Reporting war in Iraq, from Al Jazeeras point of view
By Steve Erickson
A first-rate film, Control Room arrives in theaters in the wake of revelations about American torture of Iraqi detainees. Director Jehane Noujaim films the workings of Al Jazeera, the Arabic TV station, from the onset of Americas invasion of Iraq until the fall of Baghdad.
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Photo by Magnolia Pictures
An Al Jazeera reporter, as seen in Control Room, a documentary about the war in Iraq, reports from the networks studio in Qatar.
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Al Jazeera has been strongly criticized as a font of anti-American propaganda by right-wing American politicians. However, the network is not exactly beloved by most Arab governments either, though the network, often termed independent, is in fact funded in part by the Qatari emir. The journalists Noujaim interviews dont hate the United States. Instead, they express an ambivalence towards it, voicing respect for the ideals of democracy and freedom of speech, which theyd like to bring to the Arab world, while expressing the utmost cynicism toward U.S. foreign policy.
Beginning with Pres. George W. Bushs announcement to invade Iraq, Control Room depicts everyday life at the networks offices in Qatar. The arc of the invasion provides the storyline. Noujaim introduces us to a memorable cast of characters. The three most prominent are Al Jazeera producer Samir Khader, journalist Hassan Ibrahim, and American military press officer Lt. Josh Rushing.
None of these men sees the world in black and white. Khader speaks of exchanging the Arab nightmare for the American dream and says that hed be willing to work for Fox News and wants his children to go to college in the U.S. Ibrahim expresses his faith in the American peoples resistance to their governments actions. Khader is a dapper, somewhat cynical man, while Ibrahim is more despondent. Watching footage of the bombing of Baghdad being bombed, Khader moans, Democracy.
Rushing, in contrast, believes in the American military mission, while well aware of his own limitations and biases. He confesses feeling nauseated by images of dead American soldiers, and less affected by footage of dead Iraqis.
Al Jazeeras depiction of the dead and injured proves to be the most controversial aspect of its war coverage. The network provided a perspective missing from the American media a real sense of the wars consequences for civilians. Embedded Western journalists couldnt help but give a sanitized perspective. Al Jazeera shows blood and guts. Control Room includes many of these grisly images, which are not for the faint of heart. Such coverage raises the specter of sensationalism, a possibility the film unfortunately never addresses.
Whatever ones position on the war, its valuable for Americans to try to understand the rationale behind popular disdain for our country in the Arab world. The blunt skepticism Kahder, Ibrahim, and other Al Jazeera journalists bring to their discussion of American policy are revealing. Of particular interest is the fact that three of the journalists argue that the images of Iraqis tearing down the statue of Saddam Hussein were staged, claiming that the crowd who greeted American troops didnt speak Arabic with Iraqi accents. Several times the film underscores the fact that most of the Arab world equates America with Israel, and the occupation of Baghdad with that of the West Bank and the Gaza Strip.
Noujaim, who previously co-directed the dot-com documentary, Startup.com, was born in Egypt and educated in the U.S., where she now lives.