December 26, 2007
Top Story Of 2007: The Surge, The Military, And The Media
By
Michelle Malkin
There should be no question what the top
story of the year was: America's counterinsurgency
campaign in Iraq, the Democrats' hapless efforts to
sabotage it, and the Western mainstream media's stubborn
refusal to own up to military progress.
What happened in January defined the
rest of the year. We rang in 2007 with vehement liberal
opposition to the "surge" of 21,000 added U.S.
troops and tactical changes to secure Baghdad. In the
ensuing 12 months, Democrats tried and failed repeatedly
to undermine this military strategy and starve the war
of funding. Their poisonously partisan allies at
MoveOn.org attempted to
smear surge architect and patriot Gen. David
Petraeus as a
traitor. The New York Times and Associated
Press fought tooth and nail to obscure the successes of
the surge with their relentless "grim milestone"
drumbeat. But by year's end, with Shiites and Sunnis
marching and praying together for peace, even anti-war
Democrats and adversarial media outlets alike were
forced to acknowledge that undeniable military progress
and security improvements had been made.
Is there still a long way to go? Hell,
yes. Were there other ancillary factors that contributed
to the decrease in violence and the "awakenings"
in
Anbar province and
Baghdad? Yes again. But go back to January. Refresh
your memories of the anti-surge rhetoric and the
spectacularly misguided conventional wisdom.
When the Senate Foreign Relation
Committee's resolution opposing the surge passed 12-9 on
Jan. 24, Sen. Joseph Biden, D-Del., the panel's
chairman, disingenuously claimed it was
"not an attempt to embarrass the president."
Bull. That's what the Democrats have been trying to do
all year. Biden argued: The measure
"is designed to let the
president know that there are many in both parties,
Democrats and Republicans, that believe a change in our
mission to go into Baghdad—in the midst of a civil
war—as well as a surge in ground troops . . . is the
wrong way to go, and I believe it will have the
opposite—I repeat --opposite effect the president
intends."
Seven months later, staunch anti-war
Democrat Rep. Brian Baird of Washington returned from
Baghdad and recognized reality:
"As a Democrat who voted
against the war from the outset and who has been frankly
critical of the administration and the post-invasion
strategy, I am convinced by the evidence that the
situation has at long last begun to change substantially
for the better . . . the people, strategies and facts on
the ground have changed for the better and those changes
justify changing our position on what should be done."[
Our troops have earned more time,
By Brian Baird,
Seattle Times, August 24, 2007]
Wrong-way Biden insisted the anti-surge
resolution wasn't meant to embarrass the president.
Opponents of the Baghdad mission insisted they didn't
want America to fail. But let's not forget where the
Democrats came from in January—and where the party
leadership remains. A Fox News poll in mid-January
revealed that a disturbing 49 percent of Democrats
either wanted us to lose in Iraq or "didn't know" if
they wanted us to succeed. All but two Democrats voted
in the House to oppose the surge. As our troops
succeeded, these surge critics went from arguing against
the strategy to arguing whether violence dropped in
Baghdad to arguing about why that decrease occurred.
Through it all, Gen. Petraeus and the troops serving
under him have remained stalwart, candid and courageous.
He told the Senate Armed Services Committee on Jan. 23:
"The way ahead will be neither quick nor easy."
That's also what I heard repeatedly from
officers I interviewed while
embedded in Baghdad in January—just as the first
wave of surge forces was being mobilized. It's a message
the instant gratification Beltway media didn't want to
deliver.
There's a reason the magazine and
newspaper editors are naming everything but the surge as
their top story of the year. (Putin?
The
Virginia Tech massacre? Come on.) Good news in the
war on terror is bad news for those rooting for failure.
Far easier to play up casualties and sectarian strife,
sensationalize accusations of atrocities, and demonize
the men and women in uniform to indulge Bush Derangement
Syndrome, as Washington Post staffer and NBC military
analyst
William Arkin did on Jan. 30 when he
lambasted troops for enjoying "obscene amenities"
and serving as a "mercenary" force.
One of the troops Arkin considers a
"mercenary" was Army 2nd Lt. Mark J. Daily. On Jan.
19, a reader e-mailed me that the 23-year-old standout
soldier had been killed in an IED attack in Mosul along
with three other comrades. To MoveOn and Democrat
leaders and the anti-surge press, he's just another
number. Another "victim." Another pawn. But on
his MySpace site and across the Internet, his immortal
words resonate:
"Some have allowed their
resentment of the President to stir silent applause for
setbacks in Iraq. Others have ironically decried the war
because it has tied up our forces and prevented them
from confronting criminal regimes in Sudan, Uganda, and
elsewhere. I simply decided that the time for candid
discussions of the oppressed was over, and I joined."[Mark
Daily's Letter]
He declared simply: "I genuinely
believe the United States Army is a force of good in
this world."
It's the legacy 2Lt. Daily left on this
world—and the legacy that defined 2007 against all
political and media odds.
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.
Michelle Malkin's latest book is "Unhinged:
Exposing Liberals Gone Wild."
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