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وسائل
الإعلام ليست هي العدو في
العراق بقلم
: ماكس بووت لوس
أنجلوس تايمز - 10/1/2007 إن لوم وسائل الإعلام عن المشاكل
الحاصلة في العراق يصرف النظر
عن ماهية انتماء هذه الوسائل
ولمن تتبع. The
media aren't the enemy in Blaming the press for the problems in January 10, 2007 IF WE WIND UP losing the war in Iraq, as now appears likely (though not
inevitable), many conservatives know who to blame: the
press, or, in blogger-speak, the MSM (mainstream news
media). Just as it did during the Vietnam War, a myth is
likely to develop in which Administration spokesmen and many soldiers have been saying for years that
things aren't so bad in Iraq. "If you just watched
what's happening every time there's a bomb going off in Such protestations are natural from someone who's likely to go down in
history as Robert McNamara redux. But this refrain has
been taken up by even the most sophisticated and
disinterested observers on the right. James Q. Wilson, a
longtime professor at Harvard, UCLA and Pepperdine,
published a scathing essay in the autumn issue of the
Manhattan Institute's City Journal in which he
complained that "positive stories about progress in
"We won the Second World War in Europe and Japan," he concluded,
"but we lost in Vietnam and are in danger of losing
in Iraq and Lebanon in the newspapers, magazines and
television programs we enjoy." Actually, it's not at all clear that the Vietnam War was lost in the media.
Reporters were initially gung-ho about the war; they
went into opposition only after it became clear that the
military and the Johnson administration had no plan for
victory. In any case, the Tet analogy is dubious, because it is hard to find any
signs of U.S. progress in the Iraq conflict comparable
to the devastation the Viet Cong suffered in 1968. Even if you go by the Bush administration's own assessment, conditions today
are bleak. In November, the Defense Department issued a
congressionally mandated report that found that violence
was "escalating" to "the highest [levels]
on record." Meanwhile, the report found, attempts
at national reconciliation have "shown little
progress." In short, the apocalyptic condition of THAT ISN'T TO deny that there has been some biased, slipshod news coverage.
To my mind, there has been too much emphasis on American
casualties and American abuses, both of which are low by
historical standards. There has been too much
Baghdad-centric reporting, which slights differing
conditions in outlying regions. And, of course, in Initially, I thought that this institutional bias toward sensationalism
distorted public understanding of the war. But by now
the dismal conditions on the ground have caught up with,
if not surpassed, the media's bleak outlook. Whatever the shortcomings of some reporting, there has been a lot of
first-rate coverage by a heroic corps of correspondents
that has persevered in the face of terrible danger. (At
least 109 journalists have been killed and many others
wounded or kidnapped, making this the deadliest conflict
on record for the Fourth Estate.) I am thinking of
reporters such as John Burns, Dexter Filkins and Michael
Gordon of the New York Times; Greg Jaffe and Michael
Philips of the Wall Street Journal; Tom Ricks of the
Washington Post; Tony Perry of the Los Angeles Times and
former Times reporter John Daniszewski; Sean Naylor of
Army Times; Bing West and Robert Kaplan of the Atlantic
Monthly; and George Packer of the New Yorker. They've
risked their necks to get the truth — and not, as
Rumsfeld suggested, by flying over If you wanted to figure out what was happening over the last four years, you
would have been infinitely better off paying attention
to their writing than to what the president or his top
generals were saying. If we fail to achieve our goals in
http://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/la-oe-boot10jan10,0,2650141.column?coll=la-opinion-center
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من حق الزائر الكريم أن ينقل وأن ينشر كل ما يعجبه من موقعنا . معزواً إلينا ، أو غير معزو .ـ |