James R said:
Personally, I am interested to hear directly from somebody who has served in Iraq. It adds another perspective. If you think the media has treated/is treating the military unfairly, then here is one place you can correct some misconceptions people might have.
Two tours in Iraq here (Feb. to Oct. 2003 and Apr. 2004 to Jan. 2005) and some opinions I've developed along the way. My biggest problem with the mainstream media's reporting of conditions in Iraq is that they never really showed how bad things were before the invasion. They'll report about something negative, like how little electricity is available. Their reporting may accurate, but it lacks context. They won't explain the sad state of repair that the grid and power plants were in from 1991-2002, and they won't explain how much of that infrastructure was deliberately spared from destruction during the invasion, many times at great expense to the tactical situation. This isn't always the case, but it happens more often than not. Pretty much everyone else who has seen the situation first-hand will tell you the same thing. I think this is what our zoomie friend (USAF07) is getting at.
Another thing that irritates me is the way they play up the body count angle. After a hostile action, journalists will scurry around the battalion TOC asking anyone that will talk to them about how many people are dead or wounded - friendly, hostile, and noncombatant alike - then make that a barometer of how successful said action was. In truth, a "body count" is only a good indicator of itself, unless the piece they're composing is specifically about that (which is not what I refer to here). Yet the media obsesses over numbers of people dead.
Finally, journalists are often technically inaccurate doomsayers. Much of this job requires extensive education and training to understand, so I don't blame them for all of this. But look at the way the media treats any highbrow weapons system like the MV-22 Osprey. Few criticisms of that aircraft are valid, and none present a mitigating reason to delay its acquisition schedule, but there they are, trying to tell us that it is a flying death trap (it isn't) that the Marines don't want it (we love it) and that it isn't worth half what it costs (yet the Vietnam-era CH-46s are somehow good to go for another 20 years). Once in a while, I wish they would refrain from drawing their own retarded conclusions and just trust the people who do it for a living and whose lives depend on the technology.
Let me caveat a little bit by saying that the rampant attention whoring that some reporting comes across as is almost entirely restricted to broadcast journalists. I blame it on the immediacy of the medium. Embeds are usually pretty good for the perspective they offer, limited as it is. Two of my favorite people who have reported on the situation in Iraq with honesty, candor, and insight are Michael Yon and Bing West. In particular, West's latest book
The Strongest Tribe should be the one book to rule them all. If anyone is looking for a chronicle of everything that has gone right and wrong in Iraq since the 2003 invasion, look no further.