Journalism
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“You cannot wage a war without rumors, without media, without propaganda. Any military planner who plans a war, and doesnt put media, propaganda on top of his agenda, is a bad military,” says Al Jazeera senior producer, Samir Khader.
In wars, image assumes iconic status. The coverage of the bombing of Baghdad during the first Persian Gulf War put CNN on the media map. Today, the spread of digital technology means that an image can be distributed worldwide within seconds. But are we better informed?
‘You’ve got to see it to believe it’ but should Americans really trust their eyes?
The complexity of war coverage in the news and press media – does America really get the full picture from American foreign reporting on the war with Iraq?
Images can end wars. At least that’s the contention of Vietnam War veteran Larry Stimeling who says on his website “The United States ended the war in Vietnam, not because of defeat on the battlefield, but because of photographs that turned America’s stomach”. His message highlights the power of the picture, and indivertibly harks back to American coverage of the Vietnam War. So where in the press