At the dawn of the 21st century the “War on Terror” ushered in an era in which some were besieged by wars and others by war-related imagery. For the fortunate who live outside of war zones, mostly in the Global North and West, the experience of war has been primarily a mediated one. With the advent of digital imagery and its many evolving and developing technological transmutations, the possibilities of reproduction, representation, manipulation, and circulation have grown exponentially in the past twenty years. Yet in the grand scheme of human communication history, the “pictorial turn” is a relatively recent phenomenon that requires further analysis.Footnote 1 In this article, I unpack and analyze some of the key media moments from the vast visual lexicon and iconography of the “War on Terror” to reveal its scaffolding and machinations and offer counterstrategies of resistance. I argue that the “War on Terror” is the orchestrated sum of literal and figurative imagery, a coordinated public relations disinformation media campaign designed to hide real wars and their true destruction and costs.
The media has been a key site for production and consumption of knowledge about the “War on Terror.” In fact, the “War on Terror,” as a unifying organizing trope that renders a complex messy prolonged and multipronged military apparatus stretching across vast space and time into a legible singular logic of a just and necessary global war, is a media construct. That does not mean that the “War on Terror” does not exist outside of the media; it does. In fact much of it is concealed from the public. Rather what I, and others before me, have contended is that most people's understanding of the “War on Terror” is constructed through the military industrial media complex (MIMC). In his controversial book, The Gulf War Did Not Take Place, Jean Baudrillard, using the first Iraq War as a case study, argued that the media representations of war, via new technological optics of seeing the war, have created a simulacrum of war, wherein its signs, symbols, and images no longer represented the real war.Footnote 2 Worse yet, this simulacrum of war becomes its own entity and reality, what Baudrillard called the “hyperreal.” The real dimensions and costs of the wars are overtaken by its glossy projections and shiny simulacra. Therefore, to fully understand the “War on Terror,” how it operates and how we, as spectators and citizens, have been brought into it, we have to unpack and demystify the media spectacle that is the “War on Terror.”
As an Afghan American refugee of war, I, along with my family and communities, have experienced many of the regimes of real and representational violence that mark the “War on Terror.” As a then New Yorker, it was horrifying to see the Twin Towers collapse from my Brooklyn rooftop and then see my country of birth attacked by my adopted country in retaliation. I knew that life for people from the MENASA (Middle East, North Africa, and South Asia) region was never going to be the same. The xenophobia was palpable in my building, on my block, in the city, and across the country. Thousands of Arabs and South Asians were forced to abandon their enclaves in large US cities due to domestic surveillance.Footnote 3 Islamophobic hate crimes against minority and immigrant populations peaked with the news cycle.Footnote 4
My work in the two decades since has focused, in large part, on unpacking the regimes of violence that flowed from this event. I have analyzed the gap between the real violence of killer drones and their public relations discourse and virtual optics to demonstrate that modern warfare has become a smoke-and-mirrors spectacle that distracts people with dazzling special effects, while the real blood, flesh, and gore are hidden from view. Activists, artists, and researchers have been jamming the simulacra of war by exposing the realities of drone warfare and humanizing its victims.Footnote 5 Elsewhere, I have shown how the security state apparatus and its military industrial media complex incorporates African-Americans and casts them against other people of color in the MENASA.Footnote 6 I posit the concept of spectatorial solidarity as a way of realigning empathies between and among marginalized groups by identifying how imperial violence and national violence are intricately linked, and therefore our liberation is linked. Building on this work, in what follows I provide an expanded set of strategies for facilitating spectatorial solidarity and unified movements through critical and empathic viewership.
