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Failing Hegemony: A Comparative Content Analysis of the Coverage of the Lead-up to the Attack on Iraq in 2003 in the World Media
Authors: Erin Collins, Aalborg University, Denmark, email: [log in to unmask] Martin Jensen, Aalborg University, Denmark, email: [log in to unmask] Peter Kanev, Aalborg University, Denmark, email: [log in to unmask] Matt MacCalla, Aalborg University, Denmark, [log in to unmask]
Submitted to the AEJMC International Communication Division (Markham Competition)
Abstract:
The media in a hegemonic system follow and reinforce the 'spin' of the political elites. This ability of the powerful to enlist the media in their campaigns against enemies, real or imagined, is an indicator of the elites' power to convince and to define the limits and flow of the public discourse. The US-led war against Iraq in the early 2003 was preceded by a media debate, which demonstrated that global media are breaking new ground. News outlets from around the world challenged the dominant news frame of the United States. While in a similar conflict 12 years earlier the world, or at least the Western media were generally united around the cause for attacking Iraq, the news outlets of 2003 did not buy into the story of the 'Coalition of the Willing.' This implies a serious challenge of the global hegemon's 'soft power' to convince and to conduct policy without resorting to coercion.
Failing Hegemony: A Comparative Content Analysis of the Coverage of the Lead-up to the Attack on Iraq in 2003 in the World Media
Submitted to the AEJMC International Communication Division (Markham Competition)
Abstract:
The media in a hegemonic system follow and reinforce the 'spin' of the political elites. This ability of the powerful to enlist the media in their campaigns against enemies, real or imagined, is an indicator of the elites' power to convince and to define the limits and flow of the public discourse. The US-led war against Iraq in the early 2003 was preceded by a media debate, which demonstrated that global media are breaking new ground. News outlets from around the world challenged the dominant news frame of the United States. While in a similar conflict 12 years earlier the world, or at least the Western media were generally united around the cause for attacking Iraq, the news outlets of 2003 did not buy into the story of the 'Coalition of the Willing.' This implies a serious challenge of the global hegemon's 'soft power' to convince and to conduct policy without resorting to coercion.
Failing Hegemony: A Comparative Content Analysis of the Coverage of the Lead-up to the Attack on Iraq in 2003 in the World Media
Introduction
The present historic moment of a politically unipolar world naturally invites research interest in the formation, existence and possible decline of a global media hegemony. The nature of economic globalization, often perceived as Americanization, makes the case for exploring the parameters of hegemonic influences in the global media. There can be little argument that today's world is one that is effectively dominated by one massive superpower. The United States of America is now responsible for more than a third of the global economy and has an unrivaled military, spending more on its armed forces than the next dozen countries combined ('The Economist' 2003, p.4). As Niall Ferguson recently wrote in Newsweek, "The United States is now an empire in all but name". (2003, p.8) Most significant for the purposes of this paper is the US's dominance in the realm of culture and specifically the institutions that govern the global dissemination of information. American, along with British companies, are the primary providers of films, music, television programming and most importantly, news, for the entire world (Magder 2003, p.31). In fact, in 2003 CNN alone reached more than 150 million homes in 212 countries around the world (Thussu 2003, p.118). However, the preeminent position that the US now occupies, economically, militarily and politically around the world has its origins in the collapse of the Soviet empire and the end of the Cold War. Since the demise of the world's only other superpower and the US's main ideological rival, global public opinion has shifted towards the inherent 'rightness' of the US 'worldview'. "After the collapse of the Soviet Union and the end of the cold war, the alliance of markets and foreign policy seemed triumphant. 'Globalization' was on everyone's lips. The American vision would spread – though perhaps slowly – everywhere as more nations fell under its sway." (Samuelson 2003, p.44)
In reality, it is the fact that so much of the world gravitated towards this US 'world view', that has largely given the world's only superpower its strength over the last fifteen years. It was believed that by adopting capitalist-market economies, liberal democracy and principles of free trade, the 'have-nots' of the world would one day be able to join the 'haves' as developed nations (ibid). This 'Washington Consensus' was largely believed to be the most fortuitous and expedient path to development and in turn impacted the soft power that the US held. It seems that the current role of the United States in international relations, fits the classical Gramscian notion of hegemony. Gramsci defines hegemony as the "process of moral, philosophical, and political leadership that a social group attains only with the active consent of other important social groups." (Artz & Murphy 2003, p.1) In this way, a hegemonic class, (in this case the United States) by owning and controlling the means of production and capital, including "production of symbolic goods," (Gans, 1979) are able to support their hegemonic position. Traditionally, hegemonic classes are thought of as a part of the state level of analysis. However, for the purposes of this study hegemony will be examined on the macro or international level and in this scenario it is the US that occupies the position of a hegemonic elite. One of the ways that the US is able to create this shared worldview, and maintain its status as a global hegemon, is through the use of the Western-based global media system. Most of the world's information flows from the US outward and this propagation of Western based ideas throughout the world is one of the most powerful ways of Americanizing global public opinion. (Magder 2003, p.31) This is a system which, when functioning properly, can give the US the unprecedented power to make other global actors think that their interests and those of the hegemon are one in the same. This is hegemonic leadership as expressed by Lee Artz: "Leadership only becomes hegemonic because they convince others to become allies through persuasive political and cultural practices, which necessarily require normalized interpretations best communicated to the masses via the media. Hence, capitalist hegemony needs parallel media hegemony as an institutionalized, systematic means of educating, persuading, and representing subordinate classes to particular cultural practices within the context of capitalist norms. If culture is the ideological cement of society, then, to secure corporate interests, capitalist globalization needs media hegemony to recruit, tame, and popularize interpretations, information and cultural behavior complementary to deregulation, privatization, and commercialization." (2003, p.16-17)
