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Avoid media stew of malice (The war is going very well)
The Ottawa Citizen ^ | 03-27-03 | David Warren

Posted on 03/27/2003 6:48:18 AM PST by veronica

Other than on the media front, where ignorance and bias prevail, the war is going very well

There are three "fronts" in the Iraq war, but they do not present themselves geographically.

1. The extremely visible, mostly American, allied main columns, steel strands extending from a base in Kuwait to loops joining around Baghdad and Tikrit.

2. The almost invisible airborne and special forces campaigns, in which Britons, Australians, Poles and others, including local forces, not yet acknowledged, have been playing very important roles, seizing and destroying or disabling the Iraqi regime's most lethal military and terror assets, and hunting for the "leadership targets."

3. The propaganda front, in which the U.S. and her allies struggle against Saddam Hussein's attempts to maintain the fear through which he has held the Iraqi people in subjection. In this last, Mr. Saddam is benefiting tremendously from the help of the international anti-Bush and anti-American media.

Even the first of these "fronts" is not quite what meets the eye. For instance, a great deal of technical invention and human training has gone into preparing for the urban battles that may lie ahead, from outfitting tanks and armoured vehicles for close-order fighting; to new gadgetry for the discovery and elimination of snipers; to new methods of ground-air co-ordination in and over confined urban spaces. Journalists have been embedded only in this visible force; yet even travelling with it, they remain as much in the dark as the rest of us about the U.S. forces' new capabilities.

The Pentagon planners have, thus, enlisted the media without their full knowledge in exhaustively covering what I suspect may be a series of feints. And Mr. Saddam's remaining loyalists, cut off from most of their own sources of information in the field, are obliged to focus their attention only on what they can see -- more and more exclusively through the eyes of the media. They launch essentially suicidal attacks against this now multi-tentacled, visible invader, which attrits both their conventional (e.g. Republican Guard) and unconventional (e.g. Fedayeen) fighters -- from both ground and air. Meanwhile, special and airborne forces drop in and out behind their backs, setting up for them some unwelcome, and not always small, surprises.

Even senior Israeli officers, who make it their business to know about these things, have professed puzzlement about the American plans when interviewed in the Israeli papers. The most knowing remark I've read, from one of them, is the observation that one cannot, in principle, know -- since the plans (plural) include multiple options at every stage. What they can say with confidence is that people watching on television are missing the real show. And as Donald Rumsfeld has repeated, those who talk don't know; those who know don't talk. I myself have no intention of talking about the very little I know: it is enough to guess at the shapes in the dark, and to expect surprise.

What can be said from plain observation is that the second "front" is using tactics much like those which were so successful in Afghanistan. Indeed, the overall strategy in Iraq is beginning to resemble the Afghan one, superimposed on the more conventional column of steel (which replaces the indigenous Afghan Northern Front with a snaking, high-tech hammer). And the reason for this is not far to seek: for the enemy in the field is fighting with methods very similar to those of the Taliban and al-Qaeda -- an especially barbaric form of retreat, hit and run that makes no concessions to western rules of decency.

But the Pentagon anticipated this, too, hence the Afghan-like invisible deployments, and radical makeshift adaptations to terrain -- probably including camels and horses. They take out the struts upon which the regime is supported, and seem to make no dramatic progress until the moment when suddenly the whole thing comes down, almost simultaneously in many different cities. I expect the collapse, when it comes -- in a few weeks or sooner if there is more luck than expected -- will catch almost everyone by surprise, especially the journalists.

There will, of course, be much to clean up after, as international terror organizations try to link up with whatever of Mr. Saddam's assets have survived.

But while the allies move from victory to victory on the first two "fronts," they are suffering serious and mostly unavoidable setbacks on the third, propaganda, one. I am tempted to stop and argue with the barrage of media reports -- the "24/7 battery of lies" to which I referred in a former article; a remark that filled my inbox with hate mail from my fellow journalists. But there is too much of it for one writer to deal with.

