BagNews Archives About Staff BagNews is a progressive site dedicated to visual politics and the analysis of news images.
Monday, February 13, 2012

Twitter

@bagnewsnotes »
Advertisement



May 10, 2007

Cheney In Baghdad: The Progress Of No Progress

1. Cheney-Baghdad-Nyt-1

Arrowsmall-13

2. Cheney-Baghdad-Nyt-2

Arrowsmall-14

3. Cheney-Baghdad-Nyt-3

I was interested (both visually and headline-wise) in how the coverage of Dick Cheney’s one-day Baghdad visit evolved overnight.

Specifically, I’m curious about John Burns’ report last evening on the trip (#1) as compared to his follow-up piece this morning (#2).  As well, I was interested in the headline change made early this morning to the original report (#3).  I’m interested in all this, by the way, not as a journalistic exercise as much as to better understand how domestic political events and actions “on the ground” might have contributed to these editorial moves.

So, what were the key events that took place over the past 12 – 18 hours that might have shifted these elements this way?  (If there are a handful of things to point to, I’m just going with the biggies.)

On the political front, the biggest happening involved Bush’s meeting with the “Tuesday Group,” consisting of 30 Republican members of Congress who, as reported, “bluntly warned” the Prez that Iraq had better dramatically improve by fall or they would abandon him.

Regarding circumstances “on the ground,” first an explosion in the vicinity of the Green Zone rattled the U.S. embassy where Cheney spent the day.  Second (and illustrating article #2 above), a powerful truck bombing took place outside the Interior Ministry in the normally quiet city of Irbil.  According to The Daily Star (link): “The attack was a blow to the Kurdish region’s campaign to portray itself as an investor-friendly haven of calm.”

I have a few simple takes on the editorial dynamics, first regarding the headline shift in article #1, then the contrast in images between article #1 versus #2.  Then, I’d like to hear your reading.

Constantly (if, only marginally) taking the edge off the urgency, the Administration has been buying time by floating and re-floating the presumption of improvement in Iraq.  Perhaps BushCo. — given that bubble the Administration still lives in — didn’t anticipate the broadside from their fellow Repubs (strangely scheduled the same day that Cheney was in Baghdad).  It seems reasonable that the increased heat over the war generated by these colleagues might have, overnight, turned up the (domestic and media) pressure on Bush not just for progress, but decisive results.  (You can’t say the pressure increased on the Iraqis since the main purpose of the Cheney visit was to read everyone and anyone over there the riot act.)

Regarding the visual shift between the original Burns story and the update (#1–> #2), the shot of the bombing in Irbil couldn’t have gone any further in mocking the headline (and repudiating Cheney’s efforts).  Someone might argue Cheney was partly the victim of “bad timing.”  On the other hand, if the Administration had any real credibility on Iraq, this photo would never have earned equal billing.

If the confrontation in Washington upped the ante in article #1, the Irbil photo seems to demonstrate — again, far more more bluntly than the previous day’s cranky Veep behind his smiling, thrust-to-the-foreground puppet general — an Administration suffering (here, almost in real time) an even fuller “credibility eclipse.”



(image 1 & 3:  Pool photo by Gerald Herbert.  Baghdad. published May 9, 2007. nytimes.com.  caption: Vice President Dick Cheney with Gen. David H. Petraeus at the U.S. Embassy in Baghdad. image 2:  Safin Hamed/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images. Baghdad. published May 10, 2007. nytimes.com.  caption: Police officers evacuated the site of a bombing Wednesday in Erbil, in the northern Kurdish part of Iraq. The attack, which killed at least 19 people and wounded more than 70, was one of the city’s most violent in recent years. It took place in front of offices for the Kurdish regional government.)

  • http://www.woodka.com donna

    The only thing Cheney is interested in is getting his precious oil bill passed so it doesn’t look like the oil companies are totally stealing Iraq’s oil. Which they already are, btw.
    I wonder what happened in those meetings after they “kicked the press out.”

  • Gasho

    Cheney’s visit clearly isn’t going to have any ACTUAL iimpact. How could it. Things are out of control. Millitary force is pure tar-baby activity at this point. We don’t have the negotiating stance or credibility to smooth things out politically. Cheney and Bush have their hands on none of the levers that matter. Cheney can “Press Leaders” to “show progress” or “act decisively” all he wants.. it’s NOT WORKING.
    I wonder if they’d love to throw in the towel themselves but cannot – since they’ve politically wed themselves to this conflict so aggressively.
    Regarding the image, Cheney looks as if he’s preparing to punch something. The only things hanging lower than his red power tie are his credibility and his poll ratings.

  • Gasho

    oh, and Donna -
    re: “I wonder what happened in those meetings after they “kicked the press out.”"
    I don’t know what happened, but I bet DP’s face didn’t keep that goofy grin for long.

  • http://www.agrippinaminor.com/wp/ Scarabus

    This seems odd to me. I mean… (a) If the headline says “Cheney meets with Iraqi leaders,” then… (b) presumably that’s what the story is about; so… (c) the story should be illustrated with a photo showing Cheney talking with Iraqis, not Petraeus.
    Why was Cheney not shown with Iraqis? (I’m always as much interested in what isn’t shown as in what is.)
    Incidentally, speaking of the effect of political stuff, we should remember that—following the veto—the Administration and the Pentagon are scrambling to influence Congress. The first key vote occurred today.
    Yesterday afternoon on NPR, a reporter was questioned about how even Petraeus and Gates had to admit that things were *worse* in Iraq during the past week rather than better. This is in spite of the fact that the military/Administration continue, as far as I know, to omit deaths from car/individual suicide bombings as “sectarian violence.”
    (Note: If anyone reading this knows that the policy has been changed, I hope she or he will post a response.)

  • putnam

    Scarabus: From a panning video clip of this moment on The Daily Show, the amazing thing is that to the left there is a translator and then further left, of all things, there is Maliki in a third leather chair. The leader of Iraq is not shown although he is right there. Cheney, like the press photos, is ignoring him.

  • lytom

    From the two faces, which one is more insincere?
    The leader with the dripping bloody hands and poker face, or the smiling military criminal leader Gen.Petraeus?!
    They know more than we, what was actually dropped on Fallujah – the hidden massacre – “melting” of the Iraqi victims.
    What actually occured in Aby Graib and other prison camps held by occupation forces and what is going on now.
    Suddenly there is a policy direction, coming from the Petraeus’ letter, reminding soldiers not to kill civilians and torture human beings!…something about “occupying the moral high ground”…
    Is this what he is smiling about?

  • irina

    http://www.chris-floyd.com/Articles/Articles/Parting_Shot%3A_Blair_Jails_Two_to_Shield_%22Madman%22_Bush/#jc_allComments
    http://www.craigmurray.co.uk/archives/2007/05/official_secret.html#comments~May 12, 2007
    Official Secrets Act Convictions
    An Old Bailey judge has imposed unprecedented gagging orders preventing the British media from reporting information which is published today in newspapers and websites around the world.
    The orders were imposed by Mr Justice Aikens during discussions in the court which Lewis Carroll would have delighted in hearing. At times, we were truly living in Wonderland. The discussions took place after David Keogh, a Whitehall communications officer, and Leo O’Connor, researcher to a former Labour MP, were found guilty of breaching the Official Secrets Act and jailed.
    http://www.fallujah.co.uk/