In other words, the global media system is one of the most powerful ways that the US maintains its control of global power through the creation of shared ideas and goals. It is this media system that serves as one of the greatest tools inside the hegemonic process as outlined by Gramsci. (Gramsci [translated by Hoare & Nowell-Smith] 1971, pp. 177-185) However, some chinks may be starting to appear in this US-led global hegemony. Politically, the world's only superpower appears to be becoming less and less influential in the world's 'soft power' game, which simply stated, is the ability to make people do what you want without using force (Magder 2003, p.30-32). This apparent weakness can be seen in the US's failure to convince the world that its recent invasion of Iraq was justified and in its apparent inability to peacefully rebuild Iraq and Afghanistan (Ferguson 2003, p.11). These difficulties point to a serious weakness in the perceived supremacy of the US military while similar failures in the Israeli-Palestinian peace process point to a possible weakening of the US's ability to effectively use 'soft power' to achieve their policy objectives. In addition to this, a seemingly softened US stance when dealing with so called rogue states like North Korea, Syria and Iran seems to be emerging, which could also point to a perceived loss of power. (Hirsh 2003, p. 34) This possible loss of strength for the American hegemon could be perceived as a weakening of the persuasive power of the dominant US world view or as Sardar put it, a weakening of the hegemon's 'power to define' (1999) and therefore its hegemonic power inside global civil society[1]. This last point is crucial since it is discourse within this civil society that generates the consensus that gives the hegemon its strength. It seems at least possible that certain segments of the world are beginning to reject the US common sense that has dominated unchallenged for the last decade and a half. Further to this, since the media is one of the most important ways a hegemon defines its worldview, it is reasonable to assume that a decline in the relative power of the hegemon could be visible inside the global media construct. It is with this in mind that the basis for this article was conceived. In short, if the United States is the dominant hegemonic force in the world and the Western-based media helps to facilitate that hegemonic process and strengthen it, then, if systemic change is going to occur, some change in global media content should be identifiable. So, if the US is losing its hegemonic control and it's globally accepted world view is beginning to be questioned, then this shift should be reflected inside civil society and therefore inside the media. This problem is both interesting and relevant because the current US hegemony has been defining what is talked about not only around the table at the Security Council but also around dinner tables from Philadelphia to New Delhi. That is because this dialogue is in some very significant ways being shaped by the Western-based media from which it often emanates. So, if this conversation, and the terms it is being discussed in, is created by the West, it is likely leaving out the interests of those in the Eastern and Southern reaches of the globe. This is particularly relevant given world events following September 11th 2001, as the US and its "Coalition of the Willing" have since effectively conducted diplomacy via the barrel of a gun, despite a general global consensus that these actions were wrong.
Media and Hegemony The media is a major player in the creation and dissemination of the hegemon's worldview. Therefore, if the media is failing to adequately relay the hegemon's message then this could provide an indication that the hegemon's real power is in decline. This could then provide an indication that the circumstances for the potential defection of 'historic blocs' and the creation of a counterhegemonic movement are in fact in existence. Antonio Gramsci spoke about the need for historical blocs to come together in order to create a hegemonic or counterhegemonic force (although he never specifically used the latter term). This article will analyze the role of global media in this hegemonic process and see if there is in fact the potential for a counterhegemony to emerge through opposing historic blocs. This question will be addressed methodologically through an analysis of the global media through the critical lens of hegemony theory. Hegemonic theory argues that the media represent an institution used by elites to exercise their hegemonic power. A number of scholars (Carragee, Gitlin,) have made the case that the press in the United States and, respectively, the Western world, is operating within a hegemonic system. Under this system media would tend to transmit and amplify the dominant classes' or elites' messages and ideology. The analysis of differing forms of media and how they react to and report on certain events, can provide a number of insights into how this institution is manipulated by powerful elites, as they attempt to control or 'spin' public perception. Ciaran McCullough expresses this relationship between media and its reliance on ruling elites in his book Media Power: "…certain groups in society are recognized by the media as accredited sources, and as such they have privileged access to (and greater claims on) media coverage. Their access comes from their institutional power, their representative status, or their claims to expert knowledge." (2002, p.68) In other words the media are constructed in such a way that they are more apt to follow the lead of 'legitimate' elites than that of dissenting voices. This is not to say that there is not debate within the elite class. However, there are certain underlying principles that are consistent within the elite class and it is these similarities that make up the core of the elite's worldview. For example, there may be debate inside the elite class about how best to spread liberal capitalism and democracy around the world, but there is no debate about whether or not it should in fact be disseminated. In other words, there is no 'macro' argument about the validity of the liberal capitalist system, even if there is an ongoing 'micro' debate about how it is to be implemented. Thus the overriding message that is transmitted to the media by the elite class remains the same. While a significant number of US media scholars do not subscribe to the notion of media hegemony itself, they have produced research which points at the validity of the claim that media texts as a rule are carrying elite and dominant ideology messages and frames. In "Deciding What's News" (1979) Herbert Gans comes to the conclusion that journalism is producing "symbolic goods" which are a function of the values and practices constantly applied in the news producing process. Gans states that media do not only transmit information, but by virtue of the conceptualization of this information it is also engaged in making reality judgments. (p. 39) News, according