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Home arrow Opinion arrow Journalism Loses an Icon
Journalism Loses an Icon Print E-mail
Written by John Berthelsen   
Tuesday, 24 April 2007
David Halberstam, whose Vietnam War reporting energized an entire press corps, dies in a car accident at 73


David Halberstam was killed Monday night in a car wreck south of San Francisco. The headline on the website for ESPN, the US sports channel, read “Famed Sports Author Halberstam Dies in Car Crash.”


Sports author? For another generation of Americans, the 73-year-old Halberstam, who did write several sports books later in life, was far better known for his reporting from Vietnam for the New York Times, starting in 1963. Halberstam was awarded the Pulitzer Prize, American journalism’s highest award, when he was 30, for seemingly single-handedly taking on the American government over another futile, ill-advised war in a faraway place. More than just reporting, what Halberstam did was to set the tone for journalism during the Vietnam War, encouraging a legion of skeptical and brave reporters to follow his lead.


Recognition of Halberstam’s 40-year-old reporting, and that of those who followed him, is important today, and ironic, in the light of a recent hour-long broadcast by commentator Bill Moyers on the American public television station PBS about the lack of skeptical reporting in the runup to the Iraq War. In a devastating 90-minute broadcast, Moyers delineated in reporters’ own words how the American media, day after day after day, simply bought without question the lies that the Bush administration was telling in its effort to sell the war to the world.


Certainly, the Iraqi invasion had its claque of advocates including the editorial pages of the Wall Street Journal, the Weekly Standard and right-wing outlets. But as Moyers shows, advocacy of the war went far beyond that into the news pages of the New York Times, the Washington Post and onto the major television networks in the face of clear evidence that the war was going to be a stunning disaster.


Hardly any Americans even knew where Vietnam was in 1963. But it was a time when American journalism saw as its responsibility the duty to send reporters in harm’s way to find out what was going on. The New York Times, the Washington Post, Newsweek, Time, ABC, CBS, NBC and dozens of other publications maintained fully staffed bureaus there without concern about the cost to the bottom line.


Certainly, the pressure they faced from the government in Washington, DC was enormous, first from the administration of John F. Kennedy and then, after he was assassinated, Lyndon B. Johnson, both of whom sought to curtail what they saw as negative reporting on the situation.


Halberstam, a skinny, hawk-faced reporter, didn’t stay in Saigon to listen to what were universally called the “5 o’clock follies,” the daily briefing from the Joint US Public Affairs Office. He got into little rattletrap taxis and rode down to the Mekong Delta to look around for himself, as did many of his colleagues.

Those colleagues included Francois Sully at Newsweek, who was kicked out of the country by the wife of then-dictator Ngo Dinh Diem, and who later returned after Diem was assassinated, only to die later in a helicopter crash. They included Larry Burroughs of Time and Life, whose stunning photos in 1965 brought the war home to readers of Life, and who was killed when flying into combat in Laos.


They included Merton D. Perry and Charles F. Mohr of Time Magazine. Time Publisher Henry Luce was a war hawk who refused to print their stories. Instead, Time printed a story in its press section saying reporters were getting their news out of the Jerome et Juliet bar in the Caravelle Hotel in Saigon. Mohr and Perry quit, Perry going to work for Newsweek and Mohr for the New York Times.


The US military certainly learnt its lesson. In the 1960s in Vietnam, reporters could get up at 3 or 4 or 5 a.m. pull on a helmet and flak jacket and take a taxi out to Tan Son Nhut Air Base and get onto a C-130 to go where they thought the action was. Once at the nearest military base, they jumped onto a Huey or a jeep and went out to where the shooting began. There was no such thing as embedding. It was an extraordinarily free atmosphere. If it was carnage at the besieged Marine base at Khe Sanh or the cut-and-run antics of the Army of the Republic of Vietnam, known as the ARVN – or the executions of hundreds of civilians at My Lai -- reporters went there to find out. Many paid for it with their lives, but they gave the US a clear and important picture of what Vietnam was about.


When the next war rolled around -- Desert Storm in 1991 -- that all stopped. The US military was never going to allow the press that freedom again, and largely it hasn’t. Reporters are largely herded like sheep in Iraq today, with considerable pressure to report only the good news. But more than that, as Moyers pointed out, the press post-9/11 lost its nerve. Partly it was because the wave of frantic patriotism following the explosions at the Pentagon and the World Trade Center meant that skeptical reporting was going to be greeted with death threats against the press.


Halberstam himself, in a recent interview with the liberal Nation Magazine, said that today the United States is what he called an “entertainment society. We want to be entertained more than we want to think. It's a serious problem. We're the most powerful nation in the world, but our network broadcast is increasingly about celebrity, sex, and scandal. It's less about substance than it used to be. It's not as good as it should be. And it makes us a more volatile society. We pay very little attention to the rest of the world, then when the rest of the world doesn't act in concert with us and salute us, we're very angry.”

The corporate ownership of newspapers today means that the kind of aggressive reporting that characterized journalism in the 1960s and 1970s, bringing down the presidency of Richard Nixon, who was forced to resign in 1973, is no longer possible. That kind of clamorous, insistent reporting by major news organizations in the face of public opinion, no matter how erroneous that opinion may be, fanned by jingoists waving the bloody shirt, causes editors and stockholders big headaches.


It is also important to note that reporting in Iraq today is far more difficult and dangerous than it ever was in Vietnam. Saigon in 1967 was a delight, a louche city at 3 am for hard-drinking reporters to find a bowl of pho, the ubiquitous beef-and-noodle soup, or a girl whom the novelist Graham Greene, in the novel The Quiet American, said would sing and twitter like birds on your pillow. Nobody ever worried about his or her personal safety. The restaurants, run by French-trained chefs, were brilliant. One writer described Vietnam as reeking of the mingled smell of shit and ambrosia, which was pretty accurate.

