And yet, unlike the Pentagon Papers, the Afghanistan Papers are not making a splash. Released during the week the Democrats were finalizing impeachment, the series barely registered as news. Adam Wunische, a fellow at the Quincy Institute who covers Afghanistan and the Middle East, told me, “When the Afghan Papers came out on Monday, I was checking social media for ‘Afghanistan’ and ‘Afghan war.’ None of that was trending at all. It’s very easy for the public to just not pay attention. It’s not a pressing issue, especially with all the other exciting news that’s going on in politics these days.”
1. There is no real anti-war sentiment in the USA these days. In fact, it's considered un-patriotic to oppose war. That was also true during Vietnam, but the bar for acceptance of this stance has been lowered by the media. In fact, the media itself is complicit.
2. War isn't particularly dangerous for Americans these days. Even at the height of US military campaigns, the number of body bags is small compared to Vietnam. The article mentions that we don't currently have a draft. And I think the perception is that Afghanistan is a minor skirmish that is just taking a very long time.
3. The motivation of the media has changed in the last 50 years, and this is really big. It used to be that timeliness, accuracy and thoroughness were how news outfits distinguished themselves and earned money. These days, "news" is a tiny portion of the media empires. "News" is more a mechanism of control than of business necessity. Almost a loss leader. There's money in the control of information and the management of perception, but it is less direct than viewership, advertising and subscriptions.
Note that it is WaPo that is breaking the "Afghan papers". WaPo isn't part of some media empire. They, too, have perceptions to manage for the plutocrats, but maybe with the CIA diversifying its technical contracts, Bezos isn't motivated any more to carry water for the MIC?
In an ideal world, or even a simply money-motivated one, Rachel Maddow would collect tonight's $30,000 paycheck railing against military deception with the same fervor as she did the possibility of Russia turning your electricity off on the coldest day of the year, but the empire that pulls her strings doesn't want that of her.