Making the “War on Terror” Reel
US media has a long history of being embedded in the US government's war-PR machine, working in tandem with its various intelligence and military institutions.Footnote 7 During World War I and World War II, the US government created the Committee on Public Information and the Office of War Information, respectively, agencies dedicated to producing pro-war propaganda through motion pictures and the news.Footnote 8 This precedent continued until the Vietnam War, which is often touted as the first and last significant break from the status quo complicity of the US media. During the so-called first television war, images of horror were beamed into the living rooms of Americans. Many media scholars have argued that this brief window of freedom of the press is what shifted public opinion against the war.Footnote 9
With the Gulf War or the first Iraq War, the US government, in conjunction with the news industry, began to control the vantage point of viewers and delimit the scope of the war via new technologies of long-distance viewing and killing.Footnote 10 Daily news coverage consisted of bombardment and missile strikes seen from a distance through night vision cameras and cameras on bombers. These new methods have persisted and evolved throughout the “War on Terror,” along with the development of new military and sensory technologies. For example, with improvements in the speed, surveillance, and bombing capacity of drones, their use steadily increased during the “War on Terror.” In fact armed and weaponized drones were first used in Afghanistan in the aftermath of the 9/11 attacks. The “War on Terror” also became the testing ground for other war technology: In April 2017 the Trump administration dropped the Massive Ordnance Air Blast (MOAB) bomb, otherwise known as the “Mother of all Bombs,” the most powerful nonnuclear bomb, on Afghanistan. US news outlets only showed a five- to ten-second, black-and-white, long distance, state-sanctioned aerial clip of the bombing that a nearby surveillance drone had recorded. The government stated there were no civilian casualties and quarantined the entire area.Footnote 11 As a result, there was no on-the-ground coverage of the aftermath of the bomb: the scale of the destruction and its human, animal, and environmental costs.Footnote 12
At the same time, a variety of factors have led to an overreliance on embedded journalism and prepackaged and managed wartime news, which further privilege the perspective of agents of the state. Studies have shown that embedded journalists, not surprisingly, tend to form relationships with the troops that they are embedded with and therefore tend to report from their perspectives.Footnote 13 Therefore, via mechanisms of scopic control and framing, front line reporting management, and erasure, the mainstream US news media often supports the dominant viewpoints of the US security state apparatus.
In conjunction with the news-based media, an entertainment genre has emerged around the “War on Terror” that also privileges the voice and perspectives of the agents of empire at the expense of those on the receiving end of violence.Footnote 14 This genre has its roots in a longer genealogy of racist representations of MENASA people, one that began over a century ago, with the beginning of the Hollywood film industry carrying the torch of colonial European racism.Footnote 15 The volume and scope of negative portrayals has skyrocketed following 9/11, with the rise of what can be called the “War on Terror” film and TV genre.
The “War on Terror” film and TV genre uses four distinctive features of diegetic world-making that work together to justify US wars abroad. These features, which will be familiar to critical scholars of the Middle East, were already at play in the decades prior but took on new paradigmatic qualities after 9/11. The features include (1) strictly framing people in the MENASA region within the simplistic binary opposition of good (the US security apparatus) versus evil (Islamic extremists and terrorists); (2) rehashing colonial stereotypes of despotism and barbarism to represent the Global East and South as exotic and foreboding places in need of punishment, intervention, and saving; (3) casting the victim as perpetrator and oppressor, and vice versa, thus displacing guilt and empathy; (4) allowing some Middle Eastern people and other people of color the opportunity to move to the “good” side, and vice versa, thus permitting a degree of mobility across this divide while narratively reinforcing the binary and the hierarchy of imperial power.
The long-running television series 24, which was released two months after the 9/11 attacks, popularized what has been called the “ticking bomb scenario,” a filmic motif that uses real-time split-screen storytelling techniques to enhance the effect of impending doom.Footnote 16 This device is a favorite discursive tool of torture apologists, who use the race against the clock in a doomsday scenario in which an impending nuclear bomb or another weapon of mass destruction has been activated to justify the use of torture to those who rightly have moral and ethical concerns about it. Political scientist Darius Rejali has demonstrated that in reality terrorist acts rarely involve ticking bomb scenarios, and, in the rare cases they might, that the efficacy of torture is dubious in preventing such acts. Furthermore, these filmic depictions obscure the historical reality that democratic countries such as the US, Britain, and France, which purport to champion human rights internationally, have been at the cutting edge of inventing and spreading new torture methods.Footnote 17
Likewise, Homeland, another long-running US TV series, based on the Israeli show Hatufim (Abductees), advocates for US drone warfare and reframes perpetrators as victims and vice versa. The two marine snipers, Nick Brody, along with his African American friend, Thomas Walker, are captured by al-Qaeda. Brody suffers from post-traumatic stress disorder and a psychosexual disorder because of the torture he endured and because he was forced to beat his friend Walker nearly to death (which the viewer sees through Brody's numerous flashbacks), thereby outsourcing torture and racism. Meanwhile, the main protagonist, Carrie Mathison, a CIA agent and Brody's love interest, struggles with bipolar disorder and being taken seriously as a female agent with a mental illness.
