http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,140651,00.html
I'm posting this article, because it has relevance with the thread titled: "Too much for ABC, NBC, CBS", as seen here http://www.airwarriors.com/forum/showthread.php?t=8851
I'm posting this article, because it has relevance with the thread titled: "Too much for ABC, NBC, CBS", as seen here http://www.airwarriors.com/forum/showthread.php?t=8851
Iraq: The Media vs. the Truth
Tuesday, December 07, 2004
By Helle Dale
If you trust most media accounts fed to American viewers and readers, Iraq is an unmitigated disaster.
There is no security throughout the country, and armed insurgents (search) are springing up, sown like dragon's teeth by the offensive of the U.S. military forces. The scheduled elections are highly uncertain. Indeed, U.S. forces have killed 100,000 Iraqis. Iraqis have never had it so bad. It’s a drumbeat with echoes of the way the American media reported the Vietnam War (search).
Those who have the opportunity to hear the accounts of Americans serving in Iraq often come away with a completely different impression. Many people who have sons and daughters, grandchildren, relatives and friends serving in Iraq know that they hear differently from them.
Ambassador Edward Rowny (search) recently brought up this point in a Council on Foreign Relations (search) discussion with former National Security Adviser Zbigniew Brzezinski (search), who is an ardent critic of the war. Mr. Brzezinski's response was to dismiss first-hand accounts as mere anecdotal evidence.
Yet, even in the mainstream media, differing views do seep in. Consider a recent column by Thomas Friedman (search) of The New York Times, a paper that has been unstinting in its reporting of bad news from Iraq.
This is what Mr. Friedman wrote from Iraq, “Readers ask me when I will throw in the towel on Iraq.” Impressed with the spirit and the commitment of the troops on the ground, Mr. Friedman writes: “I will be guided by the U.S. Army and Marine grunts on the ground. They see Iraq close up. Most of those you talk to are so uncynical — so convinced that we are doing good and doing right, even though they are unsure it will work.”
And the fact is that for all the unrelenting drumbeat of bad news, there is much good to be told as well — only you don’t hear it much. Agreement has so far been reached with Iraq’s Russian and European debtors to forgive $33 billion of Iraq’s debt, about a quarter of the total. Some 45,000 Iraqi police and 48,000 Iraqi army and National Guard troops have now been trained. $5 billion in U.S. aid alone has been disbursed and oil revenue, which flows into Iraqi accounts via a U.S. government trust, reached $1.9 billion in October.
A weekly update of reconstruction projects in Iraq can be located on the Web site of the U.S. Agency for International Development. Much of this good work you will never find reported, precisely because good news is no news for much of the U.S. media. And the foreign media is even worse.
Admittedly, the security situation is dire, but look at these figures. In October, the number of Iraqis killed was 775 from acts of war and murder; American troops suffered 63 casualties and 691 wounded. This is too many, but at a time of a major military offensive against insurgents, those numbers are not gigantic.
Or how about the constantly cited figure of 100,000 Iraqis killed by Americans since the war began, a statistic thrown about with total and irresponsible abandon by war opponents. That number, which should be disputed at every turn by those who care about the truth of what is going on in Iraq, came from a controversial study by the British journal of medicine The Lancet (search).
It is five to six times higher than the highest estimates from other sources of all Iraqi deaths, either military or civilian. The Lancet study relied on reporting of deaths self-reported by 998 families from clusters of 33 households throughout Iraq, a very limited sample from which to generalize.
As a recent article in the Financial Times reported on Nov. 19, even the Lancet study’s authors are now having second thoughts. Iraq’s Health Ministry estimates by comparison that all told, 3,853 Iraqis have been killed and 15,517 wounded.
The fact is that 40 percent of Iraqis say their country is better off since the war, and 65 percent are optimistic about the future. Iraqis are intending to vote in the upcoming elections to the tune of 85 percent, and 45 percent currently support Prime Minister Ayad Allawi. Many are unhappy with the U.S. troops' presence there, but at least 35 percent want the United States to stay.
We still have a rocky road ahead, beyond doubt, but these figures do not add up to the unmitigated failure that critics of the Bush administration have been painting.
Helle Dale is deputy director of the Davis Institute for International Studies at The Heritage Foundation.