You cannot buy a newspaper here or turn on a television set without finding the haunting pictures of hostage Kenneth Bigley staring at you day after day.
Everyone by now has heard of Mr. Bigley's tearful pleas for his
life, and the British public has been spellbound by the fate of the
engineer from Liverpool, who was abducted at gunpoint in Baghdad on
Sept. 16. Two fellow hostages, Americans, were abducted on the same
day and have been beheaded by their captors, their gruesome murders
broadcast over the Internet.
This combination of total barbarism and modern technology has
produced a quantum leap for terrorists. They can keep entire
countries riveted by acts of terror inflicted on one individual as
never before.
Though the subject of last week's conference of European and
American policy-makers at Wilton Park in the gently rolling
countryside of West Sussex was "The Future of Transatlantic
Cooperation," the war on terrorism was the underlying context for
many of the discussions.
Does NATO have a future in out of area missions? Will the European
Union's plans for an independent military force be a threat to the
transatlantic relationship? Should the EU have a planning cell
within NATO or not? Will the American space program collide with
Europe's evolving space policy? Will China be able to buy arms from
the Europeans over the objections of the U.S. government? All of
these are relevant and important questions, to be sure.
But with the backdrop of the global war on terror, it does indeed
feel - as one participant noted after the session "The Global War
on Terror: Transatlantic Challenges and Transatlantic Cooperation"
- as though we are rearranging the deckchairs on the Titanic. The
existential question is whether we are engaged in a clash of
civilizations, as historian Samuel Huntington famously has
described it, or in a war against a particularly vicious and potent
form of terrorism.
What emerged from the Wilton Park discussions is that while
terrorists on one level operate in a highly globalized environment
in cyberspace, we do have the power to pre-empt that capacity. We
can fight a high-tech war against them, using all the means of
modern technology, from satellites to track cell phones to
cyberspace policing to shut down Web sites. If we in the West are
not to hang separately, if we are in a war, surely we should
cooperate. The question is how far are we prepared - if at all - to
impinge on the civil liberties that make our civilization what it
is in order to save it.
What is clear, though, is that those of us in the media ought to
have a debate among ourselves about how far we are willing to help
the terrorists by graphically broadcasting their horrendous acts
into the living rooms of the Western world. The essence of
terrorism is the effect it has on the mind - i.e. terror, the fear
of future acts. Whatever the ultimate political goals of these
depraved murderers, scaring us out of out wits and dividing us
amongst ourselves is an essential tactic for them.
An editorial in the Sunday Telegraph made this point well. "If [Abu
Musab] al-Zarqawi's aim has been to show that the West is weak and
decadent, then there has been much to cheer him in recent days. In
their coverage of Mr. Bigley's appalling case, the British media -
television, tabloids and quality newspapers alike - have conspired
unwittingly in the terrorists' objectives, which have been to
control the agenda, nurture the impression of Western impotence,
and encourage the misapprehension that Mr. Bigley's suffering is
somehow the consequence of decisions taken by President Bush and,
more specifically, Tony Blair."
If we in the media were less willing to play the terrorists' game,
we could make an important contribution to the war against them.
Pictures, we all know though writers are loath to concede it, are
worth a thousands words, and we could for instance institute a
voluntary ban on pictures of captors and hostages. That would also
have the effect of not exposing the hostages to further humiliation
in their distress, showing some respect for human dignity and for
the suffering of their families. Nor does reporting on a hostage
situation need to involve the most graphic of images or above the
fold frontpage treatment.
If we are really serious about being at war, the media needs to do
some soul-searching about our role in that war.
Helle Dale is director of Foreign Policy and Defense Studies at
the Heritage Foundation. E-mail: [email protected].
First appeared in The Washington Times