shotbanner.jpeg

January 18, 2005

Mad As Hell

Lieutenant Colonel Tim Ryan commands a battalion of the 12th Cavalry, part of the First Cavalry Division, currently serving in Iraq.

He writes perhaps the most passionate, emotional evisceration of the media's blinkered coverage of Iraq that I've yet read. It's stark, it's realistic (war is hell), it's impassioned in a way field-grade officers rarely come across in public press pronouncements - and in the end, it guts most of what the war's opponents have been harping on for this past year.

Ryan assaults the press' endless, relentless, aggressive pessimism about the war:

From where I sit in Iraq, things are not all bad right now. In fact, they are going quite well. We are not under attack by the enemy; on the contrary, we are taking the fight to him daily and have him on the ropes. In the distance, I can hear the repeated impacts of heavy artillery and five-hundred-pound bombs hitting their targets. The occasional tank main gun report and the staccato rhythm of a Marine Corps LAV or Army Bradley Fighting Vehicle's 25-millimeter cannon provide the bass line for a symphony of destruction. As elements from all four services complete the absolute annihilation of the insurgent forces remaining in Fallujah, the area around the former insurgent stronghold is more peaceful than it has been for more than a year.
This is a point that is completely lost on most left-wing critics of the war, who - I'll be polite - are usually completely illiterate on all matters military. Holding the initiative - the real initiative, the one on the battlefield - is what matters in the long run.

And we do hold it, where it matters - on the battlefield. But you'd never know that from the media's coverage.

The number of attacks in the greater Al Anbar Province is down by at least 70-80 percent from late October — before Operation Al Fajar began. The enemy in this area is completely defeated, but not completely gone. Final eradication of the pockets of insurgents will take some time, as it always does, but the fact remains that the central geographic stronghold of the insurgents is now under friendly control. That sounds a lot like success to me. Given all of this, why don't the papers lead with "Coalition Crushes Remaining Pockets of Insurgents" or "Enemy Forces Resort to Suicide Bombings of Civilians"? This would paint a far more accurate picture of the enemy's predicament over here. Instead, headlines focus almost exclusively on our hardships.
We'll come back to this.

The terrorists' almost-sympathetic treatment in the western media doesn't escape notice:

What about the media's portrayal of the enemy? Why do these ruthless murderers, kidnappers and thieves get a pass when it comes to their actions? What did the the media show or tell us about Margaret Hassoon, the director of C.A.R.E. in Iraq and an Iraqi citizen, who was kidnapped, brutally tortured and left disemboweled on a street in Fallujah? Did anyone in the press show these images over and over to emphasize the moral failings of the enemy as they did with the soldiers at Abu Ghuraib? Did anyone show the world how this enemy had huge stockpiles of weapons in schools and mosques, or how he used these protected places as sanctuaries for planning and fighting in Fallujah and the rest of Iraq? Are people of the world getting the complete story? The answer again is no! What the world got instead were repeated images of a battle-weary Marine who made a quick decision to use lethal force and who immediately was tried in the world press. Was this one act really illustrative of the overall action in Fallujah? No, but the Marine video clip was shown an average of four times each hour on just about every major TV news channel for a week. This is how the world views our efforts over here and stories like this without a counter continually serve as propaganda victories for the enemy. Al Jazeera isn't showing the film of the CARE worker, but is showing the clip of the Marine. Earlier this year, the Iraqi government banned Al Jazeera from the country for its inaccurate reporting. Wonder where they get their information now? Well, if you go to the Internet, you'll find a web link from the Al Jazeera home page to CNN's home page. Very interesting.
The enemy uses the impression - or lack of impression - of their real nature and aims to win the only battle still attainable to them - the one for the western media:
What noticeably was missing were accounts of the atrocities committed by the Mehdi Militia — Muqtada Al Sadr's band of henchmen. While the media was busy bashing the Coalition, Muqtada's boys were kidnapping policemen, city council members and anyone else accused of supporting the Coalition or the new government, trying them in a kangaroo court based on Islamic Shari'a law, then brutally torturing and executing them for their "crimes." What the media didn't show or write about were the two hundred-plus headless bodies found in the main mosque there, or the body that was put into a bread oven and baked. Nor did they show the world the hundreds of thousands of mortar, artillery and small arms rounds found within the "sacred" walls of the mosque. Also missing from the coverage was the huge cache of weapons found in Muqtada's "political" headquarters nearby. No, none of this made it to the screen or to print. All anyone showed were the few chipped tiles on the dome of the mosque and discussion centered on how we, the Coalition, had somehow done wrong. Score another one for the enemy's propaganda machine.
Ryan is onto the trick that's fooled so much of the historically-illiterate American and Western left:
Did it ever occur to the media that this type of notoriety is just what the terrorists want and need? Every headline they grab is a victory for them. Those who have read the ancient Chinese military theorist and army general Sun Tzu will recall the philosophy of "Kill one, scare ten thousand" as the basic theory behind the strategy of terrorism. Through fear, the terrorist can then manipulate the behavior of the masses. The media allows the terrorist to use relatively small but spectacular events that directly affect very few, and spread them around the world to scare millions. What about the thousands of things that go right every day and are never reported? Complete a multi-million-dollar sewer project and no one wants to cover it, but let one car bomb go off and it makes headlines. With each headline, the enemy scores another point and the good-guys lose one. This method of scoring slowly is eroding domestic and international support while fueling the enemy's cause.