It begins on the small scale with remarks made in sheer ignorance. For instance, an Abrams tank with its treads blown off has not been "destroyed;" its crew is alive, and the tank can be fixed. Or, Apache helicopters grounded by a sandstorm have not been "turned back by Iraqi defenders." A frequent misunderstanding is about sandstorms themselves, which present a net advantage to U.S. forces. At the battle of Najaf, Monday into Tuesday, they were annihilating Iraqi fighters by the hundreds. The U.S. soldiers could see them clearly as heat signatures on their equipment; whereas the Saddamites could not see the Americans.

But it gets much worse than this. To present civilian deaths, such as those in a Baghdad market, even as a U.S. "mistake," on the basis of Iraqi sources only, is to disseminate Saddamite propaganda. In this case, alternative possibilities include an Iraqi inside job, to create a much-needed atrocity story (something they have repeatedly tried elsewhere); a misguided Iraqi surface-to-air missile; or an American cruise missile or bomb deflected from a nearby target by Iraq's recently acquired Russian GPS-jamming equipment. And even if it were an American mistake, western journalists participating in the subsequent Iraqi media tour of the site are directly assisting in a propaganda stunt, designed to inflame anti-American opinion throughout the Arab world, and beyond it.

On the large scale, we have the persistent display of doubts about tactics and strategy from journalists without any qualifications to judge them: who know no military history, indeed hardly any history at all; nor are they in possession of many current facts. Their motives are, moreover, clear enough, for many are people whose anti-Bush and anti-American attitudes were on display long before the war.

We also have, in vast doses, a somewhat less political morbid sentimentality that should have no place in war reporting, for it clouds all judgment on matters of life and death.

As Andrew Sullivan has pointed out, the shamefully inaccurate broadcasting of the BBC has a direct military consequence. "One of the key elements ... in this battle is the willingness of the Iraqi people to stand up to the Saddamite remnants. That willingness depends, in part, on their confidence that the allies are making progress. What the BBC is able to do, by broadcasting directly to these people, is to keep the Iraqi people's morale as far down as possible, thereby helping to make the war more bloody, thereby helping discredit it in retrospect."

The BBC is hardly the only source of disinformation on the war; it is everywhere in the "liberal" media, filling the front pages of papers such as the New York Times: pure editorializing founded on half-ignorant, half-intentional misinterpretations of facts and non-facts. The attitudes of these journalists are exposed in the tone of the questions they ask at such occasions as Pentagon and Central Command press conferences. In the BBC's case, an internal memo from the network's own defence correspondent has come to light, in which he assails his colleagues for persistently leading newscasts with reports that are, in his own capitalized words, "NOT TRUE."

I want to tell my readers directly: do not be discouraged by, and avoid wallowing in, this rich stew of malice. The media front may look grim; but the war itself is going very well.


TOPICS: Editorial; Foreign Affairs; News/Current Events
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To: Diogenesis
This writer makes some great points.


And this is the photo of the day.

21 posted on 03/27/2003 8:02:22 AM PST by skeeter (Fac ut vivas)
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To: JohnHuang2
Thank you!

As usual, very well done.

It is incredible how the left wing media maggots like Reuters/AP/BBC/NY Slimes and of course ABCNNBCBS started this we are losing the war. Some didn't wait a week.. They started this past weekend.

Then our own whiner/moaners and 5th columnist CINO's conservative in name only went ballistic Monday and Tuesday. They were posting all of this crapola from the liberal sources pretending that it was the Gospel!
22 posted on 03/27/2003 8:08:58 AM PST by Grampa Dave ("Those who are kind to the cruel end up being cruel to the kind!")
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To: Grampa Dave
Why, thanks, friend.

Then our own whiner/moaners and 5th columnist CINO's conservative in name only went ballistic Monday and Tuesday. They were posting all of this crapola from the liberal sources pretending that it was the Gospel!

Exactly.

23 posted on 03/27/2003 8:10:57 AM PST by JohnHuang2
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To: scouse
Thanks for the excellent history lesson. Please use it with the whiner/moaners and FR's 5th columnist CINOs (Conservatives in Name only), when they cite the liberal propaganda that we are losing this war.

We have excellent historians in Free Republic, and you just proved that you are one of these excellent historians!

