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By Gwynne Dyer, New Zealand Herald
New Zealand Herald
Saturday, Apr 20, 2013
“Work expands to fill the time available for its completion,” wrote
Cyril Northcote Parkinson in 1955, and instantly created a whole new
domain in the study of human affairs.
“Parkinson’s Law” was one of the most profound insights of the past
century, but he didn’t go far enough. There is a media corollary that
doesn’t get nearly enough attention.
It is this: “International confrontations expand to fill the media space available.”
There is a lot of media space available nowadays, and a striking
shortage of truly terrifying international threats, so the few modest
ones that do exist are magnified to fill the scary-news quota.
That’s why you hear so much about the North Korean nuclear threat, the
Iranian nuclear threat and the international terrorist threat. Unless
you live in South Korea or Israel or lower Manhattan, none of these
“threats” will ever disturb the even tenor of your life — and even if
you do live in one of those places, it is still very unlikely.
The very unlikely did happen in lower Manhattan once, 12 years ago (and
perhaps in Boston this week), but it is very unlikely to happen there
again. Nevertheless, 9/11 is used to justify an ongoing “war on terror”
that has provided long-term employment for several million people and
justified above a trillion dollars in “defence” spending over the past
decade.
Which brings us to another law, the Shirky Principle: “Institutions will
try to preserve the problem to which they are the solution.”
In other words, armed forces, intelligence services and those parts of
the foreign-policy establishment that have prospered from “fighting
terror” will instinctively preserve that threat. They hunt down and kill
individual terrorists, of course, but they also keep coming up with new
terrorist threats.
Moreover, fighting terrorists does not justify aircraft carriers,
armoured divisions, and planes like the F-35. Those branches of the
armed forces need the threat of wars in which weapons like those might
be at least marginally relevant.
Credible threats of high-intensity warfare are scarce these days, so
you have to be creative. There is, for example, a remote possibility
that the inexperienced young man who now leads North Korea might be
paranoid enough, and the generals who supervise him stupid enough, to
attack South Korean forces somewhere. That might lead to a major war in
the peninsula.
The probability that this would lead to the use of nuclear weapons in
the Korean peninsula is vanishingly small. The likelihood that it could
lead to the use of nuclear weapons elsewhere is zero. Yet this
confrontation is getting as much coverage in the Western mass media as
the Berlin crisis did in 1961 — and the Asian media generally follow
suit.
The same is true for the alleged Iranian nuclear threat. Iran is
probably not planning to build nuclear weapons, and there is no chance
that it would launch a nuclear attack on Israel even if it did build a
few. Israel has hundreds of the things, and its response would destroy
Iran. Yet the Israelis insist that it might happen anyway because
Iranians are crazy — and both Western and Arab media swallow this
nonsense.
Fifty years ago, during the Berlin crisis, a single misstep could have
led to 10,000 nuclear weapons falling on the world’s cities. Bad things
can still happen when politicians miscalculate, but the scale of the
potential damage is minuscule by comparison. Yet our credulous media
give these mini-crises the same coverage that they gave to the
apocalyptic crises of the Cold War.
Hence Dyer’s Corollary to Parkinson’s Law: “International confrontations expand to fill the media space available.”
Little ones will be inflated to fill the hole left by the disappearance
of big ones. The 24-hour news cycle will be fed, and military budgets
will stay big. You just have to keep the general public permanently
frightened.
That’s easy to do, because people in most countries know very little
about the world beyond their immediate neighbours. They’ll believe
almost anything the media tell them — and most of the media go along
with the official sources because scare stories sell a lot better than
headlines about the remarkably peaceful state of the world.
How ignorant is the general public? Well, Hollywood recently remade a
paranoid film of the 1980s called Red Dawn, in which Russian troops
occupy the United States and gallant American high-school students
launch a guerrilla war to expel them. Now the Russians aren’t the enemy
any more, so this time the invaders are North Korean paratroopers.
The film doesn’t explain where a country like North Korea, with 25
million people, is going to find the troops to occupy the United States,
which has 330 million. It doesn’t go into awkward details like how
could huge North Korean transport planes, if they existed, make a
20,000-kilometre round trip to drop those paratroopers on American
cities. Why bother? Few Americans know how big North Korea is, or how
far away it is.
OK, that’s Hollywood, not CNN.
But the difference between them is smaller than most journalists would like to believe.
Poet Humbert Wolfe’s judgment almost a century ago still applies everywhere:
You cannot hope to bribe or twist
(thank God!) the British journalist,
But given what the man will do
unbribed, there’s no occasion to.
Gwynne Dyer is an independent journalist whose articles are published in 45 countries.
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