Rather than underestimating the trauma of war on soldiers and other front line agents of the US security apparatus, I want to suggest that the vivid depictions of the marines being tortured and Carrie's struggles as a women in a male dominant space compounded with her mental illness operate here as empathetic devices to emotively connect viewers to the agents of the state and absolve them of their own violence. For example, when Carrie Mathison advocates for the use of drones, earning the moniker “Drone Queen,” she has already been ascribed with a level of feminist empathy, thus mitigating the violence of her actions and by extension the violence of the US security state.Footnote 18 Whose vantage point and pain is prioritized reflects whose life is “grievable” in the broader “War on Terror.”Footnote 19
The Academy Award–winning films The Hurt Locker (Kathryn Bigelow, 2008), written by an embedded Iraq War journalist, Zero Dark Thirty (Kathryn Bigelow, 2012), based on CIA and Navy Seals accounts, and American Sniper (Clint Eastwood, 2014), based on the autobiography of an Iraq War veteran also have been critiqued for promoting torture and presenting empathic perspectives of US soldiers at the expense of overshadowing or negating the experiences of the Afghan and Iraqi people. American Sniper echoes Rules of Engagement (William Friedkin, 2000), a pre-9/11 film that also justifies the killing of MENASA children. In the former we see a little boy who may have explosives attached to him through the crosshairs of the American sniper's rifle, and in the latter we see a little girl with a missing leg pointing a gun at the camera.
The political economy of these films, including their production and funding, is entangled with the security state apparatus in a variety of ways, such as having US Department of Defense personnel directly involved as consultants, writers, or producers. So it is not surprising that many of the “War on Terror” film and television programs are told from the perspectives of the agents of the security state, and in many cases are based on the life stories of soldiers and other military personnel. This is accomplished not only narratively but, as in the news media, the actual optics privilege the view of bombs, snipers, and drones and frame people from the MENASA through the crosshairs of a “weaponized gaze.”Footnote 20 Conversely, when we see lethal weapons pointed at the camera and therefore at the audience, people from the MENASA wield them.
Having Middle Eastern people involved in the production process of mainstream “War on Terror” media does not automatically generate a perspective shift. Instead, the resultant productions often operate within the same hegemonic structures and worldview. For example, the sitcom the United States of AI is created by an Iranian American scholar and has three Afghan Americans on its production crew; yet it upholds the same simplistic good-versus-evil binary. Although the main character Al, short for Awalmir, is one of the good guys, a dutiful interpreter and translator for the US Army, he is represented as an exception. The sitcom maintains the dominant tropes of Afghanistan as a despotic and savage place and the US as altruistic, democratic, and just. As I and others have written elsewhere, by foregrounding cultural authenticity and inclusion, the show appeals to liberal sensibilities while foreclosing critique of the imperial structures and imaginaries that underlie its world-making.Footnote 21
Conclusion: How to Constitute Empathy in the Age of Global Terror
As a media scholar and refugee of war, I wonder about how war imagery and violence can resonate so differently for different groups. Is experiential knowledge a necessary condition for empathy and action? Do you need to be a refugee of war with vivid traumatic memories of being on the receiving end of bombs to feel compassion for the pain of others being bombed? Or, as the disparities in the Euro-American coverage of the war in Ukraine and in the reception of Ukrainian and MENASA refugees in Europe underscores, is being of the same racial, ethnic, gender, sexuality, or class identity a priori for feeling spectatorial solidarity? How can we extend the reach of spectatorial solidarity to embrace those outside of our own identity markers and affiliations? I will conclude by offering a few suggestions.
I have shown how the US news–based media represents wars abroad through the state's securitized gaze and lens while simultaneously censoring front line and on-the-ground reporting of wars abroad. This, in conjunction with the racist optics of the “War on Terror” entertainment industry, has contributed to spectators deeming MENASA people worthy of retribution and violence based on a false sense of threat and misplaced feelings of having been wronged by them. Therefore one of the main ways to disrupt the militarized gaze and its myopic focus is to seek ways to expand our viewpoints both literally and imaginatively to incorporate as many different vantage points as possible. Attaining this multifocal point of view requires a multipronged approach.
The most straightforward approach is for viewers to take an oppositional stance and approach media through the lens of refusal, rejecting outright the false and simplistic binary oppositions of good (the US security apparatus) versus evil (Islamic extremists and terrorists).Footnote 22 As feminist and postcolonial scholars have shown, binary oppositions are ethnocentric and maintain the hierarchies of power, defining marginalized groups in opposition to those in positions of power, in this case the righteousness and bravery of the agents of the security state. These binaries in conjunction with the new optics of war not only misrepresent messier geopolitical realities but render everyone outside of these two categories invisible. Indeed, as many scholars of the Middle East have pointed out, there is a long history of US allyship with Islamic extremists and despots in the MENASA, from Afghanistan to Iran to Iraq to Pakistan.