to Gans, is subject to the values of its producers. One rule of thumb that he proposes for deciding what is really news is "violation of values". Gans distinguishes between "topical" (or short-term) and "enduring values." These form what Gans calls "the ideology of news" which he compares to the "dominant paradigm" in science - a mainstream which allows for few deviations. In a later study Chang, Shoemaker and Bredlinger (1987) find that the variables identified by Gans do predict international coverage by US media. The most important predictors are normative deviance of the event, relevance to the United States, potential for social change and geographical distance. Gans interprets this selectivity as a way for news to maintain feelings of American superiority and greater internal cohesion in comparison to the rest of the world. Gans contends that American foreign news follows American foreign policy "if not slavishly", but more closely than domestic policy. At the same time he considers foreign news less adhering to objectivity than domestic news (p. 36). Gitlin goes further than Gans in elaborating on the ideological aspects of US media. He states that mass media are "core systems for the distribution of ideology... every day, directly or indirectly, by statement and omission, in pictures and words, in entertainment and news and advertisement, the mass media produce fields of definition and association, symbol and rhetoric, through which ideology becomes manifest and concrete" (p. 2). "The mass media are a significant social force in the forming and delimiting of public assumptions, attitudes and moods - of ideology, in short. They sometimes generate, sometimes amplify a field of legitimate discourse that shapes the public's definitions of its situations" and they work through selections and omissions, through emphases and tones, through al their forms of treatment. Like Gans, Gitlin defines the function of media's ideology as "central to the continuation of the established order" Gitlin's definition of the modern US media system is one of a hegemony, in which ruling classes emboss their view of the world on the rest of the society. Carragee (1991) states that the hegemony theory is one of a greater complexity than proposed by its originators. In a study of the New York Times coverage of the German Green Party, Carragee finds out that the paper, which is the supposed paragon of journalistic standards, has "denigrated and depoliticised the Greens... [T]his analysis suggests that the hegemonic framing of foreign alternative political parties or movements becomes most evident when these... directly challenge American foreign policy interests" (p. 25). At the same time, the author contends that even an ideologically hostile party or movement would draw less fire from US media, provided it does not challenge US interests. Like Gans and Gitlin, Berry (1990) points out at what he calls a "cultural bias", which facilitates the adoption by the US media of Washington-created consensus in foreign policy matters. Berry claims that the same patriotism, which makes journalists rally around the flag in the initial stages of a crisis, also provides for their criticism when (and if) the respective policy does fail (p. 142). Berry concludes that US media are not a forum for a comprehensive foreign policy debate, due to journalistic routine (reliance on official sources). In his study on the framing of the shooting of a South Korean airliner by a Soviet fighter plane and the downing of an Iranian passenger jet over the Persian Gulf by an American military ship, Robert Entman demonstrates how the US media take a vastly different approach to similar events, which differ in the direction of the diplomatic embarrassment caused. Entman finds out that the US press loudly decries the Soviets as "murderers" and monsters for shooting a plane, which had obviously violated their airspace. A similar incident, in which a US Navy ship destroys an Iranian passenger plane in international airspace is treated more as a mistake, caused by technology, rather than a human error and human tragedy. Similar findings are reported by Chang (1987) and Lowry and Wang (2000) who examine the relation between US foreign policy towards China. By exploring the direction of symbols used Chang documents editorial policy shifts in US media outlets consistent with US government policy shifts on the "Two China" policy. Depending on who is in greater favor with the US administration, mainland China was named respectively Communist China, PRC or, more neutrally, China. Chang goes as far as to suggest that due to the heavy reliance of media on official sources for foreign policy information, government officials have the possibility of planting symbols directing attitude towards players on the international scene. Lowry and Wang (2000) compare the US media coverage of the visits of Chinese leaders in the United States and find out that direction of symbols, controversial issues and use of labels are consistent with the US China policy in the respective era. In a study of the first Gulf War coverage, Page and Entman (1992) find out that criticism, although well represented in news and editorials across the US media, especially before the war, was given less salient positioning and was more "procedural than substantive" (p. 86). Except for being supportive of its own editorial stance, the range of opinions in The Times' Opinion and Editorial pages also "indexes" the range of the official debate"(p. 33). Page finds that in newsgathering this could reflect journalistic routines, like reliance on official sources for information. However in the "freestyle" opinion and editorial pages the omission and highlighting of certain aspects of a problem carry a definite slant towards the political stand of the newspaper and its obvious adherence to the mainstream of the debate, as dictated to the society by the government. Page concludes that sometimes media can be not just passive transmitters of ideas and interpretations, but may actively articulate policy views (p. 37). In a study of the New York Times coverage of the negotiations leading to the creation of NAFTA (The North-American Free Trade Agreement) Brian Michael Goss (2001) reaches similar conclusions. The author demonstrates the collusion between editorial policy and the government's foreign policy. He attributes the phenomenon to the economics of news production, which on one side helps "cheap" "informational subsidies" from official sources make their way onto the newspaper pages, and provides for a long-term political alliance between mainstream media and the government. This relationship, arguably stemming from the economic and cultural framework around the media (Herman & McChessney, 1997), makes the analysis of media a key component when examining hegemony in the 21st century. It suggests that media content can often reflect the ideas and positions of hegemonic elites rather than of the many differing viewpoints inside global civil society. It is the ability of US news media to set the agenda of their counterparts from around the world that makes the case for looking at the global media system as a conveyor of the dominant view of the world hegemon.
