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War Is Fun as Hell
Sheldon Rampton, AlterNet
August 2, 2005
Years of writing about public relations and propaganda has probably
made me a bit jaded, but I was amazed nevertheless when I visited
America's Army, an online video game website sponsored by the U.S.
Department of Defense (DoD). In its quest to find recruits, the
military has literally turned war into entertainment.
"America's Army" offers a range of games that kids can download or play
online. Although the games are violent, with plenty of opportunities to
shoot and blow things up, they avoid graphic images of death or other
ugliness of war, offering instead a sanitized, Tom Clancy version of
fantasy combat. Overmatch, for example, promises "a contest in which
one opponent is distinctly superior... with specialized skills and
superior technology ... OVERMATCH: few soldiers, certain victory" (more
or less the same overconfident message that helped lead us into Iraq).
Ubisoft, the company contracted to develop the DoD's games, also
sponsors the "Frag Dolls," a real-world group of attractive, young
women gamers who go by names such as "Eekers," "Valkyrie" and "Jinx"
and are paid to promote Ubisoft products. At a computer gaming
conference earlier this year, the Frag Dolls were deployed as booth
babes at the America's Army demo, where they played the game and posed
for photos and video (now available on the America's Army website). On
the Frag Dolls blog, Eekers described her turn at the "Combat Convoy
Experience":
"You have this gigantic Hummer in a tent loaded with guns, a rotatable
turret, and a huge screen in front of it. Jinx took the wheel and drove
us around this virtual war zone while shooting people with a pistol,
and I switched off from the SAW turret on the top of the vehicle to
riding passenger with an M4."
Non-virtual realities
Unsurprisingly, the babes-and-bullets fantasy world celebrated in these
games contrasts markedly with the experiences that real soldiers are
facing in Iraq. A report by the Pentagon's own Mental Health Advisory
Team -- completed in January but only released last week -- found that
54 percent of soldiers stationed in Iraq described morale in their
individual units as "low or very low." In recent testimony to the House
Armed Services Committee, U.S. Undersecretary for Defense David Chu,
who is in charge of personnel recruitment for the military, admitted
that "there is a reduced propensity to join the military among today's
youth. Due to the realities of war, there is less encouragement today
from parents, teachers, and other influencers to join the military."
Chu said parents and other "older advisers to young Americans" whose
views on military service were shaped by the Vietnam War have become a
chief obstacle to military recruiters, adding that he was also
"lamenting the failure" of the media to report all of the "positive
successes" of the military along with the news of bombings and growing
insurgency.
In reality, as Editor and Publisher reported the day before Chu gave
his testimony, the news media has actually been failing to report the
horrors of war, as "few graphic images from Iraq make it to U.S.
papers." And as Newsweek war correspondent Joe Cochrane observed just
three days before Chu gave his testimony, one reason for the lack of
positive news from Iraq is that reporters no longer dare venture out
from Baghdad's barricaded Green Zone "unless they're embedded with U.S.
soldiers. That wasn't the case early last year, when foreigners could
walk the streets outside the Green Zone, shop in local markets, and,
most important to journalists, talk to the Iraqi people. Those days are
long gone."
And even inside the Green Zone, the situation is scarcely better:
"Heavily armed troops guard government buildings and hospitals,
menacingly pointing their weapons at any one who approaches. Soldiers
manning checkpoints can use deadly force against motorists who fail to
heed their instructions, so the warning signs say, and I have no doubt
they'd exercise that right in a heartbeat if they felt threatened. All
this fear and tension, and inside a six square mile area that's
supposed to be safe."
Cochrane says he has "always been something of an optimist" but reached
his "breaking point" during his recent visit to Iraq. "Say what you
will about whether the United States was justified to invade this
country," he wrote. "We're well into the game, and it's too late to
argue over who got the ball first. But prior to April 2003, there were
no suicide bombers in Baghdad, there was 24-hour electricity and people
went out at night. Now, if you drive into town from the airport, there
is a legitimate possibility you will get killed."
School monitors
Military officials have also developed an elaborate PR strategy for
outreach to schools. In Fall 2004, the army published a guidebook for
high school recruiters. Colin McKay, a public relations pro in Canada,
took a look at and thought it could serve as a useful reference for
anyone needing a "step by step guide to building influence in a school
setting. ... It's full of practical student activities (tactics),
promotional opportunities for Army reps (brand building), and a
detailed explanation of how to track school performance, recruiter
visits and identify potential recruits (research and evaluation)."
