Truth Behind the War. many. Media s coverage is so much influential that it can have an effect on anyone s opinion

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Name LastName Professor s Name Course Number Month DD, YYYY Truth Behind the War Media plays a great role in influencing today s youth and changing the opinions of many. Media s coverage is so much influential that it can have an effect on anyone s opinion and views. Media at times could be good, while at times it could be really bad. For example, in focusing on the issues of discrimination, it plays a very important role in letting people know the adverse effects of discrimination, while on the other hand media, itself is being responsible for the growing issues of discrimination. Media plays a great role during the Wartime, not just by broadcasting the war events but also by letting the people know the reality and the truth behind the war. They are the ones who change people s perspective and opinion. The techniques in addition to goals of the media have changed radically. The media now is what bring the news of all the terror war into everyone s home. When the World war broke out in August 1914, the United States at once fixed its relation to the belligerents thru a proclamation of neutrality. The days of the war, before their entry on the side of the allied powers in April 1917, were marked with difficulties, both in preventing violations of out neutrality and in securing proper respect for our neutral rights. The rights and duties of neutrals were involved. At the outbreak of the war, Great Britain notified the United States that she would be held responsible for injuries resulting to British interests from vessels converted to warships or armed in American ports, even though the completion of the act of conversion took place on the high seas. British merchant vessels, it was asserted, were armed for self-defense only.

The position of the United States was that a merchant vessel belonging to a belligerent should not arm itself so as to avoid capture by lawful and legitimate processes. On April 8, 1917, the Austrian government, as Germany's ally, broke off diplomatic relations with the United States, and in due course, the war was declared against Austria. Until all effective states agree upon the abandonment of neutrality, those remaining outside the agreement will insist on their right to judge for themselves as to the neutral or belligerent character of their policy, in the case of a conflict between two or more other states. This lies in the field of policy. And as long as the policy of neutrality may be elected, it follows that the status of neutrality will exist, together with its rights and duties. The belligerent states will be sufficiently active in demanding that a country is impartially neutral. The neutral state must itself insist upon an observance of its rights formally declared by the joint resolution of Congress (Cipriano, 1995). All this during the First World War was well focused on, and a clear perspective was shown through Media. There was not any biasness and the news was broadcasted to merely let the people know what is going on in their surrounding, and not to exaggerate a particular news. Media of that time would only broadcast what was actually happening and so it would leave the decision to viewers hands as to what conclusion they make out from the broadcast and it had let them had their own perspective to everything they watched rather than to force Media s own perspective on its viewer. Change of the War Picture Previously media would emphasize a focus on the positives of wars. They paid attention to what people required and needed to hear. There was no struggle, and money wasn t as key an issue in becoming a journalist. The commercialism of news was far less of an issue in the reporting of news. The news wasn t so much unconstructive as it was upbeat and vigorous. It was the media s job to keep their listeners hopeful and panic free. It wasn t

concerning who could get a hold of the most listeners by offering the most sensational newscasts. It was about letting everyone know the truth and reality (Jowett, & O'Donnell, 1992). But now in the present time, media offers overly negative pictures of war and its objectives and accomplishments. A new legacy would be built: the rising of deviousness, one that imitated and showed the broader dissatisfactions with the government. Journalism was now regarding the money and the achievement that would be wrapped around it. The competition rose as the requirement for unconstructiveness in the life unraveled. Good, decent, honest and optimistic news would no longer be found. Media vs. Military Business We shall now have a look at how the media interferes in the military business, so to have a clear vision of how things actually are. Every time a society has permitted its military establishment to insulate itself against effective public scrutiny that military establishment has ended up destroying the people it was supposed to protect. The independence guaranteed to the press under the First Amendment to that Constitution is one of the most important of the safeguards. Yet every bureaucrat knows that power flows from each increment of information he or she can garner and hold tight. To the extent that our society permits such bureaucratic self-interest to restrict access by the public to the business of government in particular, its military business the First Amendment becomes meaningless. Very few citizens have the time and means to search out government information vital to their well-being. As a result, access means mainly access by the press, like it or not. In a speech to the National Newspaper Association following the end of the war, General Colin L. Powell, chairman of the U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff, acknowledged that if the Iraqi army had moved, in August 1990, as it was entirely capable of doing, to occupy the

principal Saudi Arabian airfields and ports, the United States would have been in enormous difficulty. What General Powell did not tell his audience, but what Major General Edward B. Atkeson, formerly of the Central Intelligence Agency, had made plain more than three years earlier in an article in Armed Forces Journal International was that for a period of several weeks, until major U.S. land and air forces could be inserted, a determined, large-scale Iraqi invasion could be stopped only by nuclear weapons. But American journalism has neither the technical competence to recognize the longterm implications of an article such as General Atkeson's nor the structural means to relate it to a crisis that occurs years, or even months, later. So the public American or otherwise was never informed that in declaring his intention to defeat Iraqi aggression the president of the United States was, in fact, committing the United States to nuclear war during the period when the first token U.S. land forces flown to the region were in danger of being overrun. Passion for Seeking Out the Truth As with every major military story since the end of World War, the press failed. It did not fail because of government censorship. Rather, it failed because of the inadequacies of its own training and organization, deficiencies that prevented it from reporting matters of crucial importance, even when all of the essential facts were in the public domain. The media, much similar to the American people, began losing optimism in the government, so broadcasters subsequently would create such newscasts that would also fill the American people with a strong sense of doubt. A major loss to the reliability of the public was the leaking of information to the public from the Pentagon Papers. These documents were discovered by journalists to contain far higher rates of American fatalities and far less victorious battles than the publicly released government statistics had specified. No longer would the press recognize the government press releases; now they began more analytical journalism to check the truth of the official reports.

We need to realize that media is there to raise the voice for truth, not to support the exaggeration of the simple, uncomplicated anecdote. What the media at this stage needs to do is to make an attempt and realize that to cover a war and for a nation determined to comprehend it, there is merely one course. They must share a passion for seeking out the truth (DeParle, 1991). MediAffect Where do the media fit in this procedure? An average American high school graduate spends more time in front of the TV than in the classroom. The mass media is an influential socializing agent. Media is not restricted to the contented of media messages. Media have an effect on how we learn regarding our world and interrelate with one another. Media factually reconcile our relationship with social institutions. We base a large amount of our knowledge on government news accounts, not knowledge. We are reliant on the media for what we distinguish and how we narrate to the world of politics due to the media-politics connection. We read or watch political discussions followed by immediate analysis as well as commentary by "experts." Politicians rely on media to converse their message. Related dynamics are present in other mediated events such as televised sports and televangelism. Media is part of our usual relations with family and friends. They describe our communication with other people on a daily foundation as a diversion, sources of disagreement, or a uniting force. Media have an impact on society not merely through the contented of the message but also through the procedure. Works Cited DeParle, Jason. "Covering the War. New York Times, 5 May 1991. Venzon, Anne Cipriano. The United States in the First World War. Garland Publishing, 1995.

Jowett, G. S., and O'Donnell, Victoria. Propaganda and Persuasion. 2nd ed., Sage Press, 1992. Edward B. Atkeson. The Persian Gulf. Still a Vital U.S. Interest? Armed Forces Journal International, April 1987): 46-56