/21/17) described
his decision as “muscular but vague.” On Syria, the New York Times
(4/21/17) pondered
whether a more or less muscular approach would bring better results. And
when Trump ordered B-52 bombers to Iran’s doorstep, CBS anchor
Margaret Brennan (5/12/19) asked a
guest what he thought of the president’s “muscular response” to Iranian
provocation.
Or you can
also read about Saudi Arabia’s muscular foreign policy in Yemen (LA
Times, 4/20/15, 8/11/19; BBC,
4/21/15), thought
to have killed hundreds of thousands
of people. Likewise, on one of the many recent occasions when Israel
bombed Gaza, the Washington Post (3/26/19) noted
that some Israeli politicians were calling for an even more “muscular
response”—combining the “muscular” media trope with the convention that
the US and its allies never initiate violence themselves, but only ever
“respond” to enemy provocation (FAIR.org, 6/6/19, 8/21/20).
So reflexive
is this media whitewashing of state violence that it is even applied to
official enemies. For instance, in an article explaining the rise of
Russian president Vladimir Putin, CNN (8/8/19) wrote:
“What explained Putin's surge in popularity over those crucial early
months? One factor was clear: Putin's muscular response to domestic
terrorism.” That “muscular response,” CNN explicitly stated,
included when “Russian forces leveled the [Chechen] rebel capital of
Grozny,” which is thought to have killed around 9,000 people.
The word is
also sometimes used in reference to domestic programs as well, but
generally only when involving oppressing the powerless. In 2012, Fox
News (1/10/12) reported
that immigration activists were unhappy with President Barack Obama’s
“muscular deportation policy” (which saw more people deported
than ever before). Likewise, in the wake of masked federal agents
abducting people off Portland’s streets, the New Yorker (7/24/20) worried
about the “ever more muscular immigration-enforcement presence in US
life.”
"Weak"
is used in corporate media as a synonym for "diplomatic" (Fox
Business, 8/18/20).
While
advocating wholesale violence is “robust” or “muscular” in media speak,
opposing it is inherently “weak” and worthy of condemnation. A case in
point is Bernie Sanders, whose “weak foreign policy,” according to Business
Insider (3/15/20), was a
serious black mark against him. Examples of his weakness, it noted,
include “an obvious commitment to rejoin the Iran deal” and ending Saudi
attacks on Yemen.
More
scandalous, apparently, were his “controversial comments” on Venezuela,
Bolivia and Cuba, comments that amounted to not endorsing US regime
change efforts against sovereign nations. This, for Business Insider
columnist and former US diplomat Brett Bruen, made him a unserious
presidential candidate.
And while
Rogin and the WaPo might have described Biden as robust on foreign
policy, Trump did not see it that way; the president this month telling Fox
Business (8/18/20) his
opponent was “weak” on the issue. The reason? Biden would pursue a
diplomatic solution with Iran, like Obama did.
There is
nothing inherently strong about destroying or terrorizing other nations,
and nothing weak about opposing it. But our hawkish corporate media
continue to present it as such, therefore subtly manufacturing consent
for continued conflicts around the world. The next time you hear someone
on corporate media praising a “muscular,” or “robust” foreign policy, be
on the alert: They might be trying to sell you another war.
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