Thanks again!
24 posted on 03/27/2003 8:12:23 AM PST by Grampa Dave ("Those who are kind to the cruel end up being cruel to the kind!")
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To: JohnHuang2; veronica
Thanks for the post and ping, folks ! . . .

But while the allies move from victory to victory on the first two "fronts," they are suffering serious and mostly unavoidable setbacks on the third, propaganda, one. I am tempted to stop and argue with the barrage of media reports -- the "24/7 battery of lies" to which I referred in a former article; a remark that filled my inbox with hate mail from my fellow journalists. But there is too much of it for one writer to deal with.

It begins on the small scale with remarks made in sheer ignorance. For instance, an Abrams tank with its treads blown off has not been "destroyed;" its crew is alive, and the tank can be fixed. Or, Apache helicopters grounded by a sandstorm have not been "turned back by Iraqi defenders." A frequent misunderstanding is about sandstorms themselves, which present a net advantage to U.S. forces. At the battle of Najaf, Monday into Tuesday, they were annihilating Iraqi fighters by the hundreds. The U.S. soldiers could see them clearly as heat signatures on their equipment; whereas the Saddamites could not see the Americans.

But it gets much worse than this. To present civilian deaths, such as those in a Baghdad market, even as a U.S. "mistake," on the basis of Iraqi sources only, is to disseminate Saddamite propaganda. In this case, alternative possibilities include an Iraqi inside job, to create a much-needed atrocity story (something they have repeatedly tried elsewhere); a misguided Iraqi surface-to-air missile; or an American cruise missile or bomb deflected from a nearby target by Iraq's recently acquired Russian GPS-jamming equipment. And even if it were an American mistake, western journalists participating in the subsequent Iraqi media tour of the site are directly assisting in a propaganda stunt, designed to inflame anti-American opinion throughout the Arab world, and beyond it.

On the large scale, we have the persistent display of doubts about tactics and strategy from journalists without any qualifications to judge them: who know no military history, indeed hardly any history at all; nor are they in possession of many current facts. Their motives are, moreover, clear enough, for many are people whose anti-Bush and anti-American attitudes were on display long before the war.

We also have, in vast doses, a somewhat less political morbid sentimentality that should have no place in war reporting, for it clouds all judgment on matters of life and death.

< snip >

I want to tell my readers directly: do not be discouraged by, and avoid wallowing in, this rich stew of malice. The media front may look grim; but the war itself is going very well.


25 posted on 03/27/2003 8:19:06 AM PST by MeekOneGOP (Bu-bye Saddam! / Check out my Freeper site !: http://home.attbi.com/~freeper/wsb/index.html)
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To: .38sw
I have been there and done that.

Now, when I check in a hotel/motel I tell the front desk that I don't want the so called free USA. Most will deduct a $ from your bill when you tell them that.

Then, I never watch any phoney news from ABCNNBCBS. If they don't have Fox News. The tv never goes to a news station.

Just two weeks ago, I was driving back from fishing and listening to a conservative radio station in the Sacramento area. The ABC news on the hour had me depressed in just 5 minutes. I got on Free Republic after I got home, and as usual what depressed me was the lies/propaganda for Eisner's hate GW phoney news group!
26 posted on 03/27/2003 8:20:31 AM PST by Grampa Dave ("Those who are kind to the cruel end up being cruel to the kind!")
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To: Explorer89
On the large scale, we have the persistent display of doubts about tactics and strategy from journalists without any qualifications to judge them: who know no military history, indeed hardly any history at all; nor are they in possession of many current facts. Their motives are, moreover, clear enough, for many are people whose anti-Bush and anti-American attitudes were on display long before the war.

fyi ping

27 posted on 03/27/2003 8:29:27 AM PST by MrConfettiMan
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To: Grampa Dave
For crying out loud, Grampa, go to the Fox News website and check their motel listings for those with Fox News. Don't stay anywhere that doesn't have FOX!!
Now I'll dash over to Fox to see if I can get a link for you!
28 posted on 03/27/2003 8:47:56 AM PST by MaeWest (Reporting from behind west coast enemy lines.)
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To: veronica
"One of the key elements ... in this battle is the willingness of the Iraqi people to stand up to the Saddamite remnants. That willingness depends, in part, on their confidence that the allies are making progress. What the BBC is able to do, by broadcasting directly to these people, is to keep the Iraqi people's morale as far down as possible, thereby helping to make the war more bloody, thereby helping discredit it in retrospect."

