Are coffins covered under the Fairness Doctrine?
The controversy over the proper treatment and consideration of our war dead and their coffins continues. This political football has been kicked around by partisans on both sides since the inception of the Iraq War. This is not exactly Fairness Doctrine subject matter. Or is it?
President Obama said last week that he is considering lifting the ban on photographs and videos at Dover, in place since the Persian Gulf War in 1991, raising fundamental questions about the impact of such images on the public morale in wartime.
For Obama, changing the policy would carry some political risk as he ramps up the war effort in Afghanistan with tens of thousands of fresh troops, increasing the likelihood of combat deaths that could produce photographs of numerous coffins arriving at one time at Dover, the sole U.S. port of entry for the remains. At the same time, Obama has advocated transparency in government, and continuing to hide the Dover ritual from public view conflicts with that principle as well as with public opinion on the issue, polls indicate.
“Showing these pictures would remind people of the war,” said S. Robert Lichter, director of the Center for Media and Public Affairs at George Mason University. But he added that “what turns people against a war is not knowledge that Americans are dying but the belief that they are not dying for something” worthwhile.
A majority of Americans favor allowing the public to see pictures of the military honor guard receiving the war dead at Dover, with about 60 percent responding positively and a third answering negatively in polls posing the question in 1991 and 2004.

