America's New Berlin Correspondent: Germany a Nation of Nazis, Bloodsuckers, Prostitutes, Alcoholism and Hopelessness...

Let's face it: Media tend to over-report the most vile and extreme aspects of our society. "If it bleeds - it leads" is much more than a cliche - it is a journalistic fact of life. The danger with the daily sensationalism is that it skews the viewer's perception of reality. In other words, a viewer is apt to believe that the world around him is a much more rotten than it actually is.

Interesting thought experiment: What if you were a foreign correspondent...?

Imagine you are an American correspondent in Germany. You are encouraged by your editors to report only the most extreme, outrageous, strange and dark sides of German society. Your publication chooses to ignore the 97% of issues that bring Germans and Americans together and instead focus on the 3% that most divide the two nations - such as attitudes towards prostitution, social welfare, guns, etc. This seedy sensationalism sells - and that is exactly what your editors are after. For that reason, they also strongly encourage you to write whatever you can on Neo-Nazi violence - not because the issue is genuinely troubling - (and it is) - but because it brings good ratings and reaffirms your readership's dark stereotypes of the Vaterland.

Beyond that - your editors oblige you to bring stories only on a narrow band of pet issues that they have predetermined are of "interest" to the readership. (In fact, you may have been specially selected for your job because you have an ideological propensity to dislike Germany and favor stories that make Germany look bad.) When you arrive in Berlin, you discover that Germany isn't quite the awful place you expected and - because you are a free spirit - the urge is great to report on the many complex aspects of German society. Predictably, however, your editors discourage any independent ideas that might shed a different (you might say balanced) light on things.

The pet issues and big politics are all they want. In particular, the editors want to demonstrate that Germany is a nation infatuated with pornography, cursed by extreme alcoholism and blighted by racist attitudes towards non-Germans. Every other week - if things are slow - the boss pressures you to bring a story on another hopeless unemployed wretch in East-Berlin desperate to get out of the country. He just won't publish your more "upbeat" stories or even critical stories that fall outside the narrow band of pet issues.

The editors supplement your work by sprinkling-in stories cut-and-pasted from news wires on Germans behaving badly worldwide. You eventually realize that intellectual honesty takes a distant backseat to the pet-issue template devised by your editors. Making Germans and Germany look bad at all costs - to reaffirm the stereotypes and political leanings of readers - is no longer something you can question without risking your job.

One week - your publication runs a cover depicting a giant spider drapped in a German flag and wearing lederhosen sucking the blood of a lifeless blue collar American trapped in its web. You realize that this crude reference to recent lay-offs of American automobile workers by a large German multinational is appalling and unfair. The cover sparks a slew of hateful and irrational letters-to-the-editor by readers. You want to speak out against what you now believe is hate-mongering for profit - but again - you fear for your job.

Not surprisingly, the most "self-critical" Germans - those with a particular talent for shamelessly bashing their own nation and people - are held up as heroic dissenters and showered with awards by your publication and others like it.

Finally - because quite a few other publications share the same general ideology of your own and follow the same pattern of reporting - it is not beyond the pale for your editors to proclaim that you represent the "mainstream" of American media and that you are largely fair and unbiased in reporting on Germany.

Turn the mirror around...

Now let us turn this script around. The above is a reflection of how certain influential segments of German media have operated for years now. The latest Amerika-Korrespondent for Stern magazine - Jan Christoph Wiechmann - offers an excellent example. One of his more recent articles is entitled: "Weapons Trade in the USA: An AR-15 with your Coffee?" The opening paragraph reads:

"In Europe one usually receives a cookie with their coffee. In the USA it is an assault rifle: In the Texan solitude, waitresses with highly teased hair offer the things for sale in weapon shops camouflaged as cafes. Normal daily life in Bush-Country."

The article paints a picture of daily life in the USA that is neither typical nor normal. Yet the author intentionally presents the extreme as the ordinary - not because it represents an accurate reflection of typical daily life in the United States - but because it is sure to sell and re-affirm the deeply-held stereotypes of "Stern" readers. Further, Wiechmann cleverly selects a subject - or perhaps his editors selected it for him - that has long been a favorite pet issue of left-leaning German media for years.

Another recent example is an article, entitled "US Tourist Collapses During Sex - Dead," that appeared in SPIEGEL ONLINE on an American who died after overdosing on a potency drug while engaging in sex tourism in Thailand. Certainly - had the tourist in question been Dutch, Brazilian, Russian or German - this article probably would not have made it onto the SPON website. Fellow blogger Joerg of Atlantic Review - who brought this article to my attention - hit the nail on the head:

"If it had been a German tourist, it might not have made news on Spiegel. Or maybe it would have been, if at least the pills were American."

Why is this piece newsworthy at all? The answer is simple: It offers SPIEGEL readers another choice opportunity to look down on Americans.

Looking at the larger picture...

The long-standing media patterns described above - when combined with the sort of ugly and exploitative political opportunism that marked the Schroeder re-election campaign of 2002 - serve to transform the fault lines that represent honest German-American differences of opinion (on questions such as Iraq, trade, the role of the state, etc.) into gaping chasms of misunderstanding and mutual abuse. This leads to the sort of self-reinforcing media-political feeding frenzy that we saw from 2002 to 2005, a period that produced some of the most ugly and irrational manifestations of anti-Americanism in the history of democratic Germany.

Fortunately, Angela Merkel and Nicolas Sarkozy have made it evident that it is possible to disagree with the United States without tapping into the overflowing keg of anti-American sentiment - fueled by the media tendencies outlined above - in their respective nations. As a result of the political changes at the very top, the level of media vitriol has ebbed over the past year or two. It is important to remember - however - that the group of people calling the shots in the German media in 2002 and 2003 are essentially still running the show today. Given the right political conditions and the media's tendency to follow larger political patterns, they would gladly return to the high-pitched anti-American hysteria that flooded German media only a few years ago.

Endnote: Allow us to offer that there is certainly some of what we describe above in American media as relates to Germany - though on a much smaller scale. It is true that some Americans still associate Germany primarily with Nazism, beer or lederhosen. If anything, however, the American media pays far too little attention to foreign issues - and it is the lack of attention to Germany and Europe that is far more troubling.

Stern: "America is Destroying the West"

(By Ray Drake - originally published December 19, 2005)

Stern magazine has finally discovered why life is so rotten in Germany these days. The Western world is breaking apart and its all America's fault. This time it's a commentary in Stern magazine with a dramatic title: "America is destroying the West." Like so many Stern pieces, this article has all the tell-tale elements of the perverted view of America that has come to dominate and cloud the minds of many in the German media establishment. The article's introductory lines read:

"Commentary: America is Destroying the West

By Florian Guessgen

First the execution of Stanley Tookie Williams, then the debate over the abduction of Khaled al-Masri. This week shrilly brought to our attention how deep the rift is between the USA and Europe. The West is threatening to break apart. 

Two times in the last week we experienced up close what rights the America of George W. Bush lays claim to for itself when it is trying to achieve its objectives.

Because this state wants to deter potential murderers, murderers are executed in many of its states. Merciless(ly). Eye for an eye, tooth for a tooth. In its selection of methods the state has made itself like the criminal."

As we mentioned earlier on this blog, the furor over the Tookie Williams execution allowed many in the German media an opportunity to gush moral outrage over one of their favorite pet issues: The death penalty. Mr. Guessgen makes no attempt to hide his intent, citing Tookie's execution as evidence of the supposedly "merciless" nature of the "America of George W. Bush."

But perhaps Mr. Guessgen doesn't realize that Williams' first trial on four counts of first degree murder and two counts of robbery began in 1980. The President at the time was Jimmy Carter. Williams' case, like so many death penalty cases in America since 1976, went through a rigorous and extremely expensive appeals process that lasted nearly two and a half decades. The vast majority of Williams' appeals at the state and federal level were heard and rejected long before George W. Bush was ever elected President. (See "LA County District Attorney's Response to Stanley William's Petition for Executive Clemency"  For a moral evaluation of Tookie Williams, check here.)

Due to the particularly violent nature of his crimes (killing his victims at point blank range with shotgun blasts), his role in founding one of America's most violent street gangs and his assaults on others while in prison, Williams' became one of a tiny fraction of murder convicts actually put to death in the United States. Since the reinstatement of the death penalty in 1976, around one-thousand convicted criminals have been executed. That is less than one execution per state per year. Furthermore, the state in which Tookie Williams was executed, California, is a "blue" state that voted overwhelmingly against George W. Bush in both 2000 and 2004.

