Special bonus: Joe Galloway's foreword to my book

As an addendum to this week of discussion of my new book, So Wrong for So Long, I thought I would provide some “bonus coverage,” in the form of an excerpt from the foreword to my book by one of our participants, the great Joe Galloway. He titled it “The First Casualty.” Please comment.
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The First Casualty
By Joseph L. Galloway

In war truth is too often the first casualty, and it is not just a president or a secretary of defense or assorted official spokesmen who do the killing. Our brothers and sisters in the media also participate in the execution. Greg Mitchell has taken that as his lesson in So Wrong for So Long: How the Press, the Pundits—and the President—Failed on Iraq and in so doing has done a service to future generations in our business, and I believe, for readers of the news.

Looking back to that fall of 2002 when war drums were beating loudly and the president and his closest advisers spoke with certainty – and deceit -- about Saddam Hussein’s possession of weapons of mass destruction and the danger he ostensibly posed to our country and our friends and allies, most in the media either swallowed it whole or timidly refused to do their jobs and question the official rationale for war.

The great grey lady, The New York Times, and the voice inside the Beltway, The Washington Post, put dozens of unquestioning reports on the Bush Administration’s claims about Saddam’s quest for a nuclear weapon on their front pages. The few reports that even suggested that some experts were questioning those claims were buried deep inside, among the Viagra ads.

The Times front-paged reporter Judith Miller’s breathless stories about Iraq’s quest for WMD came straight out of the mouths of a series of bogus Iraqi “defectors.” After the invasion the paper of record ignored for too long the fact that Miss Miller virtually became the ex-officio commander of a U.S. task force charged with searching Iraq for proof of nuclear ambitions and possession of vast quantities of WMD.

Did the national outburst of patriotism and an epidemic of American flag decals and flag lapel pins on the expensive suits of television anchors frighten those who had long believed that their newspapers set the nation’s agenda? How could those agenda-setters and so many others in the media abandon their first duty to challenge and question the assertions of the politicians holding high office?

During the early years of the war, I made two reporting trips to Iraq, in the fall of 2003 and again in 2005-2006. The soldiers and Marines I lived with and went on operations and convoys with were the same type of fine young Americans I wrote about in earlier wars. In fact, many of their commanders, from colonels to four-star generals, were officers I had marched or ridden with when they were captains and majors in an earlier war. All were doing their best with a bad hand dealt them by their civilian overlords—too few troops to do the job assigned, struggling against faulty decisions by people like Ambassador L. Paul Bremer of the Coaliton Provisional Authority that only fueled the insurgency, and laboring under the micro-management of former Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld whose ears were closed against any advice contrary to his thinking.

I was an early and harsh critic of the administration’s conduct of the war. In the interest of full disclosure, because I had worked in 2001-2002 as a special consultant to Gen. Colin Powell, then secretary of state, I had sources very close to the debates and in-fighting over the conduct of the war at the highest levels. It was clear that Vice President Dick Cheney and Secretary Rumsfeld were riding roughshod over anyone who urged caution and careful thought. By 2005 I was writing columns suggesting that Rumsfeld, and his deputies Paul Wolfowitz and Douglas Feith, be fired for their mistakes, along with the then-Chairman of the Joint Chiefs Air Force Gen. Richard Meyer. None of this endeared me to either the White House or the Pentagon bosses.

Not until the 2007 perjury trial of I. Lewis “Scooter” Libby, Vice President Dick Cheney’s hatchet man, would the overly cozy relationship too many Washington pundits and reporters maintained with the likes of Libby and George W. Bush’s spinmeister Karl Rove be exposed to the open air.

Those of us old enough to remember the Vietnam War, and to carry visible and invisible scars from our work there, felt uneasy about Iraq and the stated reasons for pre-emptively invading that country. Those feelings only grew stronger in the months after March and April of 2003 when the President and his men were doing premature victory laps around the press rooms at the White House and the Pentagon.

