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TV News Bad for Truth About Iraq
© Copyright 2003 Inter Press Service News Agency
By: Jim Lobe
Date: 10/04/2003
The more commercial television news you watch, the more wrong you are
likely to be about key elements of the Iraq War and its aftermath,
according to a major new study released in Washington on Thursday.
And the more you watch the Rupert Murdoch-owned Fox News channel, in
particular, the more likely it is that your perceptions about the war are
wrong, adds the report by the University of Maryland's Program on
International Policy Attitudes (PIPA).
Based on several nationwide surveys it conducted with California-based
Knowledge Networks since June, as well as the results of other polls, PIPA
found that 48 percent of the public believe US troops found evidence of
close pre-war links between Iraq and the al-Qaeda terrorist group; 22
percent thought troops found weapons of mass destruction (WMD) in Iraq;
and 25 percent believed that world public opinion favored Washington's
going to war with Iraq. All three are misperceptions.
The report, Misperceptions, the Media and the Iraq War, also found that
the more misperceptions held by the respondent, the more likely it was
that s/he both supported the war and depended on commercial television for
news about it.
The study is likely to stoke a growing public and professional debate over
why mainstream news media – especially the broadcast media – were not more
skeptical about the Bush administration's pre-war claims, particularly
regarding Saddam Hussein's WMD stockpiles and ties with al-Qaeda.
"This is a dangerously revealing study," said Marvin Kalb, a former
television correspondent and a senior fellow of the Shorenstein Center on
the Press, Politics and Public Policy at the Kennedy School of Government
at Harvard University.
While Kalb said he had some reservations about the specificity of the
questions directed at the respondents, he noted that, "People who have had
a strong belief that there is an unholy alliance between politics and the
press now have more evidence." Fox, in particular, has been accused of
pursuing a chauvinistic agenda in its news coverage despite its motto, "We
report, you decide".
Overall, according to PIPA, 60 percent of the people surveyed held at
least one of the three misperceptions through September. Thirty percent of
respondents had none of those misperceptions.
Surprisingly, the percentage of people holding the misperceptions rose
slightly over the last three months. In July, for example, polls found
that 45 percent of the public believed US forces had found "clear evidence
in Iraq that Hussein was working closely with al-Qaeda". In September, 49
percent believed that.
Likewise, those who believed troops had found WMD in Iraq jumped from 21
percent in July to 24 percent in September. One in five respondents said
they believed that Iraq had actually used chemical or biological weapons
during the war.
In determining what factors could create the misperceptions, PIPA
considered a number of variables in the data.
It found a high correlation between respondents with the most
misperceptions and their support for the decision to go to war. Only 23
percent of those who held none of the three misperceptions supported the
war, while 53 percent who held one misperception did so. Of those who
believe that both WMDs and evidence of al-Qaeda ties have been found in
Iraq and that world opinion backed the United States, a whopping 86
percent said they supported war.
More specifically, among those who believed that Washington had found
clear evidence of close ties between Hussein and al-Qaeda, two-thirds held
the view that going to war was the best thing to do. Only 29 percent felt
that way among those who did not believe that such evidence had been
found.
Another factor that correlated closely with misperceptions about the war
was party affiliation, with Republicans substantially "more likely" to
hold misperceptions than Democrats. But support for Bush himself as
expressed by whether or not the respondent said s/he intended to vote for
him in 2004 appeared to be an even more critical factor.
The average frequency of misperceptions among respondents who planned to
vote for Bush was 45 percent, while among those who plan to vote for a
hypothetical Democrat candidate, the frequency averaged only 17 percent.
Asked "Has the US found clear evidence Saddam Hussein was working closely
with al-Qaeda"? 68 percent of Bush supporters replied affirmatively. By
contrast, two of every three Democrat-backers said no.
But news sources also accounted for major differences in misperceptions,
according to PIPA, which asked more than 3,300 respondents since May where
they "tended to get most of [their] news''. Eighty percent identified
broadcast media, while 19 percent cited print media.
Among those who said broadcast media, 30 percent said two or more
networks; 18 percent, Fox News; 16 percent, CNN; 24 percent, the three big
networks – NBC (14 percent), ABC (11 percent), CBS (9 percent); and three
percent, the two public networks, National Public Radio (NPR) and Public
Broadcasting Service (PBS).
For each of the three misperceptions, the study found enormous differences
between the viewers of Fox, who held the most misperceptions, and NPR/PBS,
who held the fewest by far.
Eighty percent of Fox viewers were found to hold at least one
misperception, compared to 23 percent of NPR/PBS consumers. All the other
media fell in between.
CBS ranked right behind Fox with a 71 percent score, while CNN and NBC
tied as the best-performing commercial broadcast audience at 55 percent.
Forty-seven percent of print media readers held at least one
misperception.
As to the number of misconceptions held by their audiences, Fox far
outscored all of its rivals. A whopping 45 percent of its viewers believed
all three misperceptions, while the other commercial networks scored
between 12 percent and 16 percent. Only nine percent of readers believed
all three, while only four percent of the NPR/PBS audience did.
PIPA found that political affiliation and news source also compound one
another. Thus, 78 percent of Bush supporters who watch Fox News said they
thought the United States had found evidence of a direct link to al-Qaeda,
while 50 percent of Bush supporters who rely on NPR/PBS thought so.
Conversely, 48 percent of Fox viewers who said they would support a
Democrat believed that such evidence had been found. But none of the
Democrat-backers who relied on NPR/PBS believed it.
The study also debunked the notion that misperceptions were due mainly to
the lack of exposure to news.
Among Bush supporters, those who said they follow the news "very closely",
were found more likely to hold misperceptions. Those Bush supporters, on
the other hand, who say they follow the news "somewhat closely" or "not
closely at all" held fewer misperceptions.
Conversely, those Democratic supporters who said they did not follow the
news very closely were found to be twice as likely to hold misperceptions
as those who said they did, according to PIPA.
Jim Lobe, works as IPS' correspondent in the Washington, D.C., bureau. He
has followed the ups and downs of neo-conservatives since the well before
their rise in the aftermath of the September 11, 2001 attacks. Visit his
column archive.
© Copyright 2003 Inter Press Service News Agency
posted at:
http://www.independent-media.tv/index.cfm
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