I believe one of the reasons for this shallow and subjective reporting is that many reporters never actually cover the events they report on. This is a point of growing concern within the Coalition. It appears many members of the media are hesitant to venture beyond the relative safety of the so-called "International Zone" in downtown Baghdad, or similar "safe havens" in other large cities. Because terrorists and other thugs wisely target western media members and others for kidnappings or attacks, the westerners stay close to their quarters. This has the effect of holding the media captive in cities and keeps them away from the broader truth that lies outside their view. With the press thus cornered, the terrorists easily feed their unwitting captives a thin gruel of anarchy, one spoonful each day. A car bomb at the entry point to the International Zone one day, a few mortars the next, maybe a kidnapping or two thrown in. All delivered to the doorsteps of those who will gladly accept it without having to leave their hotel rooms — how convenient.

The scene is repeated all too often: an attack takes place in Baghdad and the morning sounds are punctuated by a large explosion and a rising cloud of smoke. Sirens wail in the distance and photographers dash to the scene a few miles away. Within the hour, stern-faced reporters confidently stare into the camera while standing on the balcony of their tenth-floor Baghdad hotel room, their back to the city and a distant smoke plume rising behind them. More mayhem in Gotham City they intone, and just in time for the morning news. There is a transparent reason why the majority of car bombings and other major events take place before noon Baghdad-time; any later and the event would miss the start of the morning news cycle on the U.S. east coast. These terrorists aren't stupid; they know just what to do to scare the masses and when to do it. An important key to their plan is manipulation of the news media. But, at least the reporters in Iraq are gathering information and filing their stories, regardless of whether or the stories are in perspective. Much worse are the "talking heads" who sit in studios or offices back home and pontificate about how badly things are going when they never have been to Iraq and only occasionally leave Manhattan.

I'm no soldier. Never have been. I have read a lot of military history, natch - and trying to pick a part of the left's relentless drumming of mis/disinformation that galls one the worst is very difficult.

But a solid contender would have to be the smug interjection of the ill-informed pundits that insist an "exit strategy" is what we really, really need.

The only "exit strategy" that matters was that of the platoon sergeant in Saving Private Ryan; "The only way home is through Berlin".

You'd think the pundits could pick up on that one; it was in a movie and everything.

Colonel Ryan's take is longer, and more complete:

Also bothersome are references by "experts" on how "long" this war is taking. I've read that in the world of manufacturing, you can have only two of the following three qualities when developing a product — cheap, fast or good. You can produce something cheap and fast, but it won't be good; good and fast, but it won't be cheap; good and cheap, but it won't be fast. In this case, we want the result to be good and we want it at the lowest cost in human lives. Given this set of conditions, one can expect this war is to take a while, and rightfully so. Creating a democracy in Iraq not only will require a change in the political system, but the economic system as well. Study of examples of similar socio-economic changes that took place in countries like Chile, Bulgaria, Serbia, Russia and other countries with oppressive Socialist dictatorships shows that it took seven to ten years to move those countries to where they are now. There are many lessons to be learned from these transfomations, the most important of which is that change doesn't come easily, even without an insurgency going on. Maybe the experts should take a look at all of the work that has gone into stabilizing Bosnia-Herzegovina over the last 10 years. We are just at the eighteen-month mark in Iraq, a place far more oppressive than Bosnia ever was. If previous examples are any comparison, there will be no quick solutions here, but that should be no surprise to an analyst who has done his or her homework.
Read Col. Ryan's entire essay. It's essential.

Then print it out, roll it up into a stick, and use it to whack the next person you meet who says the war in Iraq is lost, and that we need to just get out.

Posted by Mitch at January 18, 2005 05:41 PM | TrackBack
Comments

What's galling to me is that more and more media types just take it on faith, apparently, that the "insurgents" somehow now make up the majority of Iraqi opinion.

It is fear, of course, that keeps them reporting from a distance, but also because on-the-spot reporting is a deeply flawed aspect of journalism, in that it's the easiest to report, and it makes the biggest visual splash. Car bombs leave x amount of bodies, with a y-sized crater. Ten minutes of observational "research" later, and you have your story. The end result, for the people at home, is that everyone watching can't help but reach a hell-in-a-handbasket conclusion.

But, we're talking about a generation, both reporting the news and those receiving it, that have no point of reference when it comes to understanding military casualties. The numbers put up in WWII mean nothing to them. They can't conceptualize what war, real war, actually means. They equate IEDs and car bombs as the worst war has to offer. Every individual death, Iraqi or American, is viewed as a defeat. They so fear the enemy's tactics, they're willing to concede everything in the hopes they'll simply go away.

Posted by: Ryan at January 18, 2005 03:21 PM

Perhaps one day, a platoon of Marines will barge into Viacom's boardroom for a "chat".

Posted by: Fenrisulven at January 19, 2005 12:19 AM
Post a comment









Remember personal info?
hi