Specific advice included the following:
• "Be so helpful and so much
a part of the school scene that you are in constant demand."
• "Cultivate coaches, librarians, administrative staff and teachers."
• "Know your student
influencers. Students such as class officers, newspaper and yearbook
editors, and athletes can help build interest in the Army among the
student body."
• "Distribute desk calendars to your assigned schools."
• "Attend athletic events at the HS. Make sure you wear your uniform."
• "Get involved with the parent-teacher association."
• "Coordinate with school
officials to eat lunch in the school cafeteria several times each
month."
• "Deliver donuts and coffee for the faculty once a month."
• "Coordinate with the homecoming committee to get involved with the parade."
• "Get involved with the
local Boy Scouts. ... Many scouts are HS students and potential
enlistees or student influencers."
• "Order personal
presentation items (pens, bags, mousepads, mugs) as needed monthly for
special events."
• "Attend as many school holiday functions or assemblies as possible."
• "Offer to be a timekeeper at football games."
• "Martin Luther King, Jr's
birthday is in January. Wear your dress blues and participate in school
events commemorating this holiday. ... February ... Black History
Month. Participate in events as available."
• "Contact the HS athletic
director and arrange for an exhibition basketball game between the
faculty and Army recruiters."
Grand theft privacy
The Pentagon's recruitment effort also entails massive
information-gathering efforts aimed at both students and their parents.
Under a little-publicized aspect of Bush's "No Child Left Behind"
education program, the military has gained what the Chicago Tribune
described as "unprecedented access to all high school directories of
upperclassmen -- a mother lode of information used for mass-mailing
recruiting appeals and telephone solicitations." Before No Child Left
Behind took effect in 2002, 12 percent of the nation's public high
schools -- some 2,500 -- denied the military access to student
databases. According to the Washington Post, "Recruiters have been
using the information to contact students at home, angering some
parents and school districts around the country."
In addition, the Post reported in June that the Pentagon has contracted
with BeNOW, a private database marketing company, to "create a database
of high school students ages 16 to 18 and all college students to help
the military identify potential recruits." The new database is
described on a Pentagon website as "arguably the largest repository of
16-to-25-year-old youth data in the country, containing roughly 30
million records." According to the military's Federal Register notice,
the information kept on each person includes name, gender, address,
birthday, e-mail address, ethnicity, telephone number, high school,
college, graduation dates, grade-point average, education level and
military test scores.
Questioned about the database, Undersecretary David Chu responded, "If
you don't want conscription, you have to give the Department of
Defense, the military services, an avenue to contact young people to
tell them what is being offered. And you would be naive to believe in
any enterprise that you're going to do well just by waiting for people
to call you."
"Then why not simply restrict the data fields to name, address, telephone number?" a reporter asked.
"The information that goes beyond that comes off of commercial lists.
Anybody could buy that information. We're not, this is not a government
file. This is off a commercial file, commercial providers. So we're not
intruding -- And typically that information has come off of forms
people have voluntarily filled out to a commercial source. So I don't
see the --"
"They may not have intended it to be the property of the U.S. military," the reporter observed.
Privacy rights groups have been sharply critical of the database.
According to a joint statement by a coalition of 8 privacy groups, the
database violates the Privacy Act, a law intended to reduce government
collection of Americans’ personal data. The database
plan, they wrote, "proposes to ignore the law and its own regulations
by collecting personal information from commercial data brokers and
state registries rather than directly from individuals."
The Electronic Privacy Information Center, one of the signers of the
joint statement, also issued its own separate statement: "The Privacy
Act and the DOD's internal regulations require the agency to collect
information directly from the citizen where possible," it explained.
"However, the database would be largely populated from other sources,
including from state motor vehicle department databases, school
enrollment data, and commercial information vendors. The main
commercial vendors that sell students' data, American Student List and
Student Marketing Group, were both pursued recently by consumer
protection authorities for setting up front groups that tricked
students into revealing their personal information."
Privacy groups also warned that data collected by the Pentagon could be
used for other purposes besides military recruiting. According to the
Washington Post, "The system also gives the Pentagon the right, without
notifying citizens, to share the data for numerous uses outside the
military, including with law enforcement, state tax authorities and
Congress." Defense Department spokesperson Ellen Krenke said the
Pentagon does not do this, but the Federal Register notice says the
military retains the right to do so.
© 2005 Independent Media Institute. All rights reserved.
View this story online at: http://www.alternet.org/story/23840/
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