The Real War Reporters

by: William Rivers Pitt, t r u t h o u t | Op-Ed

The Real War Reporters
(Image: Jared Rodriguez / t r u t h o u t; Adapted: Staff Sgt. Samuel Bendet / U.S. Air Force, blowback photography)

A good friend noted recently how little we hear of Iraq and Afghanistan in the news anymore, and further noted the deafening silence regarding those ongoing wars from what he described as "dishwater left-leaning political activists" whose disengagement from the issue, according to him, makes them full of something I can't repeat in print. That bogus disengagement, he asserts, stems from the fact that Obama is in office now, so everything must be OK. It isn't, of course, but it is hard to miss the fact that we haven't heard much about the wars, or the protesters, since a couple of Januarys ago.

It's hard to argue against his point, and worse, the sense of being made of dishwater myself is difficult to avoid. I've written about the deadly messes in Iraq and Afghanistan several times in the last year or so, but it is nothing compared to the focus I had on those two conflicts going back to 2002. Back then, and until 2009, I wrote three books on those two wars, discussed them in detail in this space on a weekly basis, joined political campaigns based solely on the candidate's stance on those conflicts, and went to dozens of public protests all over the country.

Why did my coverage of these conflicts get dialed back? There are several reasons, most of which sound like excuses. Obama's new administration brought forth a torrent of issues that also deserved coverage - the Sotomayor nomination, the retirement of Justice Stevens, the rescue of Detroit's auto industry, health care reform, and the eruption of right-wing insanity both in Congress and out in the streets, to name only a few - but in the end, my own attention has most definitely wandered from two wars that deserve much more attention.

Other reporters, like Truthout's own Dahr Jamail have certainly not stepped back from covering these conflicts. Jamail, who went to Iraq to see and report what was happening from the ground, has consistently reminded us that the mayhem and bloodshed continue unabated. In an article from last month, he noted:

It is highly unlikely that the US government will allow a truly sovereign Iraq, unfettered by US troops either within its borders or monitoring it from abroad, anytime soon. The Status of Forces Agreement (SOFA) between the Iraqi and US governments indicate an ongoing US presence past both the August 2010 deadline to remove all combat troops, and the 2011 deadline to remove the remaining troops.

According to all variations of the SOFA the US uses to provide a legal mandate for its nearly 1,000 bases across the planet, technically, no US base in any foreign country is "permanent." Thus, the US bases in Japan, South Korea and Germany that have existed for decades are not "permanent." Technically. Most analysts agree that the US plans to maintain at least five "enduring" bases in Iraq.

You don't see stuff like that in "mainstream" news reporting, but it is a fact nonetheless. Even without the heroic work of people like Jamail, all you need to do is scan the wire reports buried in the avalanche of information that is available to everyone online, but is rarely passed up the food chain for general public consumption. This, for example, is what happened in Iraq on Monday:

Reuters: A roadside bomb targeting a police patrol seriously wounded three policemen in Falluja, 50 km (35 miles) west of Baghdad, police said.

Reuters: A sticky bomb attached to the car of a member of a local council wounded him in southwestern Baghdad, police said.... A roadside bomb wounded two people, including a policeman, in the Amil district of southwestern Baghdad, police said.

Reuters: A roadside bomb planted close to a gas station killed two people and wounded three in Yusufiya, 20 km (12 miles) south of Baghdad, police said.

Reuters: Roadside bombs planted around the houses of two policemen exploded before daybreak, killing one and wounding three other people, including one policeman's son, in Ramadi, 100 km (60 miles) west of Baghdad, police said.

Reuters: A bomb attached to a car killed the driver and wounded five bystanders in the Mansour district of western Baghdad on Sunday, police said.

Reuters: A roadside bomb wounded three people in the Saidiya district of southern Baghdad Sunday night, police said.

Reuters: A roadside bomb targeting a US military patrol wounded two Iraqi civilians in Taji, 20 km (12 miles) north of Baghdad, Sunday night, police said.