But of course when someone gets executed in California, it is suddenly George W. Bush's "merciless" America that's to blame for many in the German media. No need to think, no need to understand the context, no need to differentiate. It's all very simple, just the way Stern's indoctrinated, spoon-fed readers like it: America is destroying the West and it is all Bush's fault.

Put another way, Mr. Guessgen isn't interested in a thoughtful debate on the death penalty or the Bush administration, he's interested in lashing-out at a nation and a leader that deeply threaten his political worldview. If he were genuinely concerned with human rights abuses and international law, he would be better served writing about his own government's business dealings with Sudan. He would be better served chronicling the Chinese government's mass executions or investigating Gerhard Schroeder's questionable service to Gazprom. He might even take a moment to question the German media's relative indifference to the thousands of killings and kidnappings perpetrated by Russian troops in Chechnya over the past several years while Germany and Russia were doing multi-billion dollar business deals for everything from trains to planes to automobiles to gas pipelines. But instead, Guessgen continues his commentary by comparing the United States to the "dark rogues" of the Russian mafia and writes:

"Methods like the Russian Mafia
Eye for an eye, tooth for a tooth. The same principle is also used by the USA in the worldwide hunt for criminals. Because George W. Bush and the CIA are hunting terrorists - mass murderers, they allow themselves the right to kidnap and torture - without consideration for principles of justice or international rights. The ends justify the means. There that German al-Masri is just kidnapped for a short time from the Balkans, dragged to Afghanistan, shut-in, interrogated, probably also tortured. The USA, the home of the "West" works with the same methods of the dark rogues of the Russian mafia."

Davids Medienkritik has no interest in debating the obvious: There clearly have been cases of torture, abuse and mistaken identity in the war on terror. We would openly concede that, at times, the Bush administration has dealt poorly and indecisively with these issues. But Mr. Guessgen's assertion that the United States and its leadership have no "consideration for principles of justice and international rights" is simply absurd and symptomatic of an ideological disconnect from reality.

To claim what he claims, Mr. Guessgen must have completely missed the intense and ongoing debate in the United States on civil rights, torture and the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq that has permeated all levels of American media and politics since 2001. He must have completely missed the Senate's overwhelming 90-9 passage of John McCain's anti-torture bill and President Bush's recent decision to finally support the measure. He must have also completely missed recent statements by Condoleezza Rice on torture during her recent Europe visit. Mr. Guessgen's overwhelmingly one-sided statements further serve to confirm his disinterest in an honest, balanced and unbiased analysis of what is really happening in the United States today.

Guessgen: American Democratic Principles in a "Deep Freeze"

A second major theme of Guessgen's commentary is that the "George W. Bush's America" is a nation systematically violating democratic principles. Not surprisingly, Guessgen makes absolutely no mention of the emergence of democracy in Iraq and Afghanistan when he writes:

"Liberal Principles in a Deep Freeze
The America of George W. Bush (falsely) imagines itself to be in a state of war, both domestically and abroad. The feeling of threat therefore justifies all means - the liberal (democratic) principles, so it seems, have been put in a deep freeze for an indefinite period of time. The West, equally a mythical place and normative credo, threatens to break apart in this war waged in a total manner. Only now is it becoming clear that the German-American quarrel over the Iraq War was, independent of Chancellor Schroeder, a symptom of a fundamental conflict that could shape the transatlantic relationship for decades: The American state is acting in a systematically anti-liberal manner."

By "liberal" Mr. Guessgen means democratic in a manner consistent with individual rights. One has to wonder how he could claim the American state is acting systematically against democratic principles when it has secured democratic rights for over 50 million people formerly governed by horrific dictatorships? Few people would deny that the United States has made numerous mistakes in its efforts to defeat oppressive regimes and terrorist organizations in Afghanistan and Iraq, but where would the peoples of those nations be today had the world followed the "moral" leadership of the German left and simply stood by and done nothing? Where would the people of those nations have been in ten years or twenty or thirty? Where would their children be?

Obviously, Mr. Guessgen never considers such questions. Instead he simply characterizes recent American actions as "baseball bat democracy." He writes:

"Democracy not as a torch but instead as a Baseball bat
Presently the USA assumes a world, like Thomas Hobbes, that is dog eat dog. At the least the President views the state as a protective community that has been permanently empowered by its citizens to protect them with all means. The state a la Bush is a Hobbesian “Leviathan,” an all-powerful being whose mission cannot be infringed upon by secondary discussions of values. That Bush resembles the dark Lord Voldemort more than the white magician Dumbledore in this, that is calculated. The global mission of the Bush warriors, that consists of bringing the world democracy and the USA security is unavoidably taking on irrational fundamentalist characteristics in all of this. In the hands of George W. Bush democracy is not a torch, but instead a baseball bat.”

Baseball bat democracy? It would seem that Mr. Guessgen is unaware of the Bush administration's recent commitment of $15 billion to combat AIDS in Africa. It would seem that he missed America's extensive rescue and humanitarian efforts and enormous financial contributions on behalf of tsunami victims in East Asia earlier this year. It would seem he overlooked massive US airlifts of aid and monetary donations to victims of the recent earthquake in Pakistan and Afghanistan. It would seem he slept through recent democratic transformations in Ukraine, Lebanon, Kosovo and Bosnia that were vigorously supported by the US government both financially and logistically. It would seem he never heard of ongoing, multilateral US diplomatic efforts to peacefully resolve conflicts with both North Korea and Iran over their nuclear programs.

But here we must ask the question: How could someone not blinded by ideology have possibly missed all of these things?   

Americans According to Guessgen: Traumatized and Burning for Revenge

Guessgen concludes his article by suggesting that Germans take the moral high road and continue to "confidently extend a hand" to the American friends. He actually suggests Germans visit the US more through exchange programs to gain a better understanding of how "traumatized" Americans supposedly are. His final paragraph reads:

"Perhaps direct contact with the USA will help Europeans to also understand, how much the attacks of September 11, 2001 have changed the psyche of this land. America seems caught in a traumatic state, such as perhaps only relatives of murder victims experience. Pain and sadness are mixed with feelings of vulnerability. And to that is added a burning desire for vengeance, an anger against those who destroyed ones own life as it was earlier. Eye for an eye. Tooth for a tooth. America is currently making itself into the violent executor of this feeling. The Europeans must understand it, but they can not accept it."

It is striking how Mr. Guessgen paints all Americans and all Europeans with such a broad brush throughout his article. In blaming America for the supposedly widening transatlantic rift, Mr. Guessgen himself exemplifies many of the simplistic, black-and-white views of America that pollute the German media landscape. Like so many other elites in French and German media and politics, he seems to feel it his good right to speak on behalf of all Europeans without considering for even a moment that anyone within a thousand kilometers might possibly disagree with him. This overbearing arrogance so common in German and French high society is one major reason that several eastern European members of the EU remain so wary of the Franco-German partnership. It is this condescending arrogance of the left-wing German moral elite that must be understood...but not accepted.

Stern5105

"Stern" cover 51/05:
New Stern series:
The history of the CIA
How America's Power of
Darkness Manipulates the
World

(You can leave a message for Guessgen here. "Betreff" means "Re"; "Nachricht" means "Message"; "Senden" means "Send". You may want to send us a copy of your input...)

UPDATE: Mr. Guessgen noticed our article and published a response featuring translations of our work. We subsequently published a second piece of our own in reply.

Time for (another) Lecture - or - Germany Releases (another) Terrorist Killer of American Soldier

Joerg at Atlantic Review has more.

This time it is an RAF killer - last time a Hezbollah killer of another US service member. Of course the eternal apologists for all that is wrong with Germany will tell us we should "respect" German law. Sorry - no sale.

In other news, Joerg reports that Germany's travelers are being encouraged by their Foreign Ministry to lecture others on human rights abuses while abroad. This German habit of lecturing the rest of the world on virtually everything is growing extremely tiresome to many Americans (and others) - particularly since so little of the criticism is actually constructive or based on a full understanding of facts and circumstances. The credibility of Germany is further decimated by its Foreign Ministry when top diplomats attempt to deny that anti-Americanism exists in German media and society.

Perhaps Americans ought to respond to the endless barrage of stupid and predictable criticism by mentioning the release of the two murderers above and the outrageous epidemic of unthinking anti-Americanism in German media. The fundamental reason that Americans will never respond with the same intensity is because they generally view such lecturing as highly impolite and off-putting and often don't care for the uninformed opinions of biased foreigners.