Furthermore, beyond the polarizing false binary of “us versus them,” there are many people across all sectors of society and across nationalities who risk their lives every day to lay the foundations for democracy, self-determination, and peace. Therefore, along with rejecting binaries, we must insistently seek the stories and accounts of all of those who fall in between. Just as media has been at the root of the problem, it also can be a solution in this regard. Although corporate media have been intricately linked with dominant ideologies and exclusionary and racist nationalisms, alternative forms of media have been effectively mobilized for social change and creating counter-publics. Diverse and marginalized groups have used the media to negotiate and contest representations of themselves, while also making their own narratives a basis for cultural and political claims. There are many alternative media and media outlets and platforms that offer news, films, television, music, art, and podcasts that do not conform to reductive binary depictions and privilege instead divergent viewpoints, including first-person accounts from those subjected to war and whistleblowers.
Whereas corporate media has often been complicit with the US war machine, a series of daring post–9/11 films and documentaries has been instrumental in exposing the hand of the US security state abroad and presenting alternative viewpoints, such as Syriana (Stephen Gaghan, 2005); Road to Guantanamo (Mat Whitecross and Michael Winterbottom, 2006); Taxi to the Dark Side (Alex Gibney, 2007); Dirty Wars (Richard Rowley, 2013); Wounds of Waziristan (Madiha Tahir, 2013); Citizen Four (Laura Poitras, 2014); Snowden (Oliver Stone, 2016); and Official Secrets (Gavin Hood, 2019).Footnote 23 As numerous human rights reports have documented, the US “War on Terror”–related military actions have had a devastating physical and psychological impact on the populations subjected to that violence.
Another set of films, either made by people from the MENASA and its diaspora communities or told from their perspectives, employs a first-person account with feminist, decolonial, and queer sensibilities to speak and push back against the dominant MIMC representations of Middle Easterners. These films include my own Postcards from Tora Bora (Wazhmah Osman and Kelly Dolak, 2007); Lida Abdul's White House (2005); Norman Schwarzkopf Made Me Gay (Sara Zia Ebrahimi, 2012); The FBI Blew Up My Ice Skates (Sara Zia Ebrahimi and Lindsey Martin, 2016); The Feeling of Being Watched (Assia Bendaoui, 2018); and Flee (Jonas Poher Rasmussen, 2021). Other counter-hegemonic multimedia projects include Index of the Disappeared (Chitra Ganesh and Mariam Ghani, 2004–present);Footnote 24 Aman Mojadidi's Jihadi Gangster (2010); the War and Jang series (Laimah Osman, 2012–present); and Soup Boys (Pretty Drones) (Heems, 2012).
By asserting alternative representations of MENASA people who have feminist, decolonial, or queer agency, these media have, to varying degrees, disrupted the tropes of the “War on Terror” MIMC. The degree to which these artists, musicians, and filmmakers have challenged imperial and masculinist projects and therefore the binary and assimilationist discourses of national, gender/sexual, racial, and genre conventions has had a direct impact on both the scale of their circulation and their commercial and critical success or lack thereof. Although some of these films have won awards and popular acclaim, many have not. The “War on Terror” media industry, on the other hand, is booming financially, with no signs of slowing down. Therefore, reading racist media critically and oppositionally is a key method to building spectatorial solidarity. Once we understand how the media text, be it news-based or fiction, is inscribed within the broader political economy and infrastructures of empire and power, we can expand our scopic vision to have a more holistic vantage point and in this way expand our reach and empathy to those on the receiving end of violence as well. Building spectatorial solidary is a fundamental step toward building real movements of solidarity.
Acknowledgments
The research and open access for this article was supported by a Jack G. Shaheen Research Grant sponsored by the Hagop Kevorkian Center for Near Eastern Studies and the Asian/Pacific/American Institute at New York University. I especially wish to thank James Ryan, Amita Manghnani, Laura Chen-Schultz, and Shannon O'Neill. I would also like to thank the editors of the Disentangling the War on Terror roundtable, Marya Hannun, Annika Schmeding, and Ping-hsiu Lin as well as Joel Gordon for their thoughtful edits and suggestions.