Information at War. Philip Seib

Information at War - Philip Seib


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an American officer said about the fighting in the Mekong River town of Ben Tre, “It became necessary to destroy the town to save it.”54 Herbert Schandler later wrote about this famous quote: “This widely repeated sentence seemed to sum up the irony and the contradictions in the use of American power in Vietnam and caused many to question the purpose of our being there. If we had to destroy our friends in order to save them, was the effort really worthwhile, either for us or for our friends?”55

      President Johnson understood the precariousness of his military and political positions, and he knew that the “unmanaged” information about Tet was worsening his situation. (The White House and Pentagon began a hunt for the officer whom Arnett had quoted, but Arnett refused to divulge his name and the search was unsuccessful.56) Daniel Hallin observed:

      Tet may have been a tipping point at which information from the news media became ascendant, outweighing the government’s messaging and reshaping perceptions of the war. Hallin cited the “ideological framing” of the war “as a conflict between a ‘Western-backed regime’ and ‘Communist guerrillas.’”58 For Americans during the Cold War, such a match-up presented an easy choice, requiring little debate. But Tet introduced factors that complicated the thinking about the war. It was no longer simply a choice between “good” and “bad,” but now also required cost–benefit analysis: was this war truly worth fighting? And what information should be relied upon in formulating an answer to that question?

      Public opinion was shifting. In November 1967, a Gallup Poll asked respondents if they thought the United States was losing, standing still, or making progress in Vietnam. The answers were 8 percent losing, 33 percent standing still, 50 percent making progress, with 9 percent undecided. Just three months later, in February 1968 (a few weeks after Tet), the responses were 23 percent losing, 38 percent standing still, 33 percent making progress, and 6 percent undecided.59

      Johnson tried to retake control of the information reaching the public. He dispatched his cabinet members to television talk shows and said at a news conference that “the enemy will fail and fail again because we Americans will never yield.”61 But these efforts could not compete effectively with the information coming from the more than 200 American journalists in Vietnam. Under Secretary of the Air Force Townsend Hoopes later wrote that “the scale, virulence, and tenacity of the Tet offensive had all but severed the remaining strands of the Administration’s credibility. The President was speaking out forcefully, but his words and their tone struck listeners as more shrill than reassuring; in them one detected a profound inner discomfort and unease, a thrashing about in uncertainty.”62

      In the past – as recently as during the Kennedy years – the government–press dynamic often favored the government because there were limited ways that information could reach the public. The turnaround had taken hold beginning on November 22, 1963 when Kennedy was assassinated. People turned to television to confirm the news of his death and to gather details. The audience continued to grow; according to Nielsen research, 81 percent of the approximately 50 million American homes with a television were tuned in to the President’s funeral on November 24.63 Within the space of a few days, television had established itself as the nation’s go-to source for crisis information.

      Aside from the sheer number of viewers, this event provided evidence of a media-connected national community. Whether you were in Miami or Seattle, you watched the funeral at the same moment, as it happened. No longer did you need to wait for information to wend its way across the country. Radio had achieved something similar 20 years before, but in 1963 the impact of information was heightened by being able to see the funeral. This created the effect of being at least emotionally present at the ceremonies. Information was becoming more immersive and more personal, and, at a time of national tragedy, information was the country’s connective tissue.

      This was from someone who in the election just four years before had won 61 percent of the popular vote, carried 44 states, and won 486 electoral votes (while his Republican opponent, Senator Barry Goldwater, won 52). Had Vietnam – and specifically the Tet offensive – done him in? If so, was the information that contributed to his political downfall accurate?

      On the day after his speech from the White House, Johnson spoke to the National Association of Broadcasters and offered his cautionary view of television coverage of war:

      As I sat in my office last evening, waiting to speak, I thought of the many times each week when television brings the war into the American home. No one can say exactly what effect those vivid scenes would have on American opinion. Historians must only guess at the effect that television would have had during earlier conflicts on the future of this nation: during the Korean War, for example, at that time when our forces were pushed back there to Pusan; or World War II, the Battle of the Bulge; or when our men were slugging it out in Europe.64

      Johnson’s point was that graphic depictions of military setbacks – even temporary ones – can undermine the popular support essential in a democracy for those waging war. To an extent, that can be viewed as a self-serving outlook that considered only part of the information situation. Even Johnson’s national security adviser Walt Rostow admitted that the administration had failed to present a “clear and persuasive” picture of what was happening in Vietnam, thus ceding information dominance to the news media, whose work Rostow characterized as “generally undistinguished and often biased.”65 Even if Rostow’s appraisal was correct, the Johnson administration had lost control of the war narrative and found itself plagued by a “credibility gap.”

      Further, suppose that the information provided in the news coverage was wrong. Suppose that Tet had actually been a massive setback for the North Vietnamese and Viet Cong forces, but journalists had been so surprised by the breadth and ferocity of the attacks that they assumed the communists were victorious. If the public were to learn about such inaccuracy, would Johnson and his war policy be vindicated? In terms of influence, what would it mean about the role of television and other news media, and how would this affect policymakers’ decisions about information management in the future?


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