For what it's worth, here is our list of favorite "pet issues" of the German media in their coverage of the United States:

  1. Perceived American religiosity and/or prudishness.
  2. Perceived American obsession with guns and violence.
  3. The death penalty.
  4. The perceived excess and superficiality of American capitalism and (non)culture (i.e. fat people, the super rich, SUVs, fast-food, M-TV/hip-hop culture, Hollywood, corporate scandals, buy-outs and "excessive" profits.)
  5. Perceived social inequality in the United States (i.e. amerikanische Verhaeltnisse, poor Americans are starving and freezing to death or at least struggling with 2-3 jobs and no health insurance while the rich live it up. Perception that America has no social safety net or a woefully inadequate social safety net.)
  6. Perceived American unilateralism/exceptionalism (i.e. Iraq, Kyoto, ICC, Guantanamo)
  7. Perceived American "hurrah" patriotism or "hyper" patriotism (i.e. flag-waving).
  8. Perceived American paranoia/overreaction about terror and obsession with security and the "war" on terror and the perceived willingness of Americans to sacrifice key civil liberties (the Patriot Act has become a favored target) and take extrajudicial actions involving torture, renditions, etc.
  9. The perception that the Bush administration controls (or at least dominates) the media and can somehow intimidate media into following the party line. The perceived view that there is a lack of diversity of opinion in US media and that FoxNews, talk radio and blogs are the menacing conservative vanguard of what all US media are becoming or have already become. (i.e. US media are "gleichgeschaltet" or in lock-step.)
  10. Anything that casts a negative light on the US military (i.e. Abu Ghraib, trials of US troops, bombings or killings of civilians real or imagined).
  11. Anything that casts a negative light on the Bush administration.
  12. Iraq is a disaster-quagmire-catastrophe-debacle perhaps unparalleled in human history. Iraq = Vietnam = defeat and humiliation for America, the US military and Bush.
  13. The perception of the US as an imperial hegemon out to expand its global power and military-industrial complex while using democracy as a convenient (yet false) excuse to do so. Oil = blood = Halliburton = war.

Interestingly enough - Stern's latest America correspondent - Jan Christoph Wiechmann - has already gotten off to a fast start. His first few articles are on problems with health insurance, the super rich and the sensational socialist extremes in New York City. He also dedicates a piece to defending Gerhard Schroeder and whines about a judgmental American professor (yeah as if there are no Americans who have not been through much worse with Europeans). Now all that's missing is a piece on guns, fast food, hyper patriotism or anything else that makes the United States look extreme, ugly or sensational to Stern's far-left Hate-America readership. We are sure Mr. Wiechmann won't disappoint us - he is welcome to use the list above for ideas.

Stern's Malte Arnsperger: Lunatic Bush-Bashing Reaches a New Pinnacle

(By Ray Drake)

Once again, Stern magazine has issued an open declaration of moral, ethical and intellectual bankruptcy. This time: They publish a lunatic-fringe editorial on terrorism that is sure to please the far-left groundlings who drool with pleasure over every primitive swipe at the United States: The rise in terror attacks is easy to explain: It's all Bush's fault. Forget about blaming the terrorists themselves, forget about blaming continental Europeans - who in their profound impotence have demonstrated to the world that they are unwilling and unable to take on the heavy lifting involved in combating global terror. Forget about the fact that Europe's holier-than-thou, morally-superior class or arrogant left-wing media snobs have displayed absolute silence as dictators and thugs from Moscow to Pyongyang to Khartoum to Tehran have gone about murdering and oppressing on a mass scale for years now - while the German government busily promotes trade fairs with most of those regimes. Forget about blaming Iran or Syria, two states who openly sponsor terror.

No, ladies and gentlemen, the answer is very simple. It is very black-and-white. It is very much you are with us or you are with Bush. Bush is evil. Bush is to blame. It's a simple formula that requires little thought and absolutely no intellect. It's a simple formula that sells magazines and dulls the pain of a collective inferiority complex so large that it has reached disease like proportions in Germany and many other places around the world. Hate America is very much about feeling inferior and impotent - and bashing the big guy to make the hurt go away. You are falling behind and can't compete in the global economy? Blame America! You are too weak and impotent militarily to be a real player? Blame America. Your vision of socialism is turning your nation into an economic basket case? Blame America! And then Blame Bush Again! And Again! And Again! AND AGAIN!

Feel better yet? No? Then let's Hate America some more...

It's time to come out and say it. Bush is an easy scapegoat for the small-minded hobgoblins at Stern magazine and everywhere else that this crap tends to sell. It numbs the profound feeling of inadequacy - being able to sit up there on your high moral horse - while never having to do anything real to confront serious problems like terrorism or proliferation.  But the good Europeans know the answer since they are so obviously superior in virtue, generosity and culture: We just need to talk and talk and talk and talk and talk and talk to our enemies. Diplomacy is the only answer - because diplomacy is all they have. Until the next 9/11 happens of course. Then the good Europeans will again stand aside and let the Americans protect their exposed backsides. And after the United States sacrifices more of its sons while the Europeans sit back and watch on their televisions - they will return to criticizing and vilifying the United States from high atop the moral high ground. 

Here is what one of our readers had to say on this:

"Check out Stern magazine’s latest anti-American hatchet job: http://stern.de/politik/ausland/588208.html?nv=sb

The State Department put out statistics that there were 22,000 deaths related to terrorism last year, a 25% increase over last year. Most of these deaths were in Iraq due to sectarian fighting. Most of the victims were Iraqi citizens. However, the report also mentioned Humas and Hezbohla and their attacks on mostly Israeli citizens.

The report made several conclusions One of which was that Europe was not doing enough to stop the financing of these terror operations, especially the financing of Hezbohla.

Stern’s reaction: All 22,000 deaths were brought about by George Bush....he is solely responsible.! “The war against terror is defeated.”

Obviously the Paris riots, the recent killings of Christians in Turkey, the Van Gogh killing, and the closing down of the Mozart Opera because it blasphemed Mohammad are all Bush’s fault too. Check out the hate mail supporting this editorial from the loyal readers.

Is it me, or do the Germans now live in Bizarro World? Putin has suspended civil rights for his entire nation and continues to bully Europe like his Soviet predecessors. Yet, it is more important to pile up on Bush. The fate of the world’s most heinous killers at Guantamino are more important on the German mind than their own personal freedoms or that of there fellow Europeans. There is never a sharp editorial against Putin, nor are the readers ever invited to send anti-Russian hate mail.

It is as if when the Berlin Wall came down, Stern hired the staff from Neues Deutschland."

Right on. The fact that Stern could publish this demonstrates that little has fundamentally changed in the German media landscape since Iraq. Anti-Americanism truly has achieved the status of Leitkultur.

American Thinker: "Germany's Anti-American Neurosis"

Today James Lewis of "American Thinker" published a bare-knuckled account of German media that is harsh and takes no prisoners. Excerpts:

"Germany's Anti-American Neurosis

A neurotic obsession is like a bone stuck in your throat. You can't swallow it and you can't spit it out. That is how the German media are hooked on America. It doesn't look quite sane. For Americans, the best web guide to the German media is davids medienkritik. (David's media critique).

What you find out on this passionately written site, devoted to fighting anti-American hatred, is that something very weird is going on between the Lowlands and Poland. Something neurotic, in tens of millions of minds. And while we know that you can't always generalize from media madness to ordinary people, we also know that the media swing a huge weight of influence. So when the German Organs of Propaganda go weird and hateful, get ready to worry. Really.

The examples of obsessive anti-Americanism are all over big German news magazines like Spiegel and Stern. For instance,
1. The Statue of Liberty with a death's head instead of the Romantic goddess of liberty.

2. A close-up of the American flag covered with "BLUT FÜR ÖL".

3. George Bush in front of a giant black cross, "A MISSION FROM GOD."

4. A horrible Abu Ghraib figure in black garb, headlined "THE TORTURERS OF BAGHDAD."

5. A sadistic-looking Rambo muscle man on the cover, emblazoned "OPERATION RAMBO --- The  Secret Troops of the USA."

This is the mainstream press in Germany. In other words, what the American Leftist nutroots make up as paranoid fantasies becomes the dominant narrative in Germany. And their endless refrain is that American soldiers are no better than Nazis.

This is more than just steam-out-of-the-ears dislike of the United States. I mean, if you don't like France or Bosnia, why not ignore those places? Just take your vacations in Hawaii. Judging by Davids medienkritik, the Germans just can't let go of us in their collective minds. They are hooked on anti-Americanism, and they can't turn it off. They can't just stop buying Der Spiegel, with its repetetive anti-American slander campaigns. It's the bone in their throats. 