Global Media and Global Hegemony
Understanding the way this international media system works now carries even greater significance when attempting to understand power and hegemony in a global context. Pragmatically speaking, there can be no doubt that the majority of what we call global media (media which has a significant reach outside state borders [meaning readership or potential viewers in the millions]) are based in the West and more specifically in the United States. "Western countries predominate in the flow of news and information…and of the Western countries, the United States is easily the most dominant entity in every facet of the world communication system." (Magder 2003, p.31) The truth of this statement is underlined by the fact that "the United States exports more media products to more places globally than does any other country." (Ekachai, Greer & Hinchcliff-Pelias 1999, p.146) However, global media outlets are still controlled by the same elites who hold this power in the case of a country level of analysis. So, in essence, a small group of wealthy Westerners are controlling the flow of information for the majority of the world. And for the most part they still operate with the same fundamental goals in mind, simply carried over to the international scene. In other words, they are market-driven businesses, which must adhere to the demands of a fast-paced and competitive media industry. Therefore, the global media provide a bridge between the hegemonic state's local issues and the consciousness and worldview of the rest of the planet (Silverstone 2002, p.107). Thus, it seems clear that the entire non-Western world is receiving news that originates (at least partly) outside of its state borders and is disseminated through the filter of major Western media corporations. It can thereby be inferred that this 'news' arrives pre-packaged, accompanied by its own ideologies, assumptions and views about the world. An analysis of the content of certain players in the global media system could shine a critical light on this hegemonic process. Comparing the framing patters of media from around the world would make it possible to look at how much did the world follow the 'spin' of the hegemon (the US ruling elite). This study is also aimed to look at how the world perceives this war as opposed to the very similar conflict which took place in 1991. The two lines of comparison should eventually reveal some of the dynamics of growing or shrinking of the hegemonic entity's power to define. (Sardar 1999, p.44; McCullagh 2002, p.15) By doing this, this study intends to gain an insight into the relative control that the world's primary hegemonic power, The United States of America and its allies, have during these two periods.
Method For the purposes of this study the week leading up to the opening of military hostilities in the most recent conflict in Iraq was chosen. This time line was selected for two primary reasons. First, it allowed for an examination of a case where the world's primary hegemonic power was attempting to set limits and define the context of global debate about a single issue. Second, it allowed for comparisons between the literature on the lead-up to the US-lead operation against Iraq in 1991. 17 daily newspapers from different regions of the globe as well as four major broadcast news networks were analyzed (see appendix). A combination of regional, political, and circulation/penetration considerations were used to determine the sample, which included at least one paper from six of the world's continents. The basic unit of analysis was the article in the case of print media and the separate news story or interview in the case of broadcast items. The majority of articles were retrieved through a Lexis-Nexis search of the selected media in the target period for the terms "Iraq" and "invasion." The resulting sample was trimmed by leaving out letters to the editor and small news items. The rationale was to select a sample, which, while being limited to no more than 25 units per medium, would be still representative. The final sample consisted of more than 500 units in five languages. The concept of framing was central to our analysis of the content of these media outlets and requires further explanation at this point. Our analysis was based on the framing theory outlined by Robert Entman (1991). Entman says frames construct meaning in communication messages through selective highlighting or obscuring (omission) of certain sides of a story. Frames, as units of meaning evaluating an event, a person or a process do so by providing answers to four basic questions:
1) What is the problem that is being reported on? 2) What is the cause of the problem? 3) Who is to blame or praise? 4) What is to be done or what is going to happen?
