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[casi] TV Not Concerned by Cluster Bombs, DU






ACTION ALERT:
TV Not Concerned by Cluster Bombs, DU:
"That's just the way life is in Iraq"

May 6, 2003

Media have been quick to declare the U.S. war against Iraq a success, but
in-depth investigative reporting about the war's likely health and
environmental consequences has been scarce.  Two important issues getting
shortchanged in the press are the U.S.'s controversial use of cluster
bombs and depleted uranium weapons.

According to a May 5 search of the Nexis database, there have been no
in-depth reports about cluster bombs on ABC, CBS or NBC's nightly news
programs since the start of the war.  There have been, however, a few
passing mentions of cluster bombs-- enough so that viewers may be aware of
their existence.  Not so with depleted uranium.  Since the beginning of
the year, the words "depleted uranium" have not been uttered once on ABC
World News Tonight, CBS Evening News or NBC Nightly News, according to
Nexis.

Depleted uranium is a dense metal used in various U.S. and British
munitions as ballast and to cut through tank armor.  The U.S. military
insists it is not a major health threat, but many link it to Gulf War
Syndrome and to increased cancers and birth defects in Iraq.  As explained
in the Seattle Post-Intelligencer (11/12/02)-- one of the few mainstream
outlets to seriously investigate the issue-- DU is radioactive and remains
so for billions of years.  What's more, when a DU weapon hits its target,
"an extremely fine ceramic uranium dust" is created "that can be spread by
the wind, inhaled and absorbed into the human body and absorbed by plants
and animals, becoming part of the food chain."  According to the London
newspaper the Guardian (4/25/03), it's unclear exactly how much DU was
used in the most recent Iraq war, but some experts estimate 1,000 to 2,000
tons-- roughly three to six times the amount of DU dropped in the 1991
Gulf War.

Cluster bombs are another widely criticized weapon favored by the U.S. As
a recent Time magazine article (5/12/03) explained, cluster bombs "split
in midair and rain as many as hundreds of grenade-like bomblets," some of
which "remain, like leftover land mines, as a deadly postwar risk to
civilians."  According to Human Rights Watch (3/03), a minimum of 14 to 16
percent of cluster bomblets become "de facto antipersonnel landmines"; the
group has called for "a global moratorium" on their use.  Amnesty
International has called the U.S.'s use of cluster bombs in civilian areas
of Iraq "a grave violation of international humanitarian law" (4/2/03).

When cluster bombs have come up on the major network newscasts, little
background information has been provided.  ABC's World News Tonight
reported (4/1/03) Iraqi officials' claim that nine children had been
killed by cluster bombs, but did not elaborate.  In another report (World
News Tonight Saturday, 4/19/03), anchor Terry Moran introduced a segment
by saying, "Four soldiers were hurt today when a little Iraqi girl handed
them part of a cluster bomb," adding, bizarrely, "That's just the way life
is in Iraq right now." Later, Moran noted that the little girl was
injured, too.

The report Moran was introducing examined the dangers posed to civilians
by the large amounts of military ordnance around the country, including
both weapons stockpiles left behind by Saddam Hussein's regime and cluster
bombs dropped by the U.S. and British.  ABC focused on the efforts U.S.
Marines were making to dispose of the weaponry, and concluded that "the
Marines did not create this problem, but Iraqis are sure now looking to
them for answers."  True, U.S. Marines and soldiers did not create the
problem of Iraqi ammunition stockpiles, but they-- or, more to the point,
their commanders-- did create the problem of cluster bombs.

Apart from one passing mention (3/21/03), NBC Nightly News' only
substantive reference to cluster bombs was when Pentagon correspondent Jim
Miklaszewski reported (4/2/03) the use of "a new, more deadly cluster
bomb, designed to take out entire columns of enemy armor and troops."  But
the report included no discussion of whether the bombs were being used
near civilians, or what their long-term impact might be.

As for CBS's Evening News, it mentioned cluster bombs only once, almost
inadvertently (4/16/03).  The main source for the story was the Army's
Gen. Buford Blount, who Dan Rather interviewed about the "enormous job"
the U.S. military "has taken on in trying to get Iraq up and running
again."  At one point, apparently to illustrate the difficult requests the
Army receives very day, the report featured a clip of an Iraqi doctor
asking that the U.S. clean up cluster bombs.  Rather let the substance of
the comment pass without remark, ending the report by saying that the
Blount "remains convinced that his soldiers have made good progress."

Interestingly, CBS aired what seemed to be an expanded version of Rather's
report later that night, on the newsmagazine 60 Minutes II.  Even in the
longer story, the focus was on Blount and his struggles to "bring order
out of chaos" in Baghdad, but Rather did pursue the question the doctor
raised: "What about the cluster bomb problem?"  Blount answered that "we
didn't use that many of them, but there are evidently some areas where
they-- you know, they've got some-- some areas," and claimed that though
the Air Force may have dropped more, he, as an Army officer, didn't know
where those would be.

The report then showed footage from Rather's visit to a hospital where he
met children gruesomely injured by cluster bombs, including one boy who
lost both eyes and sustained a potentially fatal head wound.  "All his
mother can do is weep and try to ease his pain," said Rather.  Clearly,
Rather was trying to convey the horrific damage inflicted by cluster
bombs-- something too few mainstream reporters have done-- but his report
stopped short of providing specifics about the extent of "the cluster bomb
problem": Was Blount telling the truth when he said "we didn't use that
many"?  How many remain unexploded?  Does their use violate international
law?

Contrast TV's lack of curiosity to the noteworthy May 12 Time magazine
story cited above, in which reporter Michael Weisskopf highlighted the
discrepancy between Pentagon claims-- that "only 26 cluster bombs had
landed in civilian areas, resulting in one casualty"--with the reality on
the ground, where in Karbala alone, local clean-up crews "are harvesting
about 1,000 cluster bombs a day."

Human Rights Watch-- which warned for months of the danger and possible
illegality of using cluster bombs near populated areas-- has likewise
argued (4/25/03) that "U.S. claims that cluster munitions have not caused
significant damage to civilians in Iraq are highly misleading."  The group
has criticized the U.S. and Britain for failing to "come clean" about how
many cluster bombs were dropped and where, so that civilians can be
protected (4/29/03).

The repercussions of the U.S. and British use of cluster bombs and
depleted uranium weapons will be felt in Iraq for a long time to come.  It
is essential that U.S. media push for a full accounting on these issues
from the Pentagon.

ACTION:
Please ask ABC World News Tonight, CBS Evening News and NBC Nightly news
to seriously investigate the U.S.'s use of cluster bombs and depleted
uranium in Iraq.

ABC's World News Tonight
Phone: 212-456-4040
mailto:PeterJennings@abcnews.com

CBS Evening News
Phone: 212-975-3691
mailto:evening@cbsnews.com

NBC Nightly News
Phone: 212-664-4971
mailto:nightly@nbc.com

For more information, see:
The Seattle Post-Intelligencer, " Iraqi cancers, birth defects blamed on
U.S. depleted uranium":
http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/national/95178_du12.shtml

Human Rights Watch's resources about cluster bombs:
http://www.hrw.org/arms/clusterbombs.php

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