Censorship; the Canadian News Media and Afghanistan: A Historical Comparison with Case Studies
Abstract
Official censorship of the news media by the Canadian government
has only occurred twice in the history of the nation: during the First
and Second World Wars. Yet, the news media was quick to use the word
"censorship" when the first ground rules agreement for the news media was
developed by the Canadian Forces during the 1991 Persian Gulf War to restrict
what journalists aboard its ships could write about. Canada's involvement
in the International Security Assistance Force in Afghanistan provides
a rich opportunity to examine whether the Canadian news media faces either
official or unofficial censorship in its reporting on the war in Kandahar, the
Canadians' area of responsibility.
 case study research and to compare and contrast the Canadian news media's
coverage of selected Canadian combat operations during the First and Second
World Wars, the Korean War, the 1991 Persian Gulf War, the 1999 Kosovo air
war and in Afghanistan. This study suggests that journalists and the military
alike have both been involved in censorship at different times and to varying
degrees throughout these conflicts.
It  also provides an opportunity to conduct