In Iraq, reporters have to travel with bodyguards. When they do manage to get out to talk to common Iraqis, the Iraqis are prone to breaking into a dead run rather than hanging around a target. Reporters are targets for kidnapping or death. An even 100 have died so far in Iraq – most of them Iraqis, far outstripping the 63 killed in Vietnam in 10 years of war.


But having said that, reporters, editors and publishers in the Vietnam era regarded it as their responsibility to tell what the story was. Today, as President Bush’s popularity descends into the low double digits, the American press is finally starting to find the backbone that had so clearly disappeared for so long.

It would be an exaggeration to say that Halberstam was single-handedly responsible for the tone of reporting on Vietnam, but he certainly was a model for others to follow, as were Malcolm Browne and Neil Sheehan of United Press International, Sully and many others who were there at the same time and were courageous, tough and skeptical, risking and sometimes losing their lives in the field to describe what the world needed to know.  They were an exceptional bunch.


Some critics such as Peter Braestrup and Denis Warner would conclude that it was the press that was responsible for the loss of Vietnam. And if reporting the truth was what caused Vietnam to fall, so be it. The world owed David Halberstam a lot for that.

 


Comments (13)Add Comment
0
Wow!! Well Writted Piece!
written by john franklin, April 24, 2007
What a well written well reasearched fine tribute! Thank You!
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A fallen hero
written by zjan, April 24, 2007
Journalism in America has really lost a hero, an icon an inspiration for those of us who followed in his footsteps. Today, even that beacon for excellent reportig - The NY Times is no longer unsullied and news has definitely become info tainment and entertainment. Where do we go from here?
0
...
written by Dennis Renner, April 24, 2007
Good story. Thanks
0
Well Done.
written by ChrisE, April 24, 2007
I became familiar with David Halberstam as a sports writer. Strangely enough, I had just a couple of days ago began re-reading "Summer of '49" which I had not read in a number of years. The sportsworld today is far too conscious of itself to be worth this kind of attention. I was only slightly familiar with his reporting in Vietnam which I recognize as kind of sad. Sad on my part to an extent. But sad in the sense that the world of Journalism either does not seem to recognize or does not seem to learn from it's historical greats.
0
Crisis of Integrity
written by Stephen McWilliams, April 24, 2007
The American organism was inoculated by the likes of David Halberstam in an effort to curb the virulent attack on the foundation of integrity that was America. Halberstam, as a force of nature, did all he could to protect our need for integrity; his death may sound the death knell in the fight to present a point of view based on a sense of personal integrity. Alas, perhaps too late. The constant exposure to the spoils from the loss of the war for our integrity has created immunity to efforts by current reporters within news organizations. An excellent article; it identifies the point in history when the fight for our integrity took a turn for the worse. Stop worrying about Global Warming, our loss of integrity will kill us all long before we drown.
0
Excellent work!
written by Jordan Hilsenbeck, April 24, 2007
It's reassuring to know that others are aware of how deeply our media has melted into the corporate entertainment "system". Here's to the reporters of the past; those who would rather come under fire for the truth than be told what to say in safety.
0
Excellent Tribute
written by balsaboy, April 24, 2007
We know, today, that the individual does matter and is capable of changing the world. John Berthelsens' concise tribute to the late David Halberstam pointedly shows this. Excellent Tribute John!
0
Wrong War the second time around and NO David Halberstam!
written by Ron Metz, April 24, 2007
In my youth at 19 I started reading David Halberstam's dispatches from Vietnam. His stories took courage to write and yes courage for his editors to stand up to the Administration publish. Your comments on todays American press ring true when you consider the biggest news story in the states is about an actor who yelled at his kid! Thank you for a well written and timely tribute.
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Commmie Propaganda
written by Jammac, April 24, 2007
YOU worthless piece of crap! You know nothing of history and what you do know has a real radical commie bent. I dismiss everything you've written here as lies and I hope you fail in all of life's endeavors.
0
...
written by Art McGinn, April 26, 2007
Beautifully written, cogent tribute to one of the best by one of the best, who saw it all first-hand. Art McGinn, in San Francisco
0
...
written by Ian Forsyth, May 25, 2007
Excellent piece. Halberstam seems to be last of a kind. Hopefully some good can come of his death and contmeporary reporters can gain their heretofore absent sense of courage and healthy, analytical follow-up.
0
Nice One...
written by Steves, August 22, 2007
In the not so distant past, the media had a tradition of upholding simple but very important human values such as truth & integrity, and exposing those people who abused their power and who flouted and disregarded these basic human values. Now it seems that most of our media is controlled by the very people who, in that not so distant past, would have been exposed by it! Have we really become so brainwashed & naive that we believe everything we are asked to? Haven't we yet learned that the truth as presented to us on a TV screen may not be the full and complete truth and may not even be close to it? Is it not the duty and responsibility of every one of us to question any information which is put forward to us as the truth before we accept it as such? Perhaps people of my generation were lucky to have been exposed to the likes of Halberstam. To see (and feel!)the power that real truth holds, when it is made known to all and understood by all, is a remarkable thing. Also, once you have been exposed to the real thing it is much easier to identify any fake versions which may be presented to you! I believe we need some Halberstam's in the world today. People of integrity and courage are needed to properly expose the false, shallow,and crass nature of our present day society so that it may be changed for the better. I will be a very happy man if I live to see that day!

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