The European media go for the really nutso tales. The most recent headlines shout out that there's a whole new "trend" in America: Apparently our teens are going out at night to kill homeless people. It used to be Elvis and hip-hop, and now it's murdering street people for fun. How's that for nuts? It's like being stalked by some obsessional maniac because your shoes squeak too loud.

That's another oddity. There are things to criticize about every country in the world. Nobody in the United States is completely satisfied, and Americans always look for ways to improve ourselves, to solve problems and make progress. Nobody is happy with our crime rate, but we are always trying to fix it (with considerable success). That's rational.

The German neurosis isn't like that. They're not saying, "we like this about America, but we don't like that." They just keep pushing outrageous slanders that have no basis in reality, and then get übermad about us as moral defectives; the next week they come back and repeat the process. Then they do it again.  And again. They can't swallow their anti-American fishbone, and they can't spit it out. (...)"

Wow. The unsettling part of reading this is that it is that it is difficult to say whether Mr. Lewis is being too general or not about Germans in this piece. It would be nice to say he is being to general - but is he? We know that not all Germans are like this, but it is hard to say that what he has written is entirely untrue - much of it rings of harsh, unpleasant truth. Read the whole thing and decide for yourself.

This comments section is going to be absolutely fascinating... (Article posted by Ray)

UPDATE: Author James Lewis has posted this direct response to our comments on his article. Click here. He graciously admits his translation errors and has now corrected them in the original. We disagree with him on Schroeder - we doubt that Gmaelin's comments were somehow "arranged" in advance or that Schroeder made such a comparison, which Mr. Lewis seems to imply. With all due respect, that sounds like a baseless theory. As Mr. Lewis politely suggests, we will have to agree to disagree on that. In our opinion, the ex-Justice Minister spontaneously uttered her true thoughts out loud in the midst of an intense campaign - which is bad enough.

Otherwise, Mr. Lewis' article provides an interesting starting point for a necessary conversation - he expresses provocative and interesting thoughts that need to be addressed - his "bone stuck in the throat" analogy is particularly noteworthy - we thank him for his prompt response and open willingness to take responsibility for errors and look forward to more interesting comments...

Who's Fat? German Hypocrisy by the Kilo

(By Ray Drake)

You've all seen them: The condescending and demeaning articles in German media on how fat Americans are. The most notable recent example was a Focus piece entitled, "American Kids are Fat and Lazy."

As always, it is easier for Germans to deride the outside world, particularly the United States, than it is to reflect on their own faults and problems. According to a recent piece in Stern, Germans are hardly models of virtue when it comes to counting calories. The article relates that, according to a Eurostat study, two-thirds of German men are too fat.

In fact, when it comes fat men in Europe, Germany takes the cake...and eats it too: No other nation in Europe has more fat and obese men as a percentage of the population. German women aren't much better: Only Great Britain has more obese women as a percentage of its population. 

So the next time you hear the German media, that guy on the U-Bahn or the local dorf-snobs scoffing over fat Americans, just remind them that Germans need to lose the weight and the hypocrisy as well.

Victory for Davids Medienkritik: Stern Drops Hate-America Headline

(By Ray Drake)

Stern Magazine Crumbles in the face of Massive Pressure

In 2005, we first reported on a series on the history of the United States that Stern magazine, one of Germany's most widely read weekly magazines, has featured on its website for several years. Until very recently, the introductory headline looked this way:

BEFORE DAVIDS MEDIENKRITIK:

The History of the USA: No nation has ever dominated the globe like the USA. And its people could care less about the rest of humanity." (circled below)

After we published our open letter to Stern less than two weeks ago in official protest, other sites took notice and joined the effort. Scores of readers undoubtedly emailed the magazine to demand they remove the line. After leaving the Hate-America headline up on their site for so many years, Stern finally decided to make a change:

AFTER DAVIDS MEDIENKRITIK:

"The History of the USA: No nation has ever dominated the globe like the USA. The Stern series describes the history of the United States of America from the colonization to the present."

This humble victory is further proof that Davids Medienkritik and its readers and partners in the blogosphere can make a difference and demand greater accountability and professionalism from media. The "journalists" at Stern and elsewhere will think twice about publishing this sort of anti-American hate speech again. For that, we thank everyone who supported this effort. Incidentally, this is not the first time we have successfully confronted Stern, and it may not be the last. Stern has a long, well-documented history of this sort of activity. In the long-term, changing attitudes will be far more difficult than changing a few lines of text.

Endnote: To our knowledge, Stern has still made no formal apology for its actions and has not responded to complaints or emails other than to quietly change the line above. If any of our readers actually received a response, we would love to hear about it. Stern has also failed to acknowledge its correction in any official manner on its site or otherwise. Perhaps the editors think they can minimize their own embarrassment with their readers and placate us as well by just acting like this never really happened. It is high time that Stern come out and openly acknowledge that it was wrong in a formal apology and accept responsibility for its actions by posting a clear correction notice.

Endnote #2: Special thanks to Pajamas Media, Politically Incorrect, German Joys, Wizblog, Betsy's Page and everyone else who supported this effort.

An Open Letter to Stern Magazine Online

(DEUTSCHE ÜBERSETZUNG HIER / GERMAN TRANSLATION HERE)

UPDATE: Victory for Davids Medienkritik: Stern Drops Hate-America Headline

Subject: Stern Magazine Online: "Americans Could Care Less About the Rest of Humanity"

To the editors and staff of Stern.de:

I am writing this letter to express deep concern about your series entitled “The History of the USA.” This series, which has been a feature on your website for several years, includes the following headline:

The History of the USA: No nation has ever dominated the globe like the USA. And its people could care less about the rest of humanity." (circled below)

This statement is particularly troubling because it demonizes an entire nation as indifferent, uncaring and unconcerned with anyone or anything beyond its national boundaries. The series headline, published for all of Stern’s readers to see, openly declares that all Americans could care less about the rest of humanity. Not only is it patently false for reasons too numerous to list here, it is also slanderous, bigoted and profoundly ignorant. In a legal sense, it may actually violate German laws against Volksverhetzung. Whatever the legal implications may be, one honestly must ask: How could any thinking person claim or even imply that all 300 million Americans, taken individually or as a whole, are indifferent to the fate of the rest of humanity? How can a publication like Stern Online, read by millions of Germans, allow such an obviously stupid and hateful statement to accompany a series on American history for years on end?

In closing, the above-mentioned headline is all the more troubling because your publication has a long and ugly history of exploiting anti-American sentiment to boost magazine sales and increase profits. Let me point out just a few recent examples (more here):


How America lied to the World / Method Wild-West

The incredible lack of journalistic integrity and responsibility displayed in Stern’s “The History of the USA” series and in many other Stern articles is deeply troubling to the readership of Davids Medienkritik. We ask that you remove the statement in question and offer your readers a full and public apology. We sincerely hope that, in the future, your publication will refrain from the opportunistic exploitation of your readership’s anti-American sentiments.

Sincerely Yours,

David Kaspar
Davids Medienkritik

Note to readers: Stern is one of Germany's most popular, widely read weekly magazines. If you would like to join us in calling for the removal of the above statement, Stern can be contacted HERE. Instructions:

1. Select "stern.de" and click red Empfänger auswählen button.
2. Select "Kritik am Online-Angebot".
3. Enter your first/last name (Vorname, Name), email address (Email), subject (Betreff), and message (Nachricht).
4. Click red "Nachricht absenden" button to send.

Feel free to write in the language of your choice and keep your comments civil and respectful.

UPDATE: Politically Incorrect has joined our effort.

Continue reading "An Open Letter to Stern Magazine Online" »

German Media: Dehumanizing the American Soldier for Profit

(By Ray D.)

SPIEGEL ONLINE writes today that "the USA is crying over its dead soldiers." This incredibly smug, arrogant comment begets one simple question: What nation would not cry for its dead soldiers, regardless the situation? In another piece, entitled "After Iraq Duty: Traumatized US Soldier Dismembers Girlfriend", the publication details one particularly gruesome and sensational murder. Yet instead of treating it as an isolated incident, the article transitions the horrific murder into a broader discussion of mental health within the U.S. military. A subheadline halfway through reads: "US Soldiers often end as psychological wrecks." The article claims that "researchers" now believe that their are "hundreds of thousands of mentally ill GIs." To back the claim, the author cites a study from the Government Accountability Office, from September 2004. As further evidence of the so-called trauma, he cites a rash of killings in which soldiers murdered their wives or partners...back in 2002. One has to wonder why he didn't cite more recent facts, like those that appeared last week in the Washington Post:

"Nearly 64,000 of the more than 184,000 veterans of the Iraq and Afghanistan wars who have sought VA health care were found to exhibit potential symptoms of post-traumatic stress, drug abuse or other mental disorders as of the end of June, according to the latest report by the Veterans Health Administration. Of those, close to 30,000 had possible post-traumatic stress disorder, said the report, which was completed in August and recently obtained by the Associated Press.

