
Indian TV plumbed new depths of one-sidedness and jingoism by showing an appalling lack of objectivity. In the process it made monkeys out of us all — viewers, participants in talk shows, and politicians. In fact, I would go further. If anyone brought India and Pakistan close to the brink of war in December, it was not our usually foot-in-the-mouth politicians or hawkish security advisers. It was TV.
As a media representative myself, I am not trying to say that newspapers or bloggers were any less jingoist (for a while, anyway), but TV was quite something else. It just hijacked the agenda and relentlessly shoved war hysteria down our — I must say willing — throats. So while nobody was particularly objective in his or her assessment of the situation in the initial days, TV was the pits.
Consider how a typical Indian TV discussion proceeds. The anchor raises loaded questions: Is Pakistan in denial? Will their government act to arrest the terrorists? Should we go to war over the terror attacks?
The opening salvo, usually targeted at a Pakistani journalist or ex-general, will be a ‘have-you-stopped-beating-your-wife’ kind of question. “Has Pakistan become a rogue state? Why should we believe you are not lying, General?”
These may be genuine questions for which we need answers, but, at the human level, they are ill-mannered and insensitive. This kind of question-mongering drove an initially sympathetic Pakistani liberal media back into its shell, giving room for the Pak army to ratchet up the hysteria against us. It took pressure from the outside world to cool things down.
The other problem with Indian TV is it can make nuanced comments look dangerous. Take Pranab Mukherjee’s oft-quoted statement that “all options are open” when deciding India’s response to the Mumbai terror strikes.
Now all options merely mean all options; at best, they hint at something drastic, but they do not mean something specific like war. The statement was only meant to keep the Pakistanis guessing, not a direct threat to bomb them. But in the hands of TV anchors, that statement — repeated a hundred times daily — gets stretched to mean only war. They essentially boil it down to one option — the military option. So Pranab was made to look like a fool when he had to back off.
Experts were reduced to caricatures. Let’s say you ask an Indian defence expert a loaded question like this: “Now that Pakistan has refused to do anything about terror, isn’t it time to stop talking and take tough action?” Few experts will straightaway say no, we should not act. So they will begin by agreeing, “but…” The buts, unfortunately, get drowned when the other participants butt in or TV takes a break for ads. In short, the anchor can get an expert to agree on air when he has done nothing of the kind.
None of these are actual quotes from TV programmes, but they give you an idea. The handling of ex-Pakistani generals and journalists showed lack of sensitivity. By asking insulting questions that could have driven any Pakistani to rage against India, the TV anchor acted like an inquisitor.
Anchors made it clear that we Indians are the noble guys, and Pakistanis are the bad guys — never mind the fact that Pakistani journalists have been making disclosures to favour our position (Geo TV, for example).
Worse, they converted urban India’s initial anger with our bumbling politicians and ineffective leaders into an Indo-Pak hate fest. It was probably TV-driven expectations about war that drove Manmohan Singh to make intemperate remarks about Pakistan being a terrorist state — however true that may be.
In short, TV brought us to the brink of war. Time they did a rethink.