Mitchell lays it all out in this book. Read it and weep. If you are a consumer of the news, I urge that you reserve judgment when reading reports quoting the calculated rhetoric of government officials. And, if you are a reporter, take a solemn vow to not believe everything you hear, and barely half of what you see.


Comments (5)

Classy and truthful. Like Mr. Galloway..

:)

I’d just want to stipulate: trust nothing you see.

Image manipulation is childsplay..

When speaking of the failure of the professional media regarding coverage of the run up to the war,
the war, and the lack of in depth reporting on the egregious actions, foreign and domestic, of the Bush gang there is no values inidentifying these 'journalists' as "the media", "the pundits", "inside the beltway reporters" as generalizing gets us nowhere.

Journalists who are no more than stenographers for the Administration need to be outed by name.

An example;

John King of CNN obviously likes John McCain (as does much of the media), you can tell that by the way King reports on and interviews McCain. King's recent report while in Iraq with McCain sounded like the talking points of the McCain campaign

Joe Klein became a stenographer for a Republican Congressman when Klein wrote a complete fantasy column describing the Democrat's FISA bill.

If slothful reporters like this aren't outed by name they continue with their irresponsible reporting.

As I discovered some time back and posted again recently;

Bob Woodward and Judith Miller represent a media market that long ago concluded having access to power is more important than speaking truth to it.

Gee, did I forget to mention ABC's top investigative reporter Brian Ross who did that hard hitting (maybe Pulitzer winning?) report on Hillary's newly released schedule while she was First Lady?

There's no doubt Brian burned the midnight oils going over the papers to discover how Hillary
was in the White House at the same time Bill and Monica were 'fooling around'.

By the way, Russert is running the Rev Wright video on MTP and delving into Obama's campaign.

I still remember Russert interviewing Cheney back in 2000, 2001 when Russert wore that ear to ear grin as he pandered to Cheney and his "gravitas."

"I was an early and harsh critic of the administration’s conduct of the war."

Really?

from McClatchy:
Gen. Franks tells how Iraq war plan came together
By Joseph L. Galloway | Knight Ridder Newspapers
Posted on Thursday, June 19, 2003

TAMPA, Fla.—Well before Americans saw the start of the ground and air war in Iraq, teams of U.S. special forces took control of Iraq's western desert—25 percent of the country, Gen. Tommy Franks said in his first interview detailing how the war was planned, fought and won. . .

A day before the war started, President Bush held a teleconference with Franks and all of his component commanders: air, naval, land and special operations.

"The president asked each of them, `What do you think of the strategy? What do you think of your current condition and stance?'" Franks said. "Each answered very positively with a crisp understanding of their current situation, a comfort level with forces, ROE (rules of engagement), and at the end of the conference, the president asked: `Any comments?'

"Historically, the record should reflect that this man was incredibly presidential. As he summed all this up and said, `I believe the military forces of the country are in position to do what must be done, so you have the execution order, H Hour will be this time.'". . .

The war plan that was executed in March evolved after a year of study, four or five visits by Franks to Bush, and frequent phone conferences among his headquarters, the Pentagon and the White House.. . .

The general said that in creating the war plan everyone involved examined a long list of what-ifs: urban warfare, use of weapons of mass destruction, burning the oil fields, launching Scuds.

"There was never any doubt in my mind that the quality of people, command and control, the equipment and the depth of resolve of our country took this beyond the point of negotiation before the fight ever started. If we fight, we win."
http://www.mcclatchydc.com/galloway/story/9752.html

Yeah dude, really.

Joe Galloway on November 19, 2003:


They share a breathtaking arrogance. They brook no word of opposition. They persist in believing that somehow they can graft Jeffersonian democracy onto ancient Mesopotamia, a land bathed in blood and ruled by terror for millennia. When they're wrong, they never admit it. Never.

A large part of the trouble unfolding in Iraq can be laid directly at the feet of Cheney, Rumsfeld and their people. They made no plans for postwar Iraq. No plans to secure the buildings and symbols of government in Iraq. No plans to rebuild a shattered economy, infrastructure and nation. No plans to secure law and order in a fractious, violent place.


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