May 17, 2005
It's Not Just Newsweek
By
Michelle Malkin
If you want to hear an earful, ask
an
American soldier how he feels about our news media.
You will invariably hear an outpouring of dismay and
outrage over antagonistic and reckless reporting. I have
stacks of letters and e-mails from soldiers and their
families sharing those frustrations. During the
Vietnam War, those sentiments would get packed
away—private hurts to be
silently borne for decades.
But today the Internet has allowed
soldiers on the front to disseminate their
views—breaking through the media's entrenched,
anti-military bias—in unprecedented ways. In the wake of
Newsweek's publication of its unsourced, mayhem-inducing
and now-retracted item about
Koran desecration by U.S. military interrogators at
Guantanamo Bay, a sergeant in Saudi Arabia immediately
responded on a blog called The Anchoress (theanchoressonline.com):
I have
placed my life and the life of my fellow soldiers in
danger in order to achieve a measure of the freedoms we
enjoy at home for the Iraqi and Afghani people. As
soldiers, we all understand that we may be asked to
participate in wars (actions) that we (or our
countrymen) don't agree with. The irresponsible
journalism being practiced by organizations such as
Newsweek, however, [is] just inexcusable. At this
point, because of their actions and failure to follow up
on a claim of that magnitude, they've set the process
back in Afghanistan immensely . . .
I don't
regret serving my country, not one bit, but to have
everything I'm doing here undermined by irresponsible
journalists leaves me disgusted and disappointed.
Military bloggers across the Web
this week echoed the sergeant's disgust with American
journalism. And it's not just Newsweek.
It's the
New York Times and
CBS News and the
overkill over abuses at Abu Ghraib prison. It's the
Boston Globe
publishing
porn photos passed off by an
anti-war city councilor as proof that American GIs
were raping Iraqi women.
It's the constant editorial
drumbeat of "quagmire,
quagmire, quagmire."
It's the mainstream media's bogus
reporting on the
military's failure to stop purported "massive"
looting of Iraqi antiquities.
It's the
hyping of stories like the military's purported
failure to stop looting of explosives at al Qa Qaa right
before the 2004 presidential election—stories that have
since dropped off the face of the earth.
It's the persistent use of
euphemisms—"insurgents," "hostage-takers,"
"activists," "militants," "fighters"—to describe the
terrorist head-choppers and suicide bombers trying
to kill American soldiers and civilians alike. It's the
knee-jerk caricature of American generals as intolerant
anachronisms. It's the portrayal of
honest mistakes in battle as premeditated murders.
It's the propagandistic
rumor-mongering spread by sympathizers of Italy's
Giuliana Sgrena and former CNN executive
Eason Jordan about
American soldiers targeting and/or murdering
journalists.
It's the
glorification of military deserters, who bask in the
glow of unquestioning—and largely uncorroborated—print
and broadcast profiles.
And it's the lesser-known insults,
too, such as the fraudulent manipulation of Marine
recruits by Harper's magazine. In March, the
liberal publication plastered a
photo of seven recruits at Parris Island, S.C.,
under the headline,
"AWOL in America: When Desertion Is the Only Option."
None of the recruits is a deserter. When some
expressed outrage over the deception, the magazine
initially shrugged.
"We are decorating pages," sniffed Giulia Melucci,
the magazine's vice president for public relations, to
the St. Petersburg Times.
As Ralph Hansen, associate
professor of journalism at West Virginia University and
a rare member of
academia with his head screwed on straight,
observed:
"Portraying honorable soldiers as deserters is clearly
inappropriate. And I don't see any way Harper's could
claim that they weren't portraying the young Marines as
deserters. A cover is more than just art. I think that
someone had a great idea for a cover illustration and
forgot that he or she was dealing with images of real
people."
The members of our military are
more than just an expedient means to a titillating
magazine cover or juicy scoop or
Peabody Award. Too often since the "War on
Terror" was
declared, eager Bush-bashing journalists have
forgotten that the troops are real people who face real
threats and real bloodshed as a consequence of loose
lips and keyboards.
It's not just Newsweek that
needs to learn that lesson.
Michelle Malkin [email
her] is author of
Invasion: How America Still Welcomes Terrorists,
Criminals, and Other Foreign Menaces to Our Shores.
Click
here for Peter Brimelow’s review. Click
here for Michelle Malkin's website.
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