Dave Lindorff: Censorship American Style -- Hide the U.S. War Dead from the American People

The Obama Administration's freakout, as expressed by Defense Secretary Robert Gates, over The Associated Press' belated circulation of a photograph of a dying U.S. soldier in Afghanistan, Lance Cpl. Joshua Bernard (above), is the latest example of the hypocrisy of U.S. authorities who claim to be concerned about the feelings of American military families, while really simply desiring to censor the war's horrors from the eyes of the American people.
The truth: Americans, until only the last 18 years, have been able to see the carnage of war as it has been felt by our own troops from as long ago as there were cameras. Pioneering photographer and war chronicler Mathew Brady brought home the horrors of the U.S. Civil War with photos such as this one of dead Union and Confederate soldiers after the Battle of Antietam.
(For examples of the photographs of American casualties that were displayed by the press during earlier American wars, go to: http://www.thiscantbehappening.net.)
In World War II, while the military tried to prevent publication of the photos of dead American troops at first, by 1944, President Roosevelt lifted the ban, hoping that the images would fire up American resolve on the homefront.
Although it was a much less popular war, photos of American dead were plentiful from the Korean War.
Vietnam was awash in press photographers, and the Pentagon never banned them from depicting American casualties.
In fact, when American policymakers talk about the "lesson of Vietnam," they generally aren't talking about the real lesson of not sending American troops to fight unpopular wars, or of not intervening on the side of corrupt regimes in wars of national liberation, or of not fighting in wars where there is no chance of the U.S. winning. They're talking about the "lesson" of not letting the American people learn the real nature and cost of the war in question.
That's why journalists -- and particularly American journalists -- since Vietnam have been kept on short leashes, and why they are vetted by Pentagon officials and hired media "experts" before they are allowed to be "embedded" with units in the field. It's why the Reagan Administration had a navy destroyer turn its guns on, and threaten to sink a small boat carrying reporters trying to make its way to Grenada to cover the U.S. invasion of that island. And it's why since the Gulf War in 1990-91, photographs of American battlefield dead have been banned.
AP deserves credit for finally breaking the ban and offering its photo of a dying soldier, shot in a firefight with Taliban fighters in Afghanistan -- even if the news agency did wait three weeks to offer the photo to subscribers. The real shame is that so few American newspapers and electronic media organizations chose to run that photo.
Gates claims that AP was "insensitive" to the dead soldier's relatives, but it's hard to see how that can be. The real insensitive thing would be to try to hide his death from the public, as the Pentagon wanted to do. Hell, if the Afghan War is worth fighting, it should be worth dying for, and if it's worth dying for, and if young soldier Bernard gave his life for his country, his death and the manner of his death should not be hidden from his countrypeople. We should all see the terrible price he paid acting in our name.
Were the photographers and news organizations who showed American soldiers dead on the beach in the Pacific in World War II being insensitive? Were the photographers and news organizations who showed America's dead in Vietnam being insensitive? Were the photographers and news organizations who showed America's dead in Korea being insensitive? Was the photographer and news organization that dared to break the ban and publish a photo of America's dead in the Battle of Fallujah in Iraq being insensitive?
I don't think so.
Moreover, there is a terrible double standard at work here, if news organizations accept the censorship or deem it inappropriate to show dead American bodies, but go ahead and show dead bodies of the enemy -- photographs that the media seem to have no problem publishing (though surely it must be painful for their families).
After all, if all we see are dead enemy fighters, it might give the false impression that the war in question -- in this case the Afghanistan War, or what might now be called Obama's War -- is a one-sided affair where the only terrible casualties are those suffered by the "enemy," not by "our boys."
Enough with the censorship! If we are going to be a warlike nation, if we are going to have a public that cheers every time the government ships off men and women to fight and kill overseas in countries that most Americans cannot even locate on a globe, then let's make sure that everyone at least gets to see the blood and gore in full, including our own, and of course, also the civilian casualties of our military.
DAVE LINDORFF is a Philadelphia-area journalist. His latest book is "The Case for Impeachment" (St. Martin's Press, 2006). His work can be found at www.thiscantbehappening.net.
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power to the peacefull i think for every 10 army strong adds,the eleventh(it is the peoples money,after all) should be a grandmother or a young girl or a vet saying something like........"so all of you young men that want to go and fight,remember,you will kill human beings.you will see your friends die.you will kill innocent victims.that is what they will make you do......." and than go right to the bodies,the maimed,the screams,the horror that is war. blessings to all viet nam'68-'69
Totally agree...
...with you on this one. My father was 1st Cav. 82nd Artillery in the 30's when it was still horses and caissons and he fought all the way through the Pacific in WWII. He was 26 years old when he helped liberate the POWS in the Philippines. He didn't talk about his combat experiences, other than to quote Sherman's "War is hell" and add his own two cents "...and it always will be." He also taught me to beware the soldier eager for war, that true soldiers want peace more than anyone because they know what they're talking about. We fought like crazy during the Vietnam war because he could not yet believe the direction his beloved country was taking, but he told me before he died that I was right about that war and that he felt we had turned in the wrong direction starting with Korea, Vietnam, etc. I think that one of the greatest weapons we had against the Vietnam war were the unrelenting images on television intruding on American's comfortable lives and showing exactly what it looks like when someone's father, mother, sister, brother, child dies or is mangled by war. To hell with censorship and to hell with endless war. My father did not devote all of his life to serving his country to have us end up like this and it's high time we boomers make an effort to do something about it.
What about the Collateral Damage?
Despite the "official" estimates, the collateral damage, innocent civilians caught in the crossfire and bombed, have more accurately been estimated at over 1.3 million Iraqis, about 40% women and children. Shouldn't some of those victims have been photographed and become part of the discussion of our reasons for being there?