Framing works by using language to send the reader or viewer a specific message and "the use of particular words to describe events and issues represents not merely the choice of a descriptive phrase but also the choice of an attitude towards the event or issue." (McCullagh 2002, p.23) Some examples of words or phrases found in this analysis that can be considered frame markers are 'dictator' (in reference to President Saddam Hussein), 'defiant' (in reference to actors) or 'collateral damage' as a euphemism for civilian casualties. It is the inherent meaning of these 'loaded' terms that helps to send a specific message to the reader/viewer of a story. This message can often carry significantly different meaning based on the language it uses. For example, the US administration would much rather see a debate about the human costs of conflict framed in terms of 'collateral damage' rather than in terms of the number of 'dead women and children'. This is how the story is framed or in media-speak, it is the 'spin' that the content has been given. Framing analysis allows the researcher to evaluate the direction of this spin or bias, thus making it possible to move from the Cohen's classical claim that the media do not tell people precisely what to think but can tell them what to think about (1963) and towards a deeper qualitative, yet sufficiently objective understanding of how the media create and manipulate meaning. The analysis consisted of a careful reading of the selected articles covering the lead-up to the invasion of Iraq on March 19, 2003, to identify the frames they contain. The frames are identified through answering the four questions outlined by Entman and listed above. For the purposes of this study each answer to Entman's first question "what is the problem?" was designated to one of ten categories. (see appendix) These categories are consistent with the topics from Wilhelm Kempf's analysis of the media during the first Gulf War, (Kempf 1996, p. 2-10). In this way the study acquires a fairly consistent framework for a comparison and cross-referencing of these two somewhat similar events. The results of the analysis were recorded in Microsoft Excel-based coding sheets (see appendix). Four coders, (the authors of this study) analyzed the sample, dividing it between themselves in an outlate-based fashion. Each medium's sample was coded once by a coder, each coder worked on five to six outlets. To establish the degree of reliability among the coders one random sample of 10 items was independently coded by all coders. An alpha reliability test turned a 93.42 percent reliability value.
Results Initially, all 21 of our media sources were examined together to glean macro results about how the war in Iraq was framed. Then they were broken down in specific ways in order to discern micro results. Firstly, we wanted to observe the way in which the US and, to a lesser extent, the other countries in the "Coalition of the Willing"[2] tried to justify the invasion of Iraq. Secondly, we wanted to examine the way the media of the world presented their news stories and how they framed them. These questions were primarily answered by examining the responses to the two questions, what is the cause of the problem? and who is to blame? However, prior to examining the specific results of this most recent study it is useful to look at some of the findings from media studies of the first US-led invasion of Iraq in 1991. In Wilhelm Kempf 's 1996 study of media content during the first Gulf War he finds that the US-led coalition is blamed 38.8% of the time, while Iraq is blamed in 61.2% of the articles (pp. 4-5). Kempf finds that the media primarily blamed Iraqi aggression as the cause of the war and that this explanation was rarely or never questioned. Iraq's claim of having historical rights over Kuwait's territory was often mentioned, but its credibility was usually doubted or denied. The media spent very little time trying to explore the possibility of the anti-Iraq coalition being motivated by the same selfish interests ascribed to Iraq. On the contrary, the press depicted the members of the coalition as acting with the main purpose of liberating Kuwait and only rarely was the alliance suspected of acting to secure a supply of oil and stabilize petroleum prices around the world. So, from these results it can be inferred that the US hegemon had a secure grip over the global public perception of the conflict. A similar study by Nohrstedt and Ottosen found the following attitude patterns towards main actors in the first Gulf War: (row percentage of items): ________________________________Positive Negative Balanced (neutral)__ George Bush 20 4 76 Saddam Hussein 4 34 62 Mikhail Gorbachev 12 4 84 UK Prime Minister [John Major] 13 0 87 Francois Mitterand 8 8 84 J. Perez de Cuellar 10 0 90 Norman Schwarzkopf 40 1 58 Bill Clinton 17 17 67____ ___ (Nohrstedt & Ottosen 2000, p. 192)
A conversion of the above table leaves us with an overwhelmingly positive attitude for the representatives of the 1991 anti-Iraqi coalition (total of 41 positive percentage points for its leaders, compared to just 12 negative), a positive attitude for the UN Secretary General (10 to 0), and a decidedly negative depiction of Iraq's President (34 to 4). In general, Nohrstedt and Ottosen find that media in the first Gulf War never actually strayed too far away from the hegemon's propaganda line. They suggest that "if the homeland of the media is involved in the conflict, news reporting is expected to function as a propaganda channel of the nation-state." (2000, p.250). However, there may be varying degrees of support for a conflict (in the media) depending on the significance that the conflict has for the nation in question. If the dominant superpower is an actor in the conflict, its propaganda is likely to find its way into news content, and, by virtue of the power of the hegemon's media, generally set the agenda for media around the globe. Thus, the dominant power's propaganda is reiterated, wittingly or not, by all the rest. Nohrstedt and Ottosen also note that selective omission of events follows the same pattern of dependency on the hegemon's interest (Ibid). The one thing that both of these studies seems to point to is that the US was able to 'spin' the perception of the conflict around the world in its own terms and that the hegemon's power to define was alive and well. These results are in stark contrast to those gathered from the study of media content prior to the most recent conflict in Iraq. During the lead-up to their recent invasion of Iraq the US government attempted to frame the need for military action in two ways. One was the alleged possession and concealment of weapons of mass destruction (WMD) by Saddam Hussein's Iraq. The other was the connection between Iraq and the "War on Terror," including implied links to Al-Quaeda, Osama Bin-Laden and the 9/11 terrorist