Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Media chief tried to control information in a losing war

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Media chief tried to control information in a losing war

    The West Australian (Perth)
    January 28, 2011 Friday
    First Edition


    Media chief tried to control information in a losing war



    Barry Zorthian, 90, was the US government's chief media spokesman in
    Saigon during the Vietnam War. He won grudging respect from many
    reporters for the grace with which he responded to demands for a full
    accounting of the American war effort but he was trying to sell a war
    America was losing.

    It was America's first war without media censorship and Zorthian tried
    hard to establish credibility for the fight by controlling the flow of
    sensitive information rather than quashing it entirely. He believed in
    the war and thought Americans would support it if only the government
    could manage to explain the purpose of the bloody conflict.

    Zorthian was sent to Saigon in 1964 to improve relations with
    journalists, who had become increasingly disgusted with US officials
    and suspicious of the government's rosy version of events.

    As media adviser to the US commander in Vietnam, Gen. William
    Westmoreland, Zorthian started a daily briefing which gave reporters
    an opportunity to question government officials. But the briefings
    were so lacking in information that they became known as the Five
    O'Clock Follies.

    Barry Zorthian was born in 1920 to Armenian parents in Turkey. He was
    a boy when his family migrated to the US. After graduating from Yale
    University in 1941, he joined the Marine Corps and served in the
    Pacific.

    After the war, he got a law degree and spent 13 years with Voice of
    America. He worked in India for the State Department and then headed
    the US Public Affairs Office in Vietnam.

    Zorthian also co-ordinated psychological warfare operations. His
    agency dropped tonnes of propaganda leaflets; dampened anti-US rallies
    by ordering local palm readers to tell customers to avoid crowds and
    tried to frighten Vietcong troops by using loudspeakers on planes to
    broadcast funeral dirges through the jungle.

    After leaving Vietnam in 1968, Zorthian worked as a senior executive
    for Time and headed Time's government affairs division.

    He is survived by two sons and two grandchildren. Died: December 30.




    From: A. Papazian
Working...
X