Kussman said the number of troops reporting symptoms of stress probably represents a "gross overestimation" of those actually suffering from mental health disorders. Most of the troops who return from Iraq have "normal reactions to abnormal situations," such as flashbacks or trouble sleeping, Kussman said."

Note the difference in tone. Unlike SPIEGEL ONLINE, the Washington Post actually attempts objectivity. The Post mentions both the positive and negative aspects of the story. Instead of simply declaring hundreds of thousands of US troops "mentally ill" with little supporting evidence or clarification (as SPIEGEL ONLINE does) the Post actually attempts to explain the facts and details behind the headline.

For SPIEGEL ONLINE, the headline is the story and the author works to align the facts to support his premise. Facts that don't fit the headline are simply omitted. And, as we know from three years of covering SPIEGEL ONLINE, the headline is very often a product of the ideology and bias of the editors. In this case, the headline is a product of the publication's long-term campaign to malign and vilify members of the United States military.

Operation "Rambo": The Secret Special Troops of the USA

US Mercenaries in Iraq: The Torturers of Baghdad

This is particularly ironic considering the fact that the good people at SPIEGEL ONLINE owe their freedom of speech to the very people that they so enthusiastically demonize. Let's not forget that it was the American soldier who stood guard along the Iron Curtain, not the German journalist.

That said, we know that war takes a tremendous toll on all involved, particularly members of the military and their families. The picture presented the German public, however, is one based largely on extremes, spin and preconceived stereotypes. The larger forest of reality is being missed for all the ideological trees: Iraq is the greatest debacle in human history and American soldiers are either barbaric murderers, trigger-happy Rambos or demoralized victims.

A favorite line of late has been that the US military is fighting with its "last contingent". This despite the fact that the US military has announced it will meet recruiting goals for 2006. The Army, which has taken the most casualties, has exceeded recruitment goals. But don't expect those facts to be mentioned anytime soon in most German media. They don't fit the image of a demoralized, crumbling U.S. military widely popularized and accepted as fact in much of the German media. In other words, they don't support the desired headline.

Panorama Propaganda Revisited

Another popular line has been to present American soldiers as sadistic murderers and criminals by playing up sensational cases and implying they are part of a larger pattern. ARD Panorama "journalists" Voelker Steinhoff and John Goetz have exhibited particular skill in this field. Just compare two televised reports they worked on recently depicting members of the U.S. military as brutal murderers. Both reports omit key facts and both imply that alleged murders and atrocities committed by American troops are part of a larger pattern in the United States military. Even the music and format are the same...

Convicts to the Front – The last gasp of the Americans in Iraq (2006)

Torture and Killing without Punishment - Exonerations for US Soldiers (2005)

Not only does this style of "journalism" dehumanize members of the United States military, it also presents readers a warped version of reality that has little to do with the search for objective truth. But, then again, publications like SPIEGEL ONLINE and programs like Panorama have never been interested in the search for objective truth.

The bottom line is this: The larger context and balancing facts required to place sensational cases into perspective are downplayed or simply omitted. The ultimate loser is the German news consumer and anyone interested in transatlantic understanding. Sad but true...

UPDATE: Yet another outrageous example from Stern: An article detailing Seymour Hersh's assertion that US forces in Iraq represent the "Most Murderous US Army of All Time."

Inside Report: German Media Coverage of the United States

(Now available: German Translation / Deutsche Übersetzung - special thanks to Paul of NBFS)

(The following text is a final exam paper authored by Ray for a graduate level class on media and politics taken in Spring of 2006. It contains excerpts from actual interviews conducted with top members of the German media as well as outside experts on the German media scene. Particularly shocking are admissions by top German journalists that self-censorship took place to a significant degree in the run-up to the Iraq war at the very highest levels of both state-sponsored and private media. The paper offers a comprehensive look at many of the problems with media coverage of the United States today:)

Introduction

The international media research institute Media Tenor has released several studies over the past few years with one common finding: Rising anti-Americanism in German media.[1] A 2005 study concluded that German television broadcasters had been continually casting “US-American protagonists and institutions” in a negative light since 2002.[2] Another 2004 study on German-American divisions over Iraq concluded: “Especially German TV broadcasters worked less as news reporters and instead came across as part of ‘their’ government.” The same study found that in the run-up to the Iraq war, German media “barely drew a distinction between democracy and dictatorship in their news coverage.” Another study concluded: “While there were more opposing voices, such as the FAZ, available to the German readers than in its neighbor France, the media generally jumped on the popular, anti-war band-wagon.” [3]

The German media’s coverage of the United States was also discussed at length at a 2004 conference hosted by the American Institute for Contemporary German Studies (AICGS). The participants concluded that German media “overwhelmingly backed the Schroeder government’s position” in the months prior to the Iraq war. Panel members also debated whether influential segments of the German media tend towards anti-Americanism. Considering decades of robust German-American ties through the much of the Cold War and beyond, the implications were troubling. But recently, a slew of contentious issues and conflicting interests, including the Iraq war, have served to widen the transatlantic divide. Several AICGS panelists discussed the recent rift and concluded that, “while the media is part of the problem, they are not the source or instigator.” In private interviews, however, numerous German journalists and media observers expressed a far more candid view of the German media’s role in shaping perceptions of the United States. Some spoke openly of pandering to anti-American populism, pressure from above to exclude certain viewpoints, lack of expertise and access, and pervasive bias. What follows is a summary of those interviews and the major themes addressed.

Ideological Media: Tradition or Problem?

Professor and State Department Foreign Service Officer Richard Schmierer served two four-year tours at the United States Embassy in Germany from 1992 to 1996 as Press Attaché and from 2000 to 2004 as Minister-Counselor for Public Affairs. During his second tour, transatlantic relations cooled considerably and media coverage of the United States became noticeably more critical. When asked whether he thought anti-Americanism was a problem in German media, Schmierer diplomatically replied that the charge of anti-Americanism was “too broad.” He emphasized that German media, “are professional and world class,” and have a long tradition of reporting from a particular viewpoint. Generally speaking, Schmierer felt that some German media reflect, “a certain European point of view that sees elements of the U.S. and certain administrations as not having the worldview they share.” Cornel Faltin, the Washington, DC Bureau Chief for Springer Publishing, also pointed out that, “there are different papers for different readers. On the one hand you have TAZ (Tageszeitung – left-wing daily) and on the other you have Die Welt (conservative daily). That’s freedom of press.”

Others, including ZDF Bureau Chief and Correspondent Eberhard Piltz, felt that ideology was a major impediment to quality coverage of the United States. Piltz spoke of “prejudice” and described it as “an intellectual arrogance that thinks that the American way of life, feeling, taste and thinking is inferior and not authentic.” He complained that many journalists see “the U.S. through an ideological lens,” and that “most of them grew up with the leftist, socialist dream and now they look for scapegoats.” Stern magazine correspondent Michael Streck agreed with Piltz’s statement and worried “that populism goes over the line quite often.” Deutsche Welle Bureau Chief for North and South America Ruediger Lentz also expressed deep concern that “populist” ideology and views often “resonate the public mood” when it came to coverage of the United States.

Iraq: Views Suppressed

Ideology is clearly a serious problem in some corners of the German media. All too often, particularly in reporting on foreign affairs, viewpoints that go against popular sentiment are not given a fair hearing. Additionally, most of the journalists interviewed worried that bias negatively influenced reporting. One of the most troubling aspects of the interviews was the assertion, made by at least three of the interviewees, that journalists were pressured, or knew of colleagues who were pressured, not to run certain stories in the run-up to the Iraq war. Eberhard Piltz related that he “had to fight with the desk people (the editors) to tell and get in why the war was coming” and added that he "had a hard time telling the stories." Martin Wagner of Bayerische Rundfunk radio broadcasting said that he had not personally been pressured, but that “more than a couple colleagues,” experienced a “tendency especially in the run-up to the Iraq war,” not to run stories explaining the Bush administration’s position for fear of upsetting readers. Wagner claimed that the pressure on colleagues came from “above” from “owners.” Professor Schmierer observed that: “In the run-up to Iraq, media were put under strictures to limit the opposing side because readers and viewers might become incensed and the media were afraid to alienate or lose audience.” He summarized the situation this way: “Things got emotional.”