This was Afghanistan on Monday:

The Washington Post: The CIA is using new, smaller missiles and advanced surveillance techniques to minimize civilian casualties in its targeted killings of suspected insurgents in Pakistan's tribal areas, according to current and former officials in the United States and Pakistan.

The New York Times: Small bands of elite American Special Operations forces have been operating with increased intensity for several weeks in Kandahar, southern Afghanistan's largest city, picking up or picking off insurgent leaders to weaken the Taliban in advance of major operations, senior administration and military officials say.

The New York Times: Twelve trucks, most of them carrying fuel to a NATO base in eastern Afghanistan, were burned by an angry crowd early Sunday less than 30 miles from Kabul, according to local officials and NATO reports. The attack was thought to be in retribution for two raids by a joint Afghan-American force over the weekend, Afghan officials said.

AFP: Twin bomb blasts killed two people on Monday in an attack targeting police in the southern city of Kandahar, which is increasingly the focus of the Taliban's fight against Kabul.

Once again, all that was from one single day. So, yeah, it's not over over there. Not by a long chalk, and despite the whistling silence, it's not over over here, either. The wars in Iraq and Afghanistan affect every living American well beyond the impact of the flesh-and-blood conflicts we occasionally see on TV. The issue of who is still getting rich off those wars, how our society has been wired to blindly support a permanent state of war, and why we hear so little about these all-consuming matters, remain deeply pressing and of deadly importance.

Jamail is not the only reporter focusing on this. This Thursday, a teach-in will be taking place on Capitol Hill to focus specifically on Iraq, Afghanistan and the issues that surround them. The moderator will be Rep. Dennis Kucinich (D-Ohio) and the panelists will include Chris Hedges, author of "War Is a Force That Gives Us Meaning"; Jeremy Scahill, author of "Blackwater: The Rise of the World's Most Powerful Mercenary Army," and former Army colonel and current political activist Ann Wright.

I spoke with David Swanson, a writer and political analyst who is one of the organizers of the event and also a panelist, about the purpose of Thursday's teach-in.

"An immediate legislative goal is to increase the number of representatives in the House who vote No on borrowing another $33 billion from our children to escalate a hopeless, counterproductive, criminal and evil war with no end in sight," says Swanson. "One purpose of raising the number of No votes is the one that Congress members and most paid activists understand: pressuring the president. But another purpose that many in Washington find hard to fathom is building a caucus of war resisters who eventually gain a majority and deny a president war funding rather than persuading him he doesn't want it. So one line of thought for teaching and discussing is that of war powers and the best arrangement of powers among the branches of government. We hope also to establish what some of the reliable facts are on what is happening in Afghanistan, Pakistan, Iraq, Palestine and the rest of the region. Is the resistance fueled by the occupation? Can a war be ended by escalating it? What is the cost to the rule of law? What is the cost to our safety? What is the cost to our wallets, and what are we trading away in terms of jobs or green energy? Above all, what is the human cost for both the victims and the perpetrators? And how can we end these wars?

"The question of whether Congress exists to influence the president or to govern the nation," continued Swanson, "has a real impact on what people lobby Congress to do. If the purpose of voting No on the funding for the escalation is to persuade the president of something, then a toothless, unenforceable bill asking the president to draw up a plan to exit Afghanistan someday but not requiring that he stick to it seems equally good or maybe even better, since it directs the president what to do. If, on the other hand, the purpose is to move in the direction of actually ending the war in the first branch of our government, regardless of the president, then No votes on the funding are far and away the top priority. And if you think presidents, like all politicians, answer to real threats more than toothless persuasion, then a growing movement to cut off the money is the best rhetorical device as well. In that case, a weaker amendment that could offer representatives an excuse for voting Yes on the funding ('I voted for an exit timetable, so I'm antiwar') seems counterproductive - although it would be valuable if brought up the week after the funding vote."

