Columns
Norman Solomon
War Needs Good Public Relations
October 25, 2001
For some people, war is terror, disaster and death. For others,
it's a PR problem.
At the Rendon Group, a public-relations firm with offices in
Boston and Washington, pleasant news arrived the other day with a $397,000
contract to help the Pentagon look good while bombing Afghanistan. The
four-month deal includes an option to renew through most of 2002.
This is a job for savvy PR pros who know how to sound humanistic.
"At the Rendon Group, we believe in people," says the company's mission
statement, which expresses "our admiration and respect for cultural
diversity" and proclaims a commitment to "helping people win in the global
marketplace."
A media officer at the Pentagon explained why Rendon got the
contract. "We needed a firm that could provide strategic counsel
immediately," Lt. Col. Kenneth McClellan said. "We were interested in
someone that we knew could come in quickly and help us orient to the
challenge of communicating to a wide range of groups around the world."
As a PR outfit, Rendon has moved in some powerful economic
circles, with clients including official trade agencies of the United
States, Bulgaria, Russia and Uzbekistan. In Washington, the firm helped
organize a series of conferences on "post-privatization management in the
global telecommunications, electric power, oil and gas, banking and
finance, and transportation sectors." Some of the clientele has been more
liberal or touchy-feely: Handgun Control Inc. and the American Massage
Therapy Association.
Rendon proudly notes that it provided "community and media
relations counsel to the Monsanto Chemical Company in its effort to clean
up several contaminated sites." Overseas, Rendon helped the Kuwait
Petroleum Corporation to cope with labor strife and bad press when closing
a refinery in Naples, Italy.
Some clients have been more shadowy. Rendon worked for the
government of Kuwait in the early 1990s. And the firm made a lot of money
by contracting with the CIA to do media work for the Iraqi National
Congress, an organization seeking the overthrow of Saddam Hussein.
Now, the Rendon Group is facing what is perhaps its most
challenging project yet -- spinning for a war in Afghanistan. With its
sights set on media content in 79 countries, Rendon will use standard tools
of the PR trade, such as focus groups, websites and rigorous analysis of
news coverage.
Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld said that "we need to do a
better job to make sure that people are not confused as to what this is
about." It's typical of warmakers to claim that the biggest problems lie
with others' faulty perceptions rather than their own deadly orders. But no
amount of PR wizardry can change the cold facts: when a bomb hits a home
for the elderly or a hospital or a residential neighborhood, or when a
bombing campaign sets in motion a cataclysm of mass starvation.
If some people are "confused" about this war, it may be because
they remember the rationale for it: Killing thousands of civilians is
unconscionable.
Though you wouldn't know much about it from watching TV news or
skimming the front pages, large numbers of Afghans -- many of them children
and elderly -- are facing the likelihood of starvation because the bombing
has forced recurrent halts to the movement of food-aid trucks from Pakistan
into Afghanistan. Concern is growing among humanitarian aid workers that
about 100,000 people are now in imminent peril. By winter, the number could
be in the millions.
Meanwhile, on television, we see footage of air-dropped meals that
amount to no more than 1 percent of what's needed to prevent people from
starving. That's called good PR.
At this point, the playbook for the Pentagon's media game is a
familiar one. Consider the words of Eugene Secunda, a professor of
marketing and former senior vice president of the J. Walter Thompson firm.
"Operation Desert Storm allowed only one view of the battle: the one
authorized by the military," he observed in 1991. "Like travelers led from
their buses by tour guides, the TV crews were given an opportunity to
videotape the 'panoramic vista' before them, and then were whisked to the
next officially authorized destination."
Writing a decade ago, Secunda foreshadowed the kind of coverage
we're now seeing. "In the aftermath of the war with Iraq, strategic
planners, preparing for future wars, are unquestionably examining the
lessons gleaned from this triumphant experience. One of the most important
lessons learned is the necessity of mobilizing strong public support,
through the projection of a powerful and tightly controlled PR program,
with particular effort directed toward the realization of positive news
coverage."
As bombs routinely fall on Afghanistan, that's the kind of
coverage that dominates television screens in the United States. For now,
anyway, the Pentagon is winning its PR war at home.
_______________________________________________
Norman Solomon's latest book is "The Habits of Highly Deceptive Media." His
syndicated column focuses on media and politics.
______________________________________________
Note to readers: You can access free audio and video of Norman Solomon's
recent appearance on C-SPAN's "Washington Journal" at
www.c-span.org/terrorism/journal.asp -- listed under Monday, Oct. 15. The
one-hour program focuses on media coverage of terrorism and the bombing of
Afghanistan.
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