Stories in their Suitcases and “Leitmedien

Cornel Faltin put it best: “Some colleagues already have stories in their suitcases.” In Faltin’s view, some correspondents working in the United States are influenced by pre-existing views. One interviewee stated anonymously that many journalists come to the U.S. “with preconceived bias.” Eberhard Piltz concluded that, “they tend to look at America with their European, German eyes.” He added that, "stories that make Bush look bad were requested all the time." According to Piltz, one would only have to "wait by the phone for the editors." Piltz also stated that the editors were those who "went in the streets and cried for Ho Chi Minh" at an earlier time and many still viewed the United States as "the spoiler of their dreams." Piltz was of the opinion that Spiegel and Stern magazines were in the forefront of "Bush bashing" and cautioned that it was often difficult to separate "Bush-bashing from anti-Americanism." He described anti-Americanism as a "larger phenomenon" that reaches back to at least 1917.

Another factor that has contributed to “predetermined” reporting is the excessive reliance on so-called “Leitmedien” or leading media. Martin Wagner explained that many “editors at quality papers read The New York Times, The Washington Post, and Der Spiegel and have stories and ideas all ready before the day starts.” This game of follow-the-leader reduces the number of issues that actually reach the German news consumer. Wagner stressed that many examples of good journalism were ignored because they did not relate to “hot” topics. The problem is compounded by what Cornel Faltin identified as, “too much entertainment” reporting. Uwe Schmitt agreed that media was “too celebrity oriented.” The result is limited coverage of substantive issues.

Monolithic Views, Pet Issues, and Clichés

Medien Tenor studies conducted over the past few years clearly indicate an increase in critical, negative reporting on the United States. German media have “picked out only the negative (issues) and forgotten the others,” according to Ruediger Lentz. Lentz suggested that too many Germans see America in a “monolithic way” and have a stereotypical image of a “bad, ugly American.” He lamented that German media “don’t follow up on the open and heated debate in the U.S. and the divisions.” Eberhard Piltz agreed that, “the criticism in the U.S.A. doesn’t fit into some Germans’ picture of the bad or ugly America.” David Kaspar, the founder of the German-American blog Davids Medienkritik, pointed to an excessive interest in the negative and sensational as a source of bias: “They search for problems and even if there weren’t any they would invent them.” Kaspar opined that positive stories, such as low unemployment levels in the United States, are often ignored.

A frequent complaint expressed by interviewees was that German media inadequately convey the complexity and internal divisions that make up American society. Professor Schmierer emphasized that it is important for Germans to understand “America’s position, values and approach” as well as the country’s “unique circumstances.” He felt that German media “did not generally give that level of depth.” Uwe Schmitt argued that, “high quality papers do get nuance,” but added that, “there are pet issues” that some media dwell on. Cornel Faltin acknowledged the presence of pet issues, but felt that it was a “periodical thing” and that “certain issues” evoked more interest at times than others. One interviewee stated anonymously that the media “don’t make an honest effort to explain the American mind” and don’t “explain why people supported Iraq.” He worried that the media regularly “feed stereotypes.”

Two Media Tenor reports from 2004 spoke of a view of America clouded by clichés. One offered a fitting quote from author Friedrich Mielke[4]: “Today the Americans and Germans are again allowing themselves to be seduced by clichés. For many Germans, America is the land of predatory capitalism, striving for hegemony, and the arrogance of power.”

Lack of Access, Experience, and Travel

The most universally expressed frustration among journalists interviewed was the lack of access to the United States government. Claus Tigges, the Economics Correspondent for the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung (FAZ), referred to German journalists in the United States as “no vote reporters.” When asked how he dealt with the problem, Tigges concluded that German media are often forced to rely on U.S. media and think tanks. Michael Backfisch, Bureau Chief of the financial daily Handelsblatt, agreed that access was “tough” and “networking crucial.” The access problem clearly boils down to a lack of interest and time on the part of U.S. government officials. Because most American politicians are interested in reaching voters, even small domestic newspapers receive more attention than the largest German network. With the end of the Cold War, Germany has become less central to U.S. geopolitical objectives and, as a result, no longer attracts the same level of interest from high-ranking U.S. government officials.

Professor Schmierer also pointed out that some reporters had inadequate knowledge of the United States: “Those who are reporting should have had recent exposure to the U.S.” As an example, Schmierer pointed to ZDF, a major public television network. According to Schmierer, most of the “ZDF staff assigned to foreign affairs had never been to America and an exchange was arranged.” Martin Wagner countered that, “many Germans have been to the U.S.” and added that, “media are often prepared.”

While it is true that many Germans have been to the United States, it is not necessarily the case that German journalists assigned to cover the world’s only remaining superpower are fully prepared. As in most nations, German media focus primarily on domestic events. International coverage, though relatively extensive in Germany, still suffers from limited budgets and lack of interest. When coupled with the pressures of the twenty-four hour news cycle and the need for ever-shorter sound bites, the impact on the quality of coverage can be stifling. Limited budgets also make it difficult for some journalists to travel outside of Washington, DC or New York. Uwe Schmitt felt that it was “pulling the rug out if you can’t travel” and worried that, “it does influence journalism.” Ruediger Lentz agreed that, “it is a problem getting out” and getting “exposure.” Other journalists, including Michael Backfisch, felt that the focus on Washington was “overloaded” and remarked that journalists often felt compelled to stay in Washington for “scoops” and “new material.”

But not everyone agreed that travel was a problem. Several correspondents insisted that a reasonable balance was possible. Additionally, escaping the Washington “bubble” is hardly a problem unique to German media. The focus on Washington, DC is, however, clearly another factor that influences German coverage of the United States.

Anti-Americanism? Populism, Bush, the 800 Pound Gorilla, and Iraq

There is little doubt that the German media has grown more critical of the United States over the past five years. But there is disagreement as to the causes and implications of this trend.

Since September 11, 2001, German and American leaders have cooperated in Afghanistan but bitterly disagreed over Iraq. Gerhard Schroeder turned opposition to a military confrontation with Saddam Hussein into a winning campaign issue during the 2002 elections, much to the dismay of the Bush administration. Overall, approval of the United States and the Bush administration has fallen significantly in Germany since 2001. The overwhelming majority of Germans opposed the Iraq war and America’s refusal to seek a more multilateral solution. Many Germans dislike President Bush and what they perceive to be his overbearing approach to issues such as the Kyoto Protocol, the International Criminal Court, and Guantanamo Bay. Some worry that America is striving towards world hegemony. Uwe Schmitt remarked that the United States is admired as a “cultural leader,” but is also perceived as an “800 pound gorilla that wants to dominate yet be loved at the same time.”

So is German media coverage of the United States a fundamental source of the transatlantic divide or simply a reflection of larger societal trends? The answer is both. History is an undeniable source of differences. Contemporary observers too often forget the heated disagreements between the United States and West Germany over Vietnam in the 1960s and 1970s and over the deployment of nuclear missiles in the 1980s. These disagreements also revolved around the question of military force and American geopolitical dominance. For Germany, the use of military force was taboo for decades following the Second World War. Because of its past, Germany has a far more skeptical view of military action and tends to favor multilateral approaches, even if they are sometimes flawed or ineffective.

Unfortunately, many influential figures in German media, politics and society have undeniably exploited recent transatlantic tensions for political and financial gain. All too often, populism and anti-Americanism have replaced honest, constructive criticism. Take, for example, the following covers from Stern and Der Spiegel, two of Germany’s best-selling, most influential political weeklies:

How America Lied to the World (2004) / Method Wild West (2004)

USA: The Lords of the World (1997) / Blood for Oil (2003) / The Conceited World Power (2003) / Operation Rambo (2003)

Jeff Gedmin, Director of the Aspen Institute in Berlin, relayed this story in an article he wrote in 2004[5]:

“A writer for the German weekly Der Spiegel told me during the Iraq debate not to take offense at the crude anti-American covers of the magazine such as the ugly, bearded, drooling Rambo figure it used to show the typical GI in Iraq. "We're just trying to please our million readers," he explained.”