attacks on the US. The results in this study show that the media of the world (including the United States and its allies) actually used those two ways to frame their news very rarely, at 4% and 1% respectively. So, even though these two aspects were the main reasons that the US president and the Western-based "Coalition of the Willing" gave for the invasion of Iraq, they were almost never discussed in the media in the week before the hostilities began. Instead, the world media were more apt to see the invasion and ensuing occupation linked to issues such as human rights abuses and United States unilateralism. In this way it is obvious that the US were not able to use their hegemonic power to convince the world to look at the conflict through their lens. In fact, the hegemon was often framed as the aggressor and as morally bankrupt. This study also investigated whether there was a decline in the ability of the US regime to both direct and deflect blame for the conflict away from themselves and towards other actors. The findings show quite clearly that while this was the case during the first Gulf War, it was certainly not the case this time. In fact even inside the US's own media, 21 percent of the stories blame the US and the 'Coalition of the Willing' for the conflict in Iraq. This is more than the amount of blame (17 percent) put on the non-helpers. (countries like France and Germany that opposed the war) 'The Willing' fare just marginally better than Iraq and Saddam Hussein, who get about 30 percent of the blame. What can be deduced from this is that the US government was unable to set the agenda not only in the global media but also in its own back yard. The results of this blame game are even more illuminating when the entire world's media is taken into account. The global media, including those from the US and other coalition countries, blamed the US and the coalition in 45 percent of the stories, while Iraq was considered as the main culprit in just 17 percent of the stories. Not surprisingly, the media from the 'unwilling' countries blamed the US in 56 percent of the stories and only blamed Iraq in 12 percent of those. The media from the 'Coalition of the Willing' countries put blame on the US, in 40 percent of the articles, whereas Iraq is only blamed in 21 percent of the cases. The fact that Iraq is only blamed half as often as the US suggests that the media from within the coalition is not convinced by US attempts to frame Iraq as the problem. Secondly, it shows a trend in global public opinion going against the US, again showing that US credibility with the media and therefore inside civil society could be in decline. It is worth noting that the content of the dominant global broadcasters was very much consistent with the general US media representation of the conflict at that time, namely, restrained judgment of the 'willing,' focus on technical detail rather than on the essence of the conflict, etc.. While certain allowances should be made for the 'spectacle-centered' nature of television, the impact of these media's allegiances should not be discounted. These results, especially the observed shallowness of the TV coverage, seem to be consistent with the findings of the Maryland University Group that broadcast media have contributed more to the thickening of the fog of war than to clarifying the picture for the viewers. (PIPA, 2003) One major conclusion is clear from the results of this examination of the media. When compared to the studies of the last Iraq war an apparent decline in the US's message credibility is observed. While in the lead-up to the first Gulf War Iraq is primarily blamed for the conflict, this study demonstrates that it is the US which are primarily cast in a negative light. Also, and perhaps most importantly, the results suggest that there is dissent inside the US coalition and perhaps within the hegemon itself.
Discussion
The general purpose of this article was to apply Gramsci's hegemonic theory to an empirical analysis of media content leading up to the recent invasion of Iraq. Because the media is an integral part of the public sphere, it was believed that a better understanding of the current dialogue going on in civil society could be achieved through this process. It was hoped that a comparative analysis of the media prior to the recent invasion of Iraq could allow for some speculation about the health of US global hegemony. In theory, one would assume that an effective hegemon would be able to dictate the parameters of a debate inside global civil society in terms that they choose. The general picture formed from this empirical study of the media, is that there were and are several debates surrounding the war. In essence, the fact that there was no global consensus suggests that the US was unable to control the discourse leading up to the war and frame the situation to its advantage. It is also significant to note that when compared to the first conflict in Iraq the onus of blame allocated inside the global media has shifted. Where in the first Gulf War it was Iraq who shouldered the majority of the blame, during the recent invasion it was the US that was primarily determined to be culpable. This fact alone suggests that the credibility and therefore the hegemonic power of the US could be in decline. In short, the debate in the world media is definitely not following the agenda put forth by the US and its allies. The WMD debate, which the 'Coalition of the Willing' used as a pretext to invade Iraq, is a non-issue even to the majority of the media from the coalition itself. Japan is the sole exception, which might have to do with Tokyo's own WMD concerns about the Democratic People's Republic of Korea. Surprisingly, the WMD issue matters much more to Al-Jazeera and Arab News than to the rest of the media, excluding the Japanese-based Daily Yomiuri. Proximity and refutations could play a role in their concern with the topic. The alleged links between Iraq and different terrorist groups, another key reason given by the US for the invasion, are outright dismissed by the media, even in the US The human cost of the eventual war ranks seventh among the ten categories in the study. Despite the efforts of the Toronto Star, Arab News and African News, the casualties of the coming war do not get much attention in the media. The topical analysis of the media in the scope of this study seems to give credence to the hypothesis that the hegemon and its allies, despite commanding an enviable media influence, were not able to swing the debate towards 'their' issues. The results seem to pose the question, could this be the beginning of the end of the hegemon's power to define? The analysis of the blame assigned to the actors in the political drama preceding the war seems to be consistent with such a view. The 'Coalition of the Willing' is deplored in half of the articles. The articles that either divide