Hume related that Koppel “spoke with
real generosity about the American officers
and enlisted men that he dealt with, and
how able they were and how good they were
and how effective they were. But he went
out of his way to make a point of distinguishing
between them and the policy makers in Washington.
About the latter he said, “I’m
very cynical, and I remain very cynical,
about the reasons for getting into this
war.”
It is altogether appropriate that journalists
should pride themselves on being skeptical.
That’s their job. But a cynic, as
I understand it, is one who routinely attributes
low or base motives to the actions of others—or
at best, believes that every human action
is motivated by self-interest. We’ve
heard the popular definition of a cynic:
one who knows the price of everything but
the value of nothing.
Koppel speaks for many in the American
media, and it’s a sad commentary on
many of the people who purport to bring
us the “news.”
Reading Hume’s comments reminded
me of a more recent article by Dennis Prager
(“Only those with beliefs can defeat
those with beliefs,” TownHall.com,
Oct. 7, 2003). The gist of his article was
that there is a deep divide in this country
between those who believe in something and
those who apparently believe in nothing:
“Faith in religion and in America
explains much of the ideological division
within America. President Bush, Vice President
Cheney and Condoleezza Rice are deeply religious,
and the vast majority of deeply religious
Americans support this administration and
its foreign policy.”
Of course, religion is not the only kind
of faith, as Prager points out: “Virtually
all the non-religious supporters of President
Bush’s war on the Islamist threat
to liberty have a deep faith in the United
States and in its mission to preserve liberty.
. . . But in the modern West, hundreds of
millions of people have no such faith in
anything. . . . Their highest values are
tolerance, health, pleasure, and not judging
good and evil.”
And here is a telling and insightful statement:
“They are deeply afraid of fervent
believers in anything. And they especially
fear American believers—i.e., believers
in the Bible and in America.”
Is that what is wrong with our establishment
media—fear? That may be part of it,
but the whole truth is even worse. Reports
are appearing in many places now about the
corruption that has characterized much of
the “reporting” from Iraq by
American media personnel.
We learned some time back that CNN chief
news executive, Eason Jordan, admitted his
network had been withholding the truth about
the horrors and atrocities of Saddam’s
regime for years.
Now, John Burns, a New York Times Pulitzer
Prize-winning reporter and also the Times’
Baghdad bureau chief, has written a book,
Embedded, in which he describes the media’s
performance in Iraq as “absolutely
disgraceful. He says the vast majority of
correspondents in prewar Iraq “played
ball” with Saddam and deliberately
downplayed the viciousness of the regime
and the appalling human rights abuses inflicted
on the Iraqi people. Burns characterized
Saddam’s Iraq as “a grotesque
charnel house” and a genuine threat
to America. As a veteran foreign correspondent,
Burns has been posted to such places as
Mao’s China, Afghanistan and Bosnia,
but he believes that with the possible exception
of North Korea, Iraq as a terror state is
in a class by itself: “Absolute evil,”
he says. (Notra Trulock, “Media Muzzled
on Iraq—But by Whom?”)
Accurate and honest reporting of what was
going on in Iraq could (and probably would)
have made a vast difference in what transpired
in Iraq, in coalition planning for Saddam’s
overthrow, in the world’s perception
of the evils of Saddam’s regime, and
even in the UN Security Council, which would
have had little choice but to face the truth.
Instead, many reporters—particularly
with BBC and CNN, according to Burns—were
so concerned with protecting their news-gathering
“access” that they were willing
to conceal the very thing they were there
to obtain. The irony of it is both fascinating
and appalling.
Burns recounts the bribes paid to Iraqi
information ministry officials in exchange
for access and favorable treatment. Ann
Garrels, NPR correspondent, confirms Burns’
account of the bribes in her new book on
the war, Naked in Baghdad. A review of the
book in USA Today cites one of Garrels’
examples, a mid-level bureaucrat who made
at least $200,00 off his share of the bribes.
Burns’ comments about the disconnect
between reality and reporting on Iraq are
being borne out by others upon their return
from information gathering tours in Iraq.
John Leo (“Media reporting from Iraq
is one-sided and flawed,” TownHall.com,
Sept. 29, 2003) cites three such individuals.
Rep. Ike Skelton (D-MO) said he was impressed
with the flexibility and innovation of the
American military which, under one command
alone, is engaged in 3,100 rebuilding projects
in northern Iraq—“from soccer
fields to schools to refineries, all good
stuff, and that isn’t being reported.”
U.S. District Court Judge Don Walter of
Shreveport, Louisiana, was vehemently anti-war
before he took an assignment in Iraq to
serve as an advisor on Iraq’s courts.
Now he says we should have invaded sooner
than we did to put a stop to the butchery
and torture that the UN, France, and Russia
knew about but were willing to tolerate
for political and economic reasons (our
emphasis).
Georgia Democrat Jim Marshall says negative
media coverage is getting our troops killed
in Iraq by encouraging Baathist holdouts
to think they can drive the U.S. out of
Iraq. Marshall was one of seven congressional
representatives that recently returned from
Iraq. Members of the group say that reporters
have developed an overall negative tone
and mind-set that concentrates primarily
on attacks in which U.S. military are wounded
or killed.
Marshall, who is a Vietnam veteran, attributes
the disconnect between the reporting and
the reality in Iraq partly to the fact that
the 27 reporters left in Iraq are “all
huddled in a hotel.”
A movement to get more balance in reporting
from Iraq has been driven by two individuals
in particular—Andrew Sullivan (AndrewSullivan.com)
and law professor Glenn Reynolds of the
University of Tennessee (Instapundit.com).
Both men are encouraging U.S. soldiers and
others in Iraq to send in their own reports,
which have generally been positive and hopeful.
It is an example once again of the “new”
media going around the “old.”
Thank goodness for conservative radio, some
genuinely credible journalists, and the
Internet.