Then there was also the portrayal of Americans as bloodsucking mosquitoes by IG Metall, Germany’s largest trade union:

US Firms in Germany: The Bloodsuckers (2005)

Some, including German diplomats, have attempted to downplay and deny the problem of anti-Americanism. Others, including some of the journalists interviewed, felt that most of the recent ugliness in German media was attributable to dislike of the Bush administration. Ruediger Lentz put it best when he said that, “it’s not as simple as anti-Bush.” Lentz worried about a vicious cycle or “Teufelskreis” of anti-American media feeding anti-American, populist sentiment. When asked how the cycle could be broken, Lentz offered only this: “To change patterns of behavior is a long process.” It now seems that that process is slowly beginning to move forward. Iraq is no longer as divisive an issue and Gerhard Schroeder has since left office, leaving a more America-friendly Angela Merkel to patch up the wounds. Most observers hope that this difficult period in German-American relations is just another bump in the road of an otherwise healthy relationship. Only time will tell.


Individuals Interviewed:

  • Eberhard Piltz, Bureau Chief and Correspondent, Zweites Deutsches Fernsehen (ZDF) – German state television.
  • Uwe Schmitt, Senior National Correspondent, Die Welt – Daily newspaper.
  • Ruediger Lentz, Bureau Chief and General Manager of Deutsche Welle North and South America – State sponsored international news broadcaster.
  • Michael Streck, Correspondent, Stern magazine – Weekly political illustrated.
  • Martin Wagner, Foreign Corresponent, Bayerischer Rundfunk – Bavarian Radio Broadcasting
  • Claus Tigges, Economics Correspondent, Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung (FAZ)  – Daily newspaper.
  • Cornel Faltin, Bureau Chief, Springer Publishing – Media publishing house.
  • Michael Backfisch, Bureau Chief, Handelsblatt – Daily financial newspaper.
  • Richard Schmierer, State Department Foreign Service Officer and Georgetown University Professor, Press Attaché at the U.S. Embassy in Bonn from 1992 to 1996 and Minister-Counselor for Public Affairs at the American Embassy in Berlin, Germany from 2000 to 2004.
  • David Kaspar, Founder and Editor in Chief, Davids Medienkritik – English-language weblog on German media and politics.
Footnotes:

[1] Media Tenor, “Wenn Klischees die Wahrnehmung trüben (When Clichés Cloud Perceptions),” Sep. 2004. At www.medientenor.de (registration required.)

[2] Media Tenor, “Bush hat bei Europas Journalisten einen schweren Stand (Bush Has a Difficult Standing with Europe’s Journalists),” March 2006. At www.medientenor.de (registration required.)

[3] Lehmann, Ingrid A., “Transatlantic Divide over Iraq,” Sep. 2004. At www.medientenor.de (registration required.)

[4] Media Tenor, “Supermacht mit Imageproblem (Super Power with Image Problem),” June 2004. At www.medientenor.de (registration required.)

[5] Gedmin, Jeff, “Mad About Us,” 11 May 2004, The American Spectator. At http://www.spectator.org/dsp_article.asp?art_id=6547

UPDATE: For more on this topic, see this interview with Lutz Erbring.

Addendum: Pet issues common in German media coverage of the United States include:
  • Perceived American religiosity.
  • Perceived American obsession with guns and violence.
  • The death penalty.
  • The perceived excess and superficiality of American capitalism and (non)culture (i.e. fat people, the super rich, SUVs, fast-food, M-TV/hip-hop culture, Hollywood, corporate scandals, buy-outs and "excessive" profits.)
  • Perceived social inequality in the United States (i.e. amerikanische Verhaeltnisse, poor Americans are starving and freezing to death or at least struggling with 2-3 jobs and no health insurance while the rich live it up. Perception that America has no social safety net or a woefully inadequate social safety net.)
  • Perceived American unilateralism/exceptionalism (i.e. Iraq, Kyoto, ICC, Guantanamo)
  • Perceived American "hurrah" patriotism or "hyper" patriotism (i.e. flag-waving).
  • Perceived American paranoia/overreaction about terror and obsession with security and the "war" on terror and the perceived willingness of Americans to sacrifice key civil liberties (the Patriot Act has become a favored target) and take extrajudicial actions involving torture, renditions, etc.
  • The perception that the Bush administration controls (or at least dominates) the media and can somehow intimidate media into following the party line. The perceived view that there is a lack of diversity of opinion in US media and that FoxNews, talk radio and blogs are the menacing conservative vanguard of what all US media are becoming or have already become. (i.e. US media are "gleichgeschaltet" or in lock-step.)
  • Anything that casts a negative light on the US military (i.e. Abu Ghraib, trials of US troops, bombings or killings of civilians real or imagined).
  • Anything that casts a negative light on the Bush administration.
  • Iraq is a disaster-quagmire-catastrophe-debacle perhaps unparalleled in human history. Iraq = Vietnam = defeat and humiliation for America, the US military and Bush.
  • The perception of the US as an imperial hegemon out to expand its global power and military-industrial complex while using democracy as a convenient (yet false) excuse to do so. Oil = blood = Halliburton = war.

Continue reading "Inside Report: German Media Coverage of the United States" »

North Korea's Bomb: "Paper Tiger" Bush to Blame Again

(By Ray D.)

North Korea just detonated an atomic bomb and guess what: "Stern" magazine is more upset with George W. Bush than it is with Kim Jong Il. It is more upset at the supposed impotence of the United States than with the near total irrelevance and impotence of Germany and Europe in confronting dictators worldwide. Once again the old formula holds in the German media: It's all Bush's fault. World-Scapegoat-USA is to blame:

Stern.de: "North Korea: "Powerless Paper Tiger" Bush: The North Korean atomic test is also a defeat for US President Bush..."

It doesn't matter to Stern that Kim Jong Il's activities represent a threat and a defeat for the entire Western world. It doesn't matter that dictator Kim has starved, murdered and imprisoned millions of his own people. What really matters is that this is a defeat for Bush.

As we recently noted: Short-term humiliation for Bush and America trump any long-term humanitarian and geopolitical considerations for publications like "Stern" magazine and members of the Angry Left. The fates of millions of people suffering and dying in places like North Korea, Chechnya, Darfur and Congo are of remarkably little interest to them. When a true dictator with blood on his hands threatens the world and oppresses his people, the professional protester class is nowhere to be seen. The silence is deafening. The hypocrisy is overwhelming.

Sadly enough, the headlines in some German media read more like North Korean propaganda than objective headlines we might otherwise expect to find in publications printed in democratic nations. Put differently: Little has fundamentally changed.

Germany's Stern Magazine: Selling Sex and Bashing Israel

(By Ray D.)

Sex sells and Stern magazine is apparently hard up for cash. Don't believe us? Just look at this cover if the Viagra isn't working. Now that is a real attempt to please the million readers and reach-out to the "Bild" pinup crowd.

Seriously though. There is a war in the Middle East and we at Medienkritik expected to see something (shall we say) slightly different on the cover of Germany's most widely read political weekly. The Blue Lagoon was not quite what we had in mind. On the other hand, if you can pull your eyes away from nature's bling-bling for just a moment and look down at the lower-right-hand corner, there is a small subhead about Hezbollah. And to be completely fair, Editor-in-Chief Andreas Petzold, winner of our 2003 anti-Americanism prize, did dedicate most of his weekly editorial to the conflict and the cycle of violence and hatred that he believes it has spurned. Here's a quote:

The image “http://img.stern.de/_content/56/64/566415/petzold_neu_250.jpg” cannot be displayed, because it contains errors.

"It is understandable that the Jewish state, after 58 years of fighting for its existence doesn't want to look on without acting. Nevertheless: If it is most urgently about destroying those rockets-, the real threat to the life of the Israelis-, why must entire sections of Beirut be reduced to rubble and ash? Would have been so dishonorable to trade the two kidnapped Israeli soldiers for a handful of Lebanese.

A handful of "Lebanese?" An interesting choice of words to describe Hezbollah terrorists...

And how can Mr. Petzold ask about civilian casualties when Hezbollah is so obviously using the Lebanese people, (and anyone else they get a hold of - including UN peacekeepers,) as human shields? Does he honestly believe that Israel is intentionally targeting civilians? Petzold's patently false assertion that Israel is destroying entire sectors of Beirut testifies either to his profound ignorance or a perverted belief that Israel is engaged in a campaign to kill innocent women and children.

The fundamental problem with Mr. Petzold's editorial can be identified as what we would call the angry left's cycle of ignorance. Fortunately, not all of us were born yesterday. Some of us actually remember that Israel has attempted to appease and compromise and negotiate and exchange prisoners time and time and time again for decades on end. In exchange, Israelis have gotten suicide bombers, rockets, invasion and international scorn.