The BBC is hardly the only source of disinformation on the war; it is everywhere in the "liberal" media,

The Arab press is goverment-controlled anti-freedom propaganda. That we can understand. The odd-seeming part is the fact that free competitive American (and British, as the BBC example illustrates) essentially mirrors the antiAmericanism of hostile governments. But it was no different during the Cold War; CBS was sometimes labeled the "Communist Broadcasting System".

To understand why this is so you must "follow the money." Once you understand the actual financial incentives

Why Broadcast Journalism is Unnecessary and Illegitimate

of journalism, journalists' attitudes/behavior does not seem quite so incomprehensible.


29 posted on 03/27/2003 8:48:32 AM PST by conservatism_IS_compassion
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To: Grampa Dave
Here it is:
http://foxnews.hotellocators.com/
You can also go to their home page and click on the link from there.
30 posted on 03/27/2003 8:50:24 AM PST by MaeWest (Reporting from behind west coast enemy lines.)
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To: MaeWest
Amazing I just got a reply on this on another thread. Thanks that url is stored in my travel folder.
31 posted on 03/27/2003 8:58:20 AM PST by Grampa Dave ("Those who are kind to the cruel end up being cruel to the kind!")
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To: Grampa Dave
It's a rotten paper, isn't it? Actually I had used the Fox news hotel finder, so FNC was available, and I watched it in the evening. Still, I was pretty foolish to read USA today. But i'm so accustomed to reading a paper in the morning, I almost couldn't help myself. I get the Contra Costa Times, and it isn't as bad as USA Today.
32 posted on 03/27/2003 9:04:41 AM PST by .38sw
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To: .38sw
My son will buy the Contra Costa Times and read it at work. He is probably more conservative than I am, and he feels that for the most part, the CCT is okay.
33 posted on 03/27/2003 9:14:29 AM PST by Grampa Dave ("Those who are kind to the cruel end up being cruel to the kind!")
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To: JohnHuang2
Bump!
34 posted on 03/27/2003 9:26:28 AM PST by Alamo-Girl
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To: tiki
"Bevelaqua"

I agree - I've notice he has become more and more negative as we actually got into this war. Most of the other military people seem to be pleased with our progress so far.
35 posted on 03/27/2003 9:27:35 AM PST by CyberAnt
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To: veronica
The question asked before the invasion was not how successful the war would be. Everyone assumed it would go well. The divisions of opinion regard the aftermath of the war.
36 posted on 03/27/2003 9:38:29 AM PST by sakic
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To: veronica
Beautiful article.

Listening to the questions shouted at the Pentagon yesterday by reporters filled me with my own shock and awe, to wit:

- do these reporters ever (EVER) looks at Sunday's game films on Monday and assess how they have acted and behaved?

- If they have done the above, mea culpa and shame should be their war cry

37 posted on 03/27/2003 10:26:12 AM PST by SkyPilot
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To: veronica
Saddam Hussein has lost his country and is now reduced to Baghdad and environs. Soon he will be reduced to a bunker. Then he and his mistress and German shepherd will take vials of poison and their bodies will be burned beyond recognition, thus sparking sixty years of 'Saddam is alive and well and living in Argentina' paperback thrillers.
38 posted on 03/27/2003 10:33:04 AM PST by JoeSchem
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To: Diogenesis
Is that Afghanistan, or is it Iraq? If it's Iraq, that would be a perfect sign for the next showdown with the anti-Americans.
39 posted on 03/27/2003 10:55:51 AM PST by jiggyboy
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To: JohnHuang2
you're the man, JH2, 'er

I mean you're the hombre, JH2!
40 posted on 03/27/2003 1:08:26 PM PST by RobFromGa (Real Americans Support our Troops 100%)
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