the blame more or less equally between all sides or remain neutral come in second place. Iraq comes third in this order, being blamed for the conflict only one third as many times the 'Coalition of the Willing. The 'unwilling', that is Germany, France, Russia and company, are the target of scorn in just one-tenth of the articles. The United Nations seem to attract the least criticism (less than 4 percent, while being the topic of nearly three times more stories), which seems to confirm the hypothesis from the topical analysis: people around the world question the global sheriff (the United States), more than the world city hall in the form of the UN. While it is not surprising to see Arab News as the primary carrier for criticism of the 'willing,' it is worth noting that the coalition is getting some of its toughest treatment from the American International Herald Tribune the Danish Politiken, the Canadian Toronto Star and the Australian Canberra Times. With Politiken and Canberra Times published in member countries of the anti-Iraqi coalition, the results seem to point to a significant fault line both between and within the countries comprising the West. The results seem to say that the US-led coalition was unable to convince its own media, let alone that of the world, of the rightness of its invasion. The defection of the majority of the West seems even more interesting given the backdrop of the careful pronouncements in the media from Russia and China. While generally disapproving of the US-U.K. push for war, Izvestia and People's Daily, acknowledge, both tacitly and explicitly, that confronting the US openly would be a mistake. Calculations of economic and geopolitical factors color the debate in these media in pragmatic shades. Given that both Russia and China had their own concerns, like issues of terrorism, oil prices and trade relations, it is not surprising that the media in those countries remained fairly balanced in their critique of the situation. When these empirical results are analyzed through the lens of hegemonic theory, some intriguing assumptions and conclusions can be made. It can be said that there has been a significant shift in global public opinion against the US between the last Gulf War and the recent invasion of Iraq. This finding is consistent ith the results of the Pew Center global opinion poll (June 2003) showing a marked decline in the favorable views of the US around the world. It has also been shown that the US is the primary global hegemon. Next, the way the US uses the media to disseminate its own worldview has been explained. Furthermore, the appearance of dissenting global opinions inside the world media has been shown to be a reflection of the discourse going on inside global civil society. If this is in fact the case, then one can assume that this dissent inside global civil society could be an early sign of historic blocs underneath the US hegemony beginning to defect. In other words, we could be witnessing the decay of US hegemonic power. This does not mean that this decay is in any way permanent or irreversible, but it does mean that more and more the US is being framed as an unethical hegemon in Gramsci's classical rendition. Gramsci describes an ethical hegemon as one that aspires and works to raise the subservient historic blocs under its control to its level (Augelli & Murphy 1988, pp.125-140). By this Gramsci means that the blocs that make up the hegemon's power base must be lifted economically, politically and culturally to that of the elites. An unethical hegemon, in essence, is one that has failed to listen to the subservient blocs in global civil society. Thus, the dialogue between the hegemon and the blocs is one-way and top-down in nature. Gramsci says that if this happens, the blocs that have submitted to the hegemon, through discourse and compromise in civil society, begin to defect and reject the hegemon's worldview. It is at this time that a hegemon can be considered to be unethical in nature (ibid). To determine whether the US global hegemony is unethical or ethical is a subjective task at best. However, the simple fact that the economic and cultural disparity between the US and the majority of the world is growing, leads one to believe that a case could be made for the position that the US is in fact an unethical hegemon (McGrew, 2000). It has been suggested by some academics that the most likely time for change is during a time of crisis (Molotch & Lester 1974, pp.235-260). This is because during a crisis, events unfold unexpectedly and at too quick of a pace for the hegemon to adequately frame issues that are to be discussed in civil society (ibid). The inability to adequately frame hegemonic discourse then leads to the emergence of more opposing views, which in turn diminishes the hegemon's power to define (Hallin 1994, p.55). If this is the case, then this dissenting discourse should be observable inside the media during a time of crisis or conflict. It could be argued that with the current global situation, where there are a number of unpopular US-led conflicts, we have reached this time of crisis. This fact, combined with the knowledge that the media is one of the primary tools for discourse inside civil society, links the emergence of dissent in the media to the emergence of counterhegemony or at the very least, the possible defection of historic blocs. The question then becomes whether or not we are seeing signs inside the global media, and elsewhere, that this defection is indeed beginning to take place. So far we may be witnessing a deepening division between the views of US-based media and media and civil society from most of the rest of the world. With the existing divergence in how events are presented to and perceived by the US public on one side and the audiences around the world on the other, further erosion of the US hegemonic message credibility and consequently, of US "soft power" seems inevitable.
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Failing Hegemony: A Comparative Content Analysis of the Coverage of the Lead-up to the Attack on Iraq in 2003 in the World Media
Appendix 1 Results Interpretation Charts
Chart 1. Topical distribution of all units in the sample
Chart 2: Topical distribution in the media outside the United States.
Chart 3: Topical distribution of the news from US-based media.
Chart 4: Topical distribution of the stories in media from countries opposing the US intervention plans.
Chart 5: Topical distribution of the stories from the four broadcasters in the sample (CNN, BBC, Al-Jazeera and Fox News)
Chart 6: Blame distribution from the total sample.
Charts 7, 8: Blame Distribution During Gulf War 1991.
Chart 9: Blame distribution in the stories from outside the United States
Chart 10: Blame distribution in the stories from US-based media.
Chart 11: Blame distribution in media from the 'Coalition of the Willing' countries.