And why should we assume that putting another big, wet, UN band-aid on the region will do anything but exacerbate the problem and buy more time for Hezbollah and its supporters in Damascus and Tehran? Perhaps Mr. Petzold and other German media gurus should read what Claudia Rossett recently had to say about past efforts to solve the crisis the multilateral way:

"Hezbollah deliberately provoked this war on July 12 by kidnapping Israeli soldiers inside Israel’s borders, and has been launching rockets into Israel from a massive arsenal that under U.N. writ Hezbollah is not even supposed to possess. That was not the deal under which Israel, in keeping with U.N. wishes, withdrew entirely from southern Lebanon in 2000. The U.N. promise was that Hezbollah would be defanged and that U.N. peacekeepers would help the Lebanese government reestablish control over Hezbollah-infested terrain inside Lebanon.

Over the past six years, Israel honored its commitment to peace. The U.N. — disproportionately — required in practice no such compliance on the Lebanese side of the border. The “peacekeepers” of the U.N. Interim Force in Lebanon, called UNIFIL, sat passively looking on, costing about $100 million a year and doing nothing to stop Hezbollah from trucking in weapons, digging tunnels, and running the armed protection rackets with which it has kept a grip on swathes of Lebanon, including the southern border with Israel, parts of the Bekaa, and southern Beirut. Before the current fighting, UNIFIL had most recently distinguished itself for a run-of-the-U.N.-mill financial swindle involving a contingent of Ukrainian peacekeeping troops. On that subject, whatever laws might have been violated, the U.N. has — as usual with U.N. scams — refused to release details. Now, UNIFIL peacekeepers have been reduced to casualties of the crossfire, while Secretary-General Kofi Annan urges that we take what the U.N. has done wrong already, and do more of it.

With its false promises, and disproportionate deals for “peace,” the U.N. left Israel exposed to the attack that has now come, and a war that Israel did not seek. Like America when attacked by al Qaeda, Israel has been fighting back. In response, U.N. officials have come close to trampling each other in their stampede to the media microphones — not to admit the U.N.’s own failure to stop Hezbollah, not to apologize for administering a phony peace that incubated this miserable war, but to denounce Israel."

Unfortunately, in the German media world, and particularly at publications like Stern, there is remarkably little criticism of the UN (particularly when compared to criticism of the US), even in cases of massive incompetence, bungling impotence and outrageous waste. How many Germans know that it cost $100 million to support UNIFIL? How many critical articles have been run in German media on the performance of UNIFIL and the expansion of Hezbollah over the past several years? It is this chronic bias and unwillingness to explain historic context that has strongly contributed to Germans' rejection of Israeli actions. So it shouldn't really surprise anyone that 75% of Germans polled find Israel's actions "inappropriate" while only 12% see them as "appropriate" and 13% don't know. Opinions like those expressed recently by Charles Krauthammer are frighteningly rare in German and European media. The resulting views speak for themselves.

As they say: Ignorance is bliss. And never stare at the sun...

UPDATE: The Qana tragedy is playing predictably in the German media. Almost no one is asking why Hezbollah chooses to place rocket launchers and other military assets in cities full of vulnerable civilians. Once again, Israel is being handed the majority of the blame. This article in the SZ (in German) is a typical example in which the author completely fails to acknowledge Hezbollah's cynical, reckless use of civilians as human shields. There are many more articles with much the same tone. The German blog No Blood For Sauerkraut has a more balanced take (in German).

Bertelsmann Boss Awarded "Global Leadership Award" in Washington

(By Ray D.)

CEO of Bertelsmann, owner of Stern, lauded by Johns Hopkins AICGS for "global leadership"...

Bertelsmann AG is far and away Germany's largest publishing firm. The media conglomerate also owns Gruener & Jahr, "Europe's biggest magazine publisher." And Gruener & Jahr owns Stern magazine, Germany's most widely read political weekly. At the top of the Bertelsmann empire sits CEO Gunter Thielen.

Late last year, Dr. Thielen was invited to a black-tie awards ceremony in Washington, DC by the good people of the American Institute for Contemporary German Studies (AICGS) and awarded the institute's annual "Global Leadership Award." Apparently it didn't bother Karin Johnston and Jackson Janes, two self-anointed AICGS experts on German-American relations and German media, that Bertelsmann publications have propagated outrageous anti-American propaganda to millions throughout Germany over the past several years. Here is a picture from the dinner:

Dick Parsons (center) hands Gunter Thielen (left) the "Global Leadership Award" as Jackson Janes (right) looks on. (See more pics of Washington's German-American elite breaking bread with Gunter Thielen here)

And here are just a few examples of Bertelsmann's "global leadership" over the past several years:

Bertelsmann is also part owner of Der Spiegel, but hey, we at Davids Medienkritik don't want to spoil the party. So we would like to make a few nominations for the next award ceremony:

On a final note: It also just so happens that Bertelsmann is a financial contributor to the Johns Hopkins affiliated AICGS. In fact, AICGS has taken money from quite a few interesting sources over the decades, including the East German government. Recently, when Davids Medienkritik contacted the German Embassy's press office in Washington, DC to conduct an interview on German media coverage of the United States, the representative left a message telling us that they were too busy with other issues and referred us to AICGS. They clearly felt comfortable that the institute would give us a point of view consistent with the German government's.

Endnote: Read an earlier post on this topic for more information.

Stern Magazine Implies all Hispanics in the USA "Illegals"

Stern Magazine: "37 Million Illegals in the USA"

When reporting on the United States, German media incompetence has been in no short supply of late. Last Friday, SPIEGEL ONLINE grossly mischaracterized a State Department report released the same day. On Saturday, Stern published a piece implying all Hispanics in the United States are "illegals." Below is a segment of the article in question:

And here is the translation of the first paragraph above:

"37 Million Illegals in the USA

A major dispute has erupted in Congress just months before the elections in November over how illegal immigrants should be dealt with. The political significance arises from the large and quickly growing number of US citizens from the Spanish-Mexican cultural group, the Hispanics. They sympathize, in part, with the "illegals." According to official figures, they have been the largest minority in the USA since 2001, ahead of blacks with 37 million people.

First Stern tells us that there are a growing number of US citizens of Hispanic origin. Then the magazine implies that all Hispanics are illegal. Does that make sense to anyone else? If you are a citizen, you are legal by definition. And how, exactly, did the magazine determine that there are "37 million illegals in the USA"? Hmmm, let us guess:

Stern math: 37 million Hispanics in the USA = 37 million illegals in the USA

In fact, Most legitimate estimates have the number of illegals at 10 to 12 million, less than one-third of Stern's number. Secondly, and most importantly, not all illegal aliens are Hispanic and not all Hispanics are illegals as Stern outrageously implies. The publication is guilty of either journalistic negligence or shameless racism. There are millions of Hispanics who have played by the rules and migrated to the United States legally and Stern magazine is frankly spitting in their faces.

But hey, what more could you expect of a nation like Germany that openly allows housing discrimination against minorities and then thinks it can lecture the United States on minority rights. You may throw up now...

Endnote: Stern can be contacted online here. Select "Kritik am Online-Angebot;" "Vorname, Name" = first name, last name; Email = your email address; Betreff = subject; Nachricht = message; Absenden = send

Stern Online: Can't Even Get Basic Facts Straight

(By Ray D.)

Stern Incorrectly Reports Karl Rove is Resigning...

Some in German media do a better job of reporting on the United States than others. Stern magazine, Germany's most widely read political weekly, is not one of them. When they aren't busily vilifying or stereotyping Americans, they're out re-writing the facts. This time it's a story on the personnel shakeup at the White House. According to Stern, Karl Rove is "going" and set to resign. That claim is false. Stern also claims (get a load of this) that it got the news via a Fox News report, but Fox News is clearly (and correctly) reporting that Rove is being reassigned, not resigning.

Stern headline: "Personnel Change at the White House: Bush's Chief Thinker Apparently Resigning"

This is just another example of sloppy, unprofessional coverage of the United States by one of Germany's most influential news sources.

Endnote: SPIEGEL ONLINE is also running a profoundly stupid headline labeling the shakeup "Trouble in the White House." Of course. How could anything involving the Bush White House ever be positive to the left-wing ideologues running that magazine?

First the White House staff is "exhausted" and then when there is a shakeup it is "trouble." Sometimes you just can't win...

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