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Myths of Iraq
Blackanthem Military News,
BAGHDAD, Iraq, March 14, 2006 11:06
Article originally posted by
RealClearPolitics
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Ralph Peters is a retired U.S. Army officer and the author of 20
books, including the recent New Glory: Expanding America's Global
Supremacy. |
During a recent visit to
Baghdad, I saw an enormous failure. On the part of our media. The reality
in the streets, day after day, bore little resemblance to the sensational
claims of civil war and disaster in the headlines.
No one with first-hand experience of Iraq would claim the country's in
rosy condition, but the situation on the ground is considerably more
promising than the American public has been led to believe. Lurid
exaggerations and instant myths obscure real, if difficult, progress.
I left Baghdad more optimistic than I was before this visit. While
cynicism, political bias and the pressure of a 24/7 news cycle accelerate
a race to the bottom in reporting, there are good reasons to be soberly
hopeful about Iraq's future.
Much could still go wrong. The Arab genius for failure could still spoil
everything. We've made grave mistakes. Still, it's difficult to understand
how any first-hand observer could declare that Iraq's been irrevocably
"lost."
Consider just a few of the inaccuracies served up by the media:
Claims of civil war. In the wake of the bombing of the Golden Mosque in
Samarra, a flurry of sectarian attacks inspired wild media claims of a
collapse into civil war. It didn't happen. Driving and walking the streets
of Baghdad, I found children playing and, in most neighborhoods, business
as usual. Iraq can be deadly, but, more often, it's just dreary.
Iraqi disunity. Factional differences are real, but overblown in the
reporting. Few Iraqis support calls for religious violence. After the
Samarra bombing, only rogue militias and criminals responded to the
demagogues' calls for vengeance. Iraqis refused to play along, staging an
unrecognized triumph of passive resistance.
Expanding terrorism. On the contrary, foreign terrorists, such as Abu
Musab al-Zarqawi, have lost ground. They've alienated Iraqis of every
stripe. Iraqis regard the foreigners as murderers, wreckers and
blasphemers, and they want them gone. The Samarra attack may, indeed, have
been a tipping point--against the terrorists.
Hatred of the U.S. military. If anything surprised me in the streets of
Baghdad, it was the surge in the popularity of U.S. troops among both
Shias and Sunnis. In one slum, amid friendly adult waves, children and
teenagers cheered a U.S. Army patrol as we passed. Instead of being viewed
as occupiers, we're increasingly seen as impartial and well-intentioned.
The appeal of the religious militias. They're viewed as mafias. Iraqis
want them disarmed and disbanded. Just ask the average citizen.
The failure of the Iraqi army. Instead, the past month saw a major
milestone in the maturation of Iraq's military. During the mini-crisis
that followed the Samarra bombing, the Iraqi army put over 100,000
soldiers into the country's streets. They defused budding confrontations
and calmed the situation without killing a single civilian. And Iraqis
were proud to have their own army protecting them. The Iraqi army's morale
soared as a result of its success.
Reconstruction efforts have failed. Just not true. The American goal was
never to rebuild Iraq's infrastructure in its entirety. Iraqis have to do
that. Meanwhile, slum-dwellers utterly neglected by Saddam Hussein's
regime are getting running water and sewage systems for the first time.
The Baathist regime left the country in a desolate state while Saddam
built palaces. The squalor has to be seen to be believed. But the hopeless
now have hope.
The electricity system is worse than before the war. Untrue again. The
condition of the electric grid under the old regime was appalling. Yet,
despite insurgent attacks, the newly revamped system produced 5,300
megawatts last summer--a full thousand megawatts more than the peak under
Saddam Hussein. Shortages continue because demand soared--newly free
Iraqis went on a buying spree, filling their homes with air conditioners,
appliances and the new national symbol, the satellite dish. Nonetheless,
satellite photos taken during the hours of darkness show Baghdad as bright
as Damascus.
Plenty of serious problems remain in Iraq, from bloodthirsty terrorism to
the unreliability of the police. Iran and Syria indulge in deadly
mischief. The infrastructure lags generations behind the country's needs.
Corruption is widespread. Tribal culture is pernicious. Women’s rights are
threatened. And there's no shortage of trouble-making demagogues.
Nonetheless, the real story of the civil-war-that-wasn't is one of the dog
that didn't bark. Iraqis resisted the summons to retributive violence.
Mundane life prevailed. After a day and a half of squabbling, the
political factions returned to the negotiating table. Iraqis increasingly
take responsibility for their own security, easing the burden on U.S.
forces. And the people of Iraq want peace, not a reign of terror.
But the foreign media have become a destructive factor, extrapolating
daily crises from minor incidents. Part of this is ignorance. Some of it
is willful. None of it is helpful.
The dangerous nature of journalism in Iraq has created a new phenomenon,
the all-powerful local stringer. Unwilling to stray too far from secure
facilities and their bodyguards, reporters rely heavily on Iraqi
assistance in gathering news. And Iraqi stringers, some of whom have their
own political agendas, long ago figured out that Americans prefer bad news
to good news. The Iraqi leg-men earn blood money for unbalanced,
often-hysterical claims, while the Journalism 101 rule of seeking
confirmation from a second source has been discarded in the pathetic race
for headlines.
To enhance their own indispensability, Iraqi stringers exaggerate the
danger to Western journalists (which is real enough, but need not paralyze
a determined reporter). Dependence on the unverified reports of local
hires has become the dirty secret of semi-celebrity journalism in Iraq as
Western journalists succumb to a version of Stockholm Syndrome in which
they convince themselves that their Iraqi sources and stringers are
exceptions to every failing and foible in the Middle East. The mindset
resembles the old colonialist conviction that, while other "boys" might
lie and steal, our house-boy's a faithful servant.
The result is that we're being told what Iraqi stringers know they can
sell and what distant editors crave, not what's actually happening.
While there are and have been any number of courageous, ethical
journalists reporting from Iraq, others know little more of the reality of
the streets than you do. They report what they are told by others, not
what they have seen themselves. The result is a distorted, unfair and
disheartening picture of a country struggling to rise above its miserable
history.
By Ralph Peters
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