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During the first two days of this month, CNN's website displayed
an odd little announcement. "There have been false reports that CNN has not
used the word 'terrorist' to refer to those who attacked the World Trade
Center and Pentagon," the notice said. "In fact, CNN has consistently and
repeatedly referred to the attackers and hijackers as terrorists, and it
will continue to do so."
The CNN disclaimer was accurate -- and, by conventional media
standards, reassuring. But it bypassed a basic question that festers
beneath America's overwhelming media coverage of recent weeks: Exactly what
qualifies as "terrorism"?
For this country's mainstream journalists, that's a non-question
about a no-brainer. More than ever, the proper function of the "terrorist"
label seems obvious. "A group of people commandeered airliners and used
them as guided missiles against thousands of people," says NBC News
executive Bill Wheatley. "If that doesn't fit the definition of terrorism,
what does?"
True enough. At the same time, it's notable that American news
outlets routinely define terrorism the same way that U.S. government
officials do. Usually, editors assume that reporters don't need any formal
directive because the appropriate usage is simply understood.
The Wall Street Journal does provide some guidelines, telling its
staff that the word terrorist "should be used carefully, and specifically,
to describe those people and nongovernmental organizations that plan and
execute acts of violence against civilian or noncombatant targets." In
newsrooms across the United States, media professionals would agree.
But -- in sharp contrast -- Reuters has stuck to a distinctive
approach for decades. "As part of a policy to avoid the use of emotive
words," the global news service says, "we do not use terms like 'terrorist'
and 'freedom fighter' unless they are in a direct quote or are otherwise
attributable to a third party. We do not characterize the subjects of news
stories but instead report their actions, identity and background so that
readers can make their own decisions based on the facts."
Since mid-September, the Reuters management has taken a lot of
heat for maintaining this policy -- and for reiterating it in an internal
memo, which included the observation that "one man's terrorist is another
man's freedom fighter." In a clarifying statement, released on Oct. 2, the
top execs at Reuters explained: "Our policy is to avoid the use of
emotional terms and not make value judgments concerning the facts we
attempt to report accurately and fairly."
Reuters reports from 160 countries, and the "terrorist" label is
highly contentious in quite a few of them. Behind the scenes, many
governments have pressured Reuters to flatly describe their enemies as
terrorists in news dispatches.
From the vantage point of government leaders in Ankara or
Jerusalem or Moscow, for example, journalists shouldn't hesitate to
describe their violent foes as terrorists. But why should reporters oblige
by pinning that tag on Kurdish combatants in Turkey, or Palestinian
militants in occupied territories, or rebels in Chechnya?
Unless we buy into the absurd pretense that governments don't
engage in "terrorism," the circumscribed use of the term by U.S. media
makes no sense. Turkish military forces have certainly terrorized and
killed many civilians; the same is true of Israeli forces and Russian
troops. As a result, plenty of Kurds, Palestinians and Chechens are
grieving.
American reporters could plausibly expand their working definition
of terrorism to include all organized acts of terror and murder committed
against civilians. But such consistency would meet with fierce opposition
in high Washington places.
During the 1980s, with a non-evasive standard for terrorism, news
accounts would have routinely referred to the Nicaraguan contra guerrillas
-- in addition to the Salvadoran and Guatemalan governments -- as
U.S.-backed "terrorists." Today, for instance, such a standard would
require news coverage of terrorism in the Middle East to include the
Israeli assaults with bullets and missiles that take the lives of
Palestinian children and other civilians.
Sadly, the evenhanded use of the "terrorist" label would mean
sometimes affixing it directly on the U.S. government. During the past
decade, from Iraq to Sudan to Yugoslavia, the Pentagon's missiles have
destroyed the lives of civilians just as innocent as those who perished on
Sept. 11. If journalists dare not call that "terrorism," then perhaps the
word should be retired from the media lexicon.
It's entirely appropriate for news outlets to describe the Sept.
11 hijackers as "terrorists" -- if those outlets are willing to use the
"terrorist" label with integrity across the board. But as long as news
organizations are not willing to do so, the Reuters policy is the only
principled journalistic alternative.
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Norman Solomon's latest book is "The Habits of Highly Deceptive Media." His
syndicated column focuses on media and politics.