by Hekmat Aboukhater from ResponsibleStatecraft Website
how 2,500 films and shows have been weaponized
to promote war...
...explained Elmer Davis, a renowned CBS broadcaster, who had just been named director of the Office of War Information (OWI), a Pentagon program created on June 13, 1942, six months after Pearl Harbor.
Later in 1953, as the Cold War was in full swing, President Dwight D. Eisenhower commented on the burgeoning partnership between Hollywood and the Pentagon by stating that,
Thus, the president who coined the term "military industrial complex," was, in fact, one of the first major proponents of what would later be called the military entertainment complex or the militainment industry.
Today, this militainment industry is thriving.
From Top Gun to the Marvel franchise and even shows like Extreme Makeover, the Pentagon has been able to shape the narratives of more than 2,500 movies and TV shows.
No one knows this better than Roger Stahl, the University of Georgia's Communications Studies Department Head, and author of Militainment, Inc. - War, Media and Popular Culture.
With University of Bath lecturer and Workers Party Candidate Matthew Alford, investigative journalist Tom Secker, and others, Stahl created "Theaters of War," a concise 87-minute documentary in which he methodically dissects our modern militainment industry, showing the behemoth it has become.
Responsible Statecraft talked to Stahl, Alford, and Secker about,
Scrapyard soft sales on living room screens
He added that,
In the film, Stahl explained that through the OWI's successor, the Entertainment Liaison Office, the Department of Defense conditions the loaning of weapons systems on having complete access to the studio's script for a new movie.
Once the script is vetted and returned with notes, script changes, or even broad plot alterations, the studio can either accept the changes in whole, or lose access to the military's toys.
This skewed relationship can lead to brazen
propaganda.
In 2017's "The Fate of the Furious," the eighth installment of the Fast & Furious franchise, rapper and actor Ludacris reads out a 30-word seeming-advertisement hyping Textron Systems' remote-operated Ripsaw tank.
It turns out Ludacris' lines were written not by a scriptwriter, but by the Entertainment Liaison Office.
Similar covert marketing scenes are visible in hundreds of blockbuster movies, from the Transformers franchise - one of the characters, Starscream is an F-22 fighter jet - to the much-vaunted Marvel movies.
While the audience is subjected to obvious sales pitches, in some cases the Pentagon is also promoting faulty and useless products.
Lockheed Martin's F-35 fighter jet has been deemed,
Yet, the History Channel's "Secret access: Superpower 2011" documentary paints a different picture.
The short series showcases the F-35 as the only path towards maintaining U.S. militaristic dominance, and in "Man of Steel," Superman himself flies by a fleet of F-35s during his battle with the ruthless Kryptonians.
According to Stahl, all of this was made possible by the Entertainment Liaison Office.
Tom Secker, the investigative journalist
labeled a "vexatious requester" by the Pentagon due to his
incessant barrage of FOIA requests, shared the hitherto
unpublished
Production Assistance Agreement Contract for "Mission
Impossible 7 - Dead Reckoning."
According to Stahl, these scenes are intentionally designed to,
A connection that could ease the blow in a near future scenario during which the viewer might realize how useless and expensive the F-35, Osprey and other systems like the LCS program have turned out to be.
This serves to,
Creating scenes like these means, according to Alford,
The public, in turn, will be less likely to see,
Promote, whitewash and justify engagements
While the Pentagon once explained its stated aims for its involvement in the entertainment industry as a directive to promote,
...these directives changed in 1988.
The new aims have the collaboration promoting,
One of the most disturbing scenes in "Theaters of War" comes from the 2017 film "The Long Road Home."
In one scene, a military colonel claims that
the 2004 Sadr City operation during the Iraq War, which resulted
in the deaths of 22 servicemen and 940 Iraqis, was necessary to
rid two million Iraqis from the oppression of a dictator and to
provide them with a "better future." This scene and others like it have one implicit aim according to Alford,
Whether it's,
...these covert militainment campaigns have largely worked.
More recently the second season of "Jack Ryan" has lovable Jim from "The Office" working through the CIA to topple a nuclear-armed Venezuelan dictator in hopes of installing a magnanimous liberal populist.
The season aired around the same time Washington was parading Juan Guaido as Venezuela's new leader.
The militainment industry's costs
In giving an overall diagnosis of the problem, Stahl mentioned that the issue lies with the,
...a cost that was briefly summarized at the end of the documentary as reaching $8 trillion in the period after 9/11 alone.
With a sixth failed audit, a military budget that's rapidly nearing $1 trillion and a new nuclear ICBM system on the books, the influence of the militainment industry is undeniably sinister and more present than ever.
Still, Theaters of War does offer a glimmer of hope: transparency.
Stahl, Alford, Secker and others in the film recommend that every movie or show the Pentagon works with displays a prominent disclaimer at the beginning, not buried in the credits,
Viewers then will know that what they are about to watch is, at least partially, "a propaganda idea," as Elmer Davis puts it...
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