September 10, 2010 5:37 AM

A Catastrophe the Media Missed by a Country Mile

By
CBSNews
(CBS)  Juan Cole is the Richard P. Mitchell Professor of History and the director of the Center for South Asian Studies at the University of Michigan.  His latest book, Engaging the Muslim World, is just out in a revised paperback edition from Palgrave Macmillan. He runs the Informed Comment website. This article originally appeared on TomDispatch.

The Great Deluge in Pakistan passed almost unnoticed in the United States despite President Obama's repeated assertions that the country is central to American security.  Now, with new evacuations and flooding afflicting Sindh Province and the long-term crisis only beginning in Pakistan, it has washed almost completely off American television and out of popular consciousness.
 
Don't think we haven't been here before.  In the late 1990s, the American mass media could seldom be bothered to report on the growing threat of al-Qaeda.  In 2002, it slavishly parroted White House propaganda about Iraq, helping prepare the way for a senseless war.  No one yet knows just what kind of long-term instability the Pakistani floods are likely to create, but count on one thing: the implications for the United States are likely to be significant and by the time anyone here pays much attention, it will already be too late.

Few Americans were shown -- by the media conglomerates of their choice -- the heartbreaking scenes of eight million Pakistanis displaced into tent cities, of the submerging of a string of mid-sized cities (each nearly the size of New Orleans), of vast areas of crops ruined, of infrastructure swept away, damaged, or devastated at an almost unimaginable level, of futures destroyed, and opportunistic Taliban bombings continuing.  The boiling disgust of the Pakistani public with the incompetence, insouciance, and cupidity of their corrupt ruling class is little appreciated.  

The likely tie-in of these floods (of a sort no one in Pakistan had ever experienced) with global warming was seldom mentioned.  Unlike, say, BBC Radio, corporate television did not tell the small stories -- of, for instance, the female sharecropper who typically has no rights to the now-flooded land on which she grew now-ruined crops thanks to a loan from an estate-owner, and who is now penniless, deeply in debt, and perhaps permanently excluded from the land.  That one of the biggest stories of the past decade could have been mostly blown off by television news and studiously ignored by the American public is a further demonstration that there is something profoundly wrong with corporate news-for-profit.  (The print press was better at covering with the crisis, as was publicly-supported radio, including the BBC and National Public Radio.)

In his speech on the withdrawal of designated combat units from Iraq last week, Barack Obama put Pakistan front and center in American security doctrine, "But we must never lose sight of what's at stake. As we speak, al-Qaeda continues to plot against us, and its leadership remains anchored in the border regions of Afghanistan and Pakistan."  Even if Pakistan were not a major non-NATO ally of the United States, it is the world's sixth most populous country and the 44th largest economy, according to the World Bank.  The flooding witnessed in the Indus Valley is unprecedented in the country's modern history and was caused by a combination of increasingly warm ocean water and a mysterious blockage of the jet stream, which drew warm, water-laden air north to Pakistan, over which it burst in sheets of raging liquid.  If the floods that followed prove a harbinger of things to come, then they are a milestone in our experience of global warming, a big story in its own right.

News junkies who watch a lot of television broadcasts could not help but notice with puzzlement that as the cosmic catastrophe unfolded in Pakistan, it was nearly invisible on American networks.  I did a LexisNexis search for the terms "Pakistan" and "flood" in broadcast transcripts (covering mostly American networks) from July 31st to September 4th, and it returned only about 1,100 hits.  A search for the name of troubled actress Lindsay Lohan returned 653 search results in the same period and one for "Iraq," more than 3,000 hits (the most the search engine will count).  A search for "mosque" and "New York" yielded 1,300 hits.  Put another way, the American media, whipped into an artificial frenzy by anti-Muslim bigots like New York gubernatorial candidate Rick Lazio and GOP hatemonger Newt Gingrich, were far more interested in the possible construction of a Muslim-owned interfaith community center two long blocks from the old World Trade Center site than in the sight of millions of hapless Pakistani flood victims.  

Of course, some television correspondents did good work trying to cover the calamity, including CNN's Reza Sayah and Sanjay Gupta, but they generally got limited air time and poor time slots. (Gupta's special report on the Pakistan floods aired the evening of September 5th, the Sunday before Labor Day, not exactly a time when most viewers might be expected to watch hard news.) 

As for the global warming angle, it was not completely ignored.  On August 13th, reporter Dan Harris interviewed NASA scientist Gavin Schmidt on ABC's "Good Morning America" show at 7:45 am.  The subject was whether global warming could be the likely cause for the Pakistan floods and other extreme weather events of the summer, with Schmidt pointing out that such weather-driven cataclysms are going to become more common later in the twenty-first century.   Becky Anderson at CNN did a similar segment at 4 pm on August 16th.  My own search of news transcripts suggests that that was about it for commercial television.



