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Lessons Learned
Posted by Stephen Green · 20 February 2006
Damn solid stuff from Dexter Filkins in the New York Times: In nearly every military and diplomatic realm, the American effort in Iraq is finally beginning to show the careful planning and concentrated thinking that seemed to vanish the moment American troops entered Baghdad on April 9, 2003. We've heard progress reports in the past, of course, and they have often preceded a stunning setback. But what is new is the level of sophistication that Americans are bringing to their work, and the intensity of their engagement across so many fronts. Read the whole thing, please. Yes, there's plenty to complain about the Bush/Rumsfeld "peace" plan of 2003. Even taking the VodkaPundit Corollary into account ("no peace plan survives the last battle"), we simply didn't have enough troops on the ground or even any idea what we would face. It's nice to know that at long last, things are changing. Comments
It's the MSM inverse covrage law. When a republican administration is in power. The greater our success, the less coverage it recieves. The worse our failure or crime, percieved or otherwise, the greater the MSM coverage. Ofcourse it's just the opposite if a democrat administration's in office. I don't think for a second that the MSM is unaware of the slant of their coverage. Posted by: Tim P at February 20, 2006 01:49 PMFailure! This is pure butt-covering by a guy who is worried.
Yeah. What they said. ;-) (I've never been able to comprehend the notion that *any* war could be done "the right way.") Posted by: Julie at February 20, 2006 04:00 PMIt's sounds to me like they're stealing pages from the Special Force's manual and slipping them into the line doggies' SOP's. Cool. Posted by: richard mcenroe at February 20, 2006 07:48 PMFilkins has been dispatching accurate reports from Iraq since the invasion began. He is not some Hilton whore mailing it in. The only cya he engages in is literal. Cheers Posted by: Horst Graben at February 20, 2006 08:53 PMStephen Spruiell at NRO's MediaBlog has an excellent post on this subject. Will The NYT Ed Board Listen to NYT Reporters? The NYT has published back-to-back articles about how the military is turning things around in Iraq. First, Dexter Filkins published this article in the New York Times Magazine. The article is billed on the cover as "The U.S. Military Gets It Right, Too Late." I didn't think the piece was as pessimistic as that headline suggested. Filkins noted that sectarian violence might have progressed to the point where the military can't turn things around, but he didn't declare defeat inevitable. He charted progress in the military's methods for dealing with the insurgency and praised the new strategies of the commanders who are training the Iraqi forces to police their own country. Today, Thom Shanker followed with a front-page piece about the new Iraqi Counterterrorism Force — an elite unit that's taking over more responsibility from the American soldiers in fighting the insurgency. The tone of the piece is cautiously optimistic — "The Iraqi special operations forces are rapidly moving toward self-sufficiency," Shanker writes, though "it is clear that American troops will have to stay in Iraq for some time to come." Usually, you can count on the New York Times editorial board for a knee-jerk liberal reaction on almost any issue, except a few where doing so would put them in opposition to their more influential writers. For instance, op-ed star Thomas Friedman is a passionate advocate for trade liberalization, and NYT editorials on that subject often read like Friedman columns — even though most liberals favor protectionist policies for their union pals. The question in my mind after reading the NYT's latest coverage of the war is whether the NYT ed board will start listening to star reporters like Filkins and acknowledge that the military is doing things right in Iraq. |
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