Asked why the panelists who are to participate in the event were chosen, Swanson replied, "The original organizers asked me to participate and to find more speakers; Hedges, Scahill and Wright were among those they wanted, and all proved to be available. Hedges is one of the most skillful writers or speakers I've seen at providing a broad understanding of the critical points in large and complicated discussions. He, like Scahill and Wright, does not bend the truth to please any party or even a Party. Scahill is one of the best investigative journalists we have, and he has an amazing grasp for how a story is being told, or not told, and how it ought to be told. And Ann Wright is the greatest living combination of fearless civil resistance and amiable diplomacy. She could ask you to surrender to a life in prison but leave you smiling. I'm afraid that comes pretty close to the skill set most needed on Capitol Hill."

Lend this event your ear if you are able. Swanson, Scahill, Hedges and Wright, along with Kucinich, have not relented in their coverage and criticism of America's ongoing war, and they deserve all of our attention. The lack of attention paid recently to Iraq and Afghanistan by the "mainstream" media, and by independent journalists like myself, has been disgraceful and must change.

As the last line in the film "Jarhead" succinctly puts it, "We are still in the desert." 

Creative Commons License
This work by Truthout is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial 3.0 United States License.





     

»



William Rivers Pitt is a Truthout editor and columnist.  He is also a New York Times and internationally bestselling author of two books: "War on Iraq: What Team Bush Doesn't Want You to Know" and "The Greatest Sedition Is Silence." His newest book, "House of Ill Repute: Reflections on War, Lies, and America's Ravaged Reputation," is now available from PoliPointPress.


Comments

This forum is moderated by software. Please allow up to 15 minutes for your comments to go live and avoid posting the same comment multiple times.



I think that Mr Pitt needs

I think that Mr Pitt needs to get out more. I get
out a lot, in the D.C. area. We sell our gorgeous
No Afghan War buttons for a dollar apiece, thus
making substantial profits. We use those profits
for our equally gorgeous No War in Afghanistan
yard signs, which we offer "Free to a Good Yard".
One out of five houses accepts them.

For pictures, and more info, see www.waifllc.org.

Our problme: there are too few of us doing this
work. If we had a dozen colleagues, we would have
our yard signs all over the D.C.. area.

Mr Pitt, do you live in the D.C. area? or do
you know someone who does? we could use
your help, out on the street.

Bottom line: the bloggers and the "activists"
may have moved on, but the people, at least
those in the Nation's Capital, are still very
much against the Wars.

Best wishes,

Alan McConnell, in Silver Spring MD



Your writing is as brilliant

Your writing is as brilliant as ever and I appreciate your commentary on the endless war. I must add that insofar as I'm concerned, as a liberal living in San Francisco, the US government simply does not represent me. I'm sorry to say this because in many ways it's an admission of defeat. After a lifetime of one war after another, and a defense budget that seems immune to sanity, to see Obama elected and then see him go right down the same path is not only dispiriting but tragic, for military families and the whole country. In terms of public action I've turned my attention to my city and state, and I no longer believe there is anything I can do that will have any impact on anyone in Washington DC. Indeed, it would seem Washington and New York are totally insane. Thanks again for your fine work.



Desert? NO, that's the Casa

Desert? NO, that's the Casa Blanca vegetable garden where Michelle's raising whole cloned cauliflowers from just one of Obama's ears, deaf to the rest of US! After the Burning Bushs, it's a house-servant delicacy: Smoked Cauliflower Head of State.



I voted for Obama. I rooted

I voted for Obama. I rooted for "hope" and "change." I cried when he won, tears of relief and hope for change. I want you to know that I Do Not think everything's okay. There's only so much that one person can do before disappearing into a pile of blubbering despair. Does that make me full of the unmentionable? Perhaps. Still, I don't think everything's okay.

I am a grandmother, and I work as a professional counselor, one-on-one with people, rooting for their own personal version of "hope" and "change." My grandson is headed for Afghanistan, as soon as the Navy gets him trained in medicine, enough to mend the broken, salvageable bodies of our troops. Please, don't tell me that I think everything's okay. That's just not true, and I don't know anyone who feels that way.



I really find Pitt's columns

I really find Pitt's columns well worth reading and his recent concentration on other matters in the recent past is logical given what has been happening in the "States" what with Tea Party folk not understanding that Vietnam war protesters were not commies but stood for the same things they stand for, reduced government