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Will
The Media Let Us Win In Iraq?
Serving as a mouthpiece for terrorists in Iraq...
[Roger
Aronoff] 4/14/06
Amidst
all of the news of sectarian violence and the temporary
inability to form a government of national unity in Iraq,
there is actually reason for optimism. The truth is that
the forces of freedom and democracy are making progress.
Now, if we could only get the media to pay attention.
Following the February bombing of one of the Shia's most sacred shrines, the
Golden Dome mosque in Samarra, the situation could have careened out of control,
into full-fledged civil war. But it didn't. In spite of many reports that it
had already reached that point, the top Shi'ite leader in the country, the
Ayatollah Sistani, urged calm. He realized after the first parliamentary elections,
held last December, that the prospects for establishing a unified and democratic
government are very promising, and that he wasn't going to allow the determined
minority of Sunnis and jihadists to wreck this promise for Iraq.
David
Ignatius of the Washington Post recently returned from
Iraq and gave a mixed
review. He said that after the bombing of the mosque in Samarra, "Iraq
seemed to be slipping toward civil war, but the Iraqi Army performed surprisingly
well." He said that the U.S. should have been better prepared from the outset,
but that "the American military is finally becoming adept at fighting a counterinsurgency
war in Iraq.
Historian and columnist Victor Davis Hanson is also recently back from Iraq.
He offers his perspective and
gives quite a different picture than most of the reporters we hear from. "We
hear that the U.S. Army is worn out—propped up by national guardsmen and reserves," writes
Hanson. "Yet young enlistees differ. They claim instead that more mature reservists
are a godsend for reconstruction efforts since so many back home were successful
contractors, businessmen, teachers and mechanics. Complaints circulate about
the weight, not the dearth, of body and truck armor. I saw hundreds of Humvees
on the roads, but not one was unarmored."
Hanson also challenges many
of the assumed wrong moves taken by the U.S. and its allies in Iraq, and demonstrates
that conventional wisdom may not always be right. "The insurrection broke out
not so much because we had 200,000 rather than 400,000 troops in country," says
Hanson, "but rather because a three-week strike that decapitated the Baathist
elite, despite its showy 'shock and awe' pyrotechnics, was never intended,
World War II-like, to crush the enemy and force terms on a shell-shocked, defeated,
and humiliated populace. Many of our challenges, then, are not the war in Iraq
per se, but the entire paradox of postmodern war in general in a globally televised
world."
And while every death of a soldier is a terrible loss, Hanson compares casualties
to past wars: "We have fought suicide bombers in the Pacific. Intelligence
failures doomed tens of thousands—not 2,300—at the Bulge and Okinawa. We pacified
the Philippines through counterinsurgency fighting. Failure to calibrate the
extent of Al Zarqawi's insurrection pales before the Chinese crossing of the
Yalu."
Good news is coming from other parts of the Middle East. From the Daily Star
in Lebanon comes this hopeful
expression: "In Lebanon, the days of fear are over, hopefully forever.
No one can stop us from saying what we think…we dare to publicly say no to
the hijacking of South Lebanon by the rulers in Damascus and Tehran. We say
no to the Syrian-controlled Palestinian militia in Naameh…No fear. And there
is no way back."
Qatar, the staging ground for the early phases of the Iraq war, is the latest
country in the region to announce its first democratic elections, scheduled
for next year. Now, if the ruling elite there would only do something about
the pernicious influence of the anti-American Al-Jazeera television channel.
British Prime Minister Tony Blair has put events in perspective, waxing
eloquently about the stakes in this global struggle. He condemned the belief
that "George Bush is as much if not more of a threat to world peace as Osama
bin Laden; and what is happening in Iraq, Afghanistan or anywhere else in the
Middle East, is an entirely understandable consequence of U.S./U.K. imperialism
or worse…"
To those who suggest we should ask ourselves why they hate us, Blair calls
that a "posture of weakness (and) defeatism" that feeds extremism. "We must
reject the thought that somehow we are the authors of our own distress," said
Blair, "that if only we altered this decision or that, the extremism would
fade away."
"For us," he continued, "so much of our opinion believes that what was done in
Iraq in 2003 was so wrong, that it is reluctant to accept what is plainly right,
now." He reiterated his "determination to fight the ideology of Islamist extremism," describing
it as "theologically backward," "pre-feudal" and "reactionary."
"This terrorism will not be defeated until its ideas, the poison that warps the
minds of its adherents, are confronted, head-on, in their essence, at their core," he
said.
Which brings up the role of the media. Blair said that the Western media too
often serves as a mouthpiece for terrorists in Iraq. He said reporters tend
to view every killing "as an indication of the coalition's responsibility for
disorder, rather than of the 'wickedness that causes it.'"
Blair is right: constant bad news from the media, and the demonizing of President
Bush, have diverted attention from the main enemy. It seems elementary, but
the point must be made―even if the media recoil from making it―that
we are truly the "good guys" in this conflict. Factually speaking, the "war
on terror" is a war on radical Islamists who despise everything we stand for,
including freedom of the press.
But the problem, which is becoming painfully obvious to more and more Americans,
is that press freedom is being used to distort the nature of the struggle and
the enemy. We can only lose this war if the media continue to play the enemy's
game.
ONE
copyright
2006 Accuracy in Media www.aim.org
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