Copyright 2010 CBS. All rights reserved.
Add a Comment See all 39 Comments
by jimbot1957 September 15, 2010 2:17 AM EDT
Sorry, I'm sure that the Pakistani Govt will build dams and flood control projects once they've paid for a dozen more nukes...
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by bruce789 September 13, 2010 2:35 PM EDT
I don't fault the television for under-reporting the disaster, the whole area is a pain in our side, but a resolution is underway on the war. Whatever corruption Haiti had, it wasn't using the money to shoot back at us. Of the tsunami, most of the people affected were buddhists and we had no problem with that, some official questioned if we were not interested in nation building (a ridiculous suspicion) we offered aid also to one other country that was muslim and they refused aid (I donated to a group that could deliver aid directly to the people there because they said the people were in trouble). When we hear, "Where is my aid, it is not arriving." it doesn't sound good, we're suppose to bailout an ungrateful group, what we don't hear is, "Please help us," except that money is short here. I thought Beck's recent comments are ok--recent speech nopolitical.
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by noloyalisti September 13, 2010 2:04 PM EDT
I think we should give trillions of dollars of our money in reparations to the Iraqis, Afghanis and Palestinians for what we have done to them.

That is the only fair and civilized thing to do, we FUBARed their countries for American corporate greed.
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by stevador39 September 12, 2010 8:58 PM EDT
There is a system of charity that enriches itself with donations from Americans and very generous donations from the U.S. tax dollars. The Asian Tsunami donations totaled over 8 billion dollars. Of that, over six billion disappeared. Haiti received billion in U.S. Tax dollars. It's still a corrupt sink hole loaded with criminal aid workers and religionists who are lining thier pockets. The United states public is feed up with international scams that drain money from this country. IMPEACH B.O. AND SCREW INTERNATIONAL AID.
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by HikerDan September 12, 2010 11:12 PM EDT
Well said... Last time I checked they had their own goverment. Let them take care of their own people. And... They burn our flag and we will give them the money? Only in USA such nonsense is possible.
by genome2 September 12, 2010 2:02 PM EDT
I believe in karma you get out of life what you put into it eye for an eye tooth for a tooth.
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by taxedmore September 11, 2010 6:14 PM EDT
Juan - I agree that there is way too little coverage of the flooding and aftermath. However, I take exception with some of your observations:
"On August 10th, the United Nations announced that six million Pakistanis needed immediate humanitarian aid just to stay alive." -- they must have received the help, even the big bad American TV News would have mentioned 6 million people dead. You missed that one Juan.
"Park 51 Muslim-owned community center in lower Manhattan" -- to cost $100 million, that would go a long way toward helping the flood victim. Strange that Juan Cole didn't manage to make that connection.
One thing I saw on the TV coverage was the fact that Muslim countries have donated very little, compared to what they could do, to the flood relief effort, somehow Juan managed to miss that TV coverage. Imagine that.
Juan - Newt did not cause the flood, Allah or some other god did.
"the wall-to-wall cable news coverage of the Haitian earthquake" -- Juan, up to 200,000 people died in that one. Some different than 2000. Also, it is a lot closer to home for most Americans.
"a tendency in capitalist news to cover what will attract advertising dollars" -- they have coverage of the beheadings down pat.
"the public has largely decided to ignore the AfPak theater of operations." -- Juan, you are getting near the "nutty" fringe with this comment.
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by KeithDrippingSprings September 11, 2010 1:44 PM EDT
Well, I guess we, or more specifically ?I don?t care if they are having problems or not?.

I personally am tired of my country going to places they have no business in. Why do we have a duty to Pakistian in a crisis when the rest of the time we should be leaving them alone?

I want to have all Americans come home; all the soldiers, all the NGO do-gooders, and all the corporate thieves doing business in America?s name.

I want my government out of other people?s business including their problems. I do not want to defend liberty anywhere except here where it is appreciated. I do not want to spread any beliefs or ideals. All I want is a good job.

I want life here in America to be what it once was. I want my children to be able to support a family on one income. I want my grandchildren to be able to go to college without saddling themselves with enough debt to buy a very nice home. I don?t like what we have become or how we got here. The Republicans and the Democrats are two sides of one coin, Scoundrels and Thieves every one. They have sold our heritage to the highest bidders and ruined the American way of life.
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by jd2408 September 11, 2010 5:24 PM EDT
Great post and totally agree with you. That is exactly why many of us became Independents and keep pushing our corrupt government and even our corrupt news media. Our country is being destroyed from within. I, for one, am sick and tired of these anti-American critics. Nothing is ever enough. We waste enough money on countries that hate us that we could have rebuilt every bridge and every highway in this country and more. Enough is enough.
by will_1022 September 12, 2010 12:28 AM EDT
Great to see the Chistian attitude this country was was founded on.
by PatriotMike2 September 11, 2010 12:49 PM EDT
I love a guy who blasts the US but doesn't bother to ask how other countries stepped up.... There are other countries on this planet right? I seem to recall hearing something about countries like France, England, Australia, Indonesia, Saudi Arabia, China. Juan, did you turn your search engine on them and see how much they cared? Did it ever occur to you to look into that? Of course not, you're just another America-hater. Go have a glass of whine with Angelina Jolie and Obama.
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by PatriotMike2 September 11, 2010 12:29 PM EDT
Juan, ever get the impression WE DON'T GIVE A RIP ABOUT PAKISTAN? Let them rot in cholera hell. They support AQ and the Taliban and you think we're going to care when their terrorist-supporting cesspool of a country gets flooded? Don't support my enemies and then come begging for a handout.
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by AmazingGrce September 11, 2010 10:21 AM EDT
Interesting how not one poster is willing to point the finger where it belongs.

THE MEDIA made a choice NOT to provide coverage.

THE PUBLIC has no say in the matter other than to complain about the media IF the media lets us post comments or IF the media decides to cover a protest.

THE AMERICAN people no longer controls media coverage.

Anyone who blames Americans is dead wrong.
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