Chart 12: Blame distribution in the media from countries opposing the US intervention in Iraq
Appendix 2 List of Media Sources United States USA Today (US) Stories used from the 13th to the 19th of March 2003 International Herald Tribune, The, (US) Stories used from the 13th to the 19th of March 2003 CNN (Cable News Network), (US) Stories used from the 13th to the 19th of March 2003 Fox News (US) Stories used from the 13th to the 19th of March 2003 The United Kingdom BBC Online (British broadcasting Corporation), (UK) Stories used from the 13th to the 19th of March 2003 Guardian, The, (UK) Stories used from the 13th to the 19th of March 2003 Independent, The, (UK) Stories used from the 13th to the 19th of March 2003 Australia Australian, The, (Australia) Stories used from the 13th to the 19th of March 2003 Canberra Times, The, (Australia) Stories used from the 13th to the 19th of March 2003 Asian/African Broadcasters Izvestia (Russia) Stories used from the 13th to the 19th of March 2003 Hindu, The, (India) Stories used from the 13th to the 19th of March 2003 People's Daily, The (China) Stories used from the 13th to the 19th of March 2003 Daily Yomiuri, The, (Japan) Stories used from the 13th to the 19th of March 2003 Arab News (Saudi Arabia) Stories used from the 13th to the 19th of March 2003 Al-Jazeera Network (Qatar) Stories used from the 13th to the 19th of March 2003 African Times, The, (South Africa) Stories used from the 13th to the 19th of March 2003
Americas Toronto Star, The (Canada) Stories used from the 13th to the 19th of March 2003 Buenos Aires Herald, The, (Argentina) Stories used from the 13th to the 19th of March 2003 Europe Monde, Le (France) Stories used from the 13th to the 19th of March 2003 FAZ (Germany) Stories used from the 13th to the 19th of March 2003 Politiken (Denmark) Stories used from the 13th to the 19th of March 2003
Failing Hegemony: A Comparative Content Analysis of the Coverage of the Lead-up to the Attack on Iraq in 2003 in the World Media
Appendix 3 Coding Categories (Coders' Instruction Sheet) What is the Cause? This section was divided into ten categories roughly based on the previous study done by Kempf in 1996 1) WMD (Weapons of Mass Destruction debate) - This category included all articles or broadcasts that primarily discussed the issue of WMD in, or leaving, Iraq 2) UN (United Nations) Relevancy/Effectiveness – This category was created for articles that discuss the effectiveness of the UN its role in the conflict or the nature of its future impact in international relations – discussion which was confined to the specific nature of discussions in the Security Council about a potential invasion of Iraq were grouped in category 7, as coalition building articles. 3) US (United States) Unilateralism/Imperialism – Articles in this category primarily discussed the role of the US as an actor that is able to act in its own interests without the necessity of receiving international approval or consensus for said actions. Also included in this category are articles that discuss the imperialistic nature of US actions. 4) Global Economy – These were articles or broadcast stories that dealt specifically with the impact of a potential conflict on the economy of the entire world. Any economic discussion in articles that dealt primarily with the impact on specific countries was put in category 5, Domestic Spin. 5) Domestic Spin Political/Economic – This category took in all articles that dealt with the specific political or economic impacts that an invasion of Iraq would have for individual states. 6) 9/11 /Terrorism/ Al-Queda – This category dealt with all articles that focused primarily on the US-led 'War on Terror' and its relationship to Iraq. Also included are articles that mentioned the 9/11 or Al-Queda link to Iraq. 7) Coalition Building – This category included all articles that discussed the political debate and wrangling over, either, A) acquiring a second resolution inside the UN Security Council or B) presenting the general validity/lack of validity of the case to invade Iraq. Also included were articles on who would join the US and the UK in the potential invasion of Iraq. 8) Technical Aspects of War – This category dealt with articles that dealt primarily with the logistics of war i.e. US troops move into position or Iraqi defense forces and civilians brace for an invasion. 9) Human Rights/Costs – This category grouped all articles that dealt with the possible suffering or 'collateral damage' that could result from an invasion of Iraq. 10) Misc. – This was a little used category that essentially collected all articles whose main themes did not fit into any of the above nine categories. * It is important to note here that many of these categories could have been mentioned inside any given article but that the cause was attributed to the category that was referred to most prominently throughout the text. Who is to Blame? 1) US/UK and the Coalition of the willing – this category included all stories that mainly attributed blame to the countries that were in favor (politically) of invading Iraq. 2) Iraq/Saddam Hussein – This category included all articles that primarily blamed the Iraqi regime for the conflict 3) Unwilling/Non-helpers – This category included all of the countries that were actively opposing the US invasion and who were then displayed in a negative light (France, Russia, Germany, Canada etc.) 4) The UN – These articles blamed the ineffectiveness or the powerlessness of the UN in handling the potential for conflict in Iraq 5) Neutral/miscellaneous – This category included all articles that were either neutral in their views or blamed other nations or actors not listed above.
Failing Hegemony: A Comparative Content Analysis of the Coverage of the Lead-up to the Attack on Iraq in 2003 in the World Media
Appendix 4
Sample Coding Sheet (Izvestia Daily, March 13-18, 2003)
[1] Throughout this paper the notion of civil society will refer to Gramsci's definition as it pertains to the hegemonic process. This is defined as the area where common sense is developed through discourse between institutions that are somewhat autonomous from the state (e.g. media, education system, and churches) Global civil society will be understood to be this arena taken outside state borders. (Baylis & Smith 2001, p.210) [2] This study borrows this term from the rhetoric of the US President George W. Bush to designate the countries joining the United States and Great Britain in their campaign against Iraq despite the absence of a UN Security Council mandate.
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