When the War Disappears From the Front Page, so Does Our Seriousness

In today’s world, news organizations do not merely report on matters already in public view, they train public attention through selection and repetition. Western states, by avoiding swift action in support for Ukraine may have desensitized the populace and made them more vulnerable

Kyiv Post
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When the War Disappears From the Front Page, so Does Our Seriousness

Ukraine was on the minds of many at Chalke, England’s largest history festival, in the last week of June. The war came up in talk after talk, and Ukraine’s diaspora tent, “Reborn,” drew steady interest, yet in Britain’s daily news cycle, Ukraine can already feel far away.

Adélie Pojzman-Pontay and Francis Dearnley, of “The Telegraph’s Ukraine: the Latest,” took time on the festival’s sidelines to consider whether people are still interested, and what it takes to keep Ukraine on the front page.

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Pojzman-Pontay described an audience of their podcast divided roughly into thirds: one-third in the UK, one-third in the US, and one-third in the rest of the world, “primarily the rest of the English-speaking world.” Across those regions, Ukraine has slipped down the news agenda, but Pojzman-Pontay said listeners are “sad to see it drop from the headlines, even if they understand why.”

That sentiment captures the peculiar politeness of liberal neglect. People understand why editors make room for Gaza, Iran and the next crisis, they understand that attention is finite, they understand the pressures of the newsroom, yet the result is still absurd. A war shaping Europe’s future is treated as something one must go looking for, like a niche interest.

Pojzman-Pontay put it plainly: “They [the listeners] understand what is at stake for Ukraine, but also for the rest of the world in terms of geopolitics and defense... Sometimes they have no other source for daily updates.” The BBC, she said, had done “Ukrainecast” daily, then moved it to twice a week, and “wrapped up the project in December last year.”

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In today’s world, news organizations do not merely report on matters already in public view, they train public attention through selection and repetition. A story repeated daily tells citizens that it demands utmost attention. A story reduced, softened or dropped tells them that this no longer requires daily moral or political energy. Then, politicians rediscover the old mantras of “defense is not a vote-winner,” that “nobody wins elections on foreign policy” and the circle closes.

Perhaps the situation is more dire in the US. Dearnley commented: “As the coverage of the European theatre has declined in the United States, we have acquired many listeners and viewers as a consequence of that.” People even felt strongly enough to message in. “One of the most common emails we get in our inbox is: ‘Thank God somebody is doing this in English, because our media is not covering it in this kind of level of granular detail.’”

There is something wrong when gratitude for what should be a natural feature of programming replaces expectation. A serious society should not be thankful that someone, somewhere, still explains a European war in English.

A public that is not taught the difference between Ukraine and the Russian imperial story will not understand why the war matters.

The paradox is that the audience has not vanished. Pojzman-Pontay said their audience keeps growing, especially since the shift to a video-first product. “Sadly,” she added, “that is also the world we live in: it is driven by algorithms.” So even Ukraine must now fight for attention in the language of platforms. The war has not become less important. It has become easier to scroll past, and, perhaps, given the Kremlin’s efforts to promote the content of “useful idiots” and dilute war news, they are finally getting a result.

This is where media failure meets civic failure. Dearnley said the war is “changing the moral architecture of the world.”

“What was once shocking,” he argued, “is now accepted… a major European city can suffer the horrors we have seen in the last four years and no longer be a front-page story.” He called that “a great tragedy.” It is also a warning, because when outrage no longer cuts through, the unacceptable becomes scenery and we become numb to terror.

It is perhaps in the slow burn of the first eight years of the Russo-Ukrainian War and the prolonged period of the large-scale war that we may see the reasoning behind the numbing. Pojzman-Pontay said it took time for Western governments and populations “to take what was happening in Ukraine seriously.” There was “a huge learning curve.” The full-scale invasion woke people because it was “so shocking, so clear-cut”: an army crossed a border, tried to seize a capital, decapitate a government, and committed war crimes. Russia was “no longer hiding.”

While efforts of teams such as that of “Ukraine: the Latest” try to untangle “the Russian propaganda and the Russian myth that Ukraine should be Russian, or is Russian, or that Russians and Ukrainians are the same people,” Western states, by avoiding swift action in support for Ukraine may have desensitized the populace and made them more vulnerable to such developments on their very doorstep.

Dearnley went further, saying that Western society was “not mentally and intellectually equipped for the world we actually inhabit.” He called that “a failure of education.”

Attention and media focus is therefore not a soft subject and should be part of national security. A public that is not taught the difference between Ukraine and the Russian imperial story will not understand why the war matters. A public that sees Ukraine only at moments of atrocity will not grasp the daily machinery of endurance, or comprehend the horrors of enduring years of onslaughts.

The Telegraph team’s achievement is not simply persistence but a continuity that eventually stops a country being reduced to a headline. Pojzman-Pontay said their listeners have developed “a knowledge of the front line and a knowledge of the country, both through the lens of the war and through its culture, its language and its people.” That is what daily coverage can do.

Ukraine has not disappeared. We have allowed the habit of watching it to become optional, as if it doesn’t affect us directly, and once attention becomes optional, seriousness follows it out of the room.

The views expressed in this opinion article are the author’s and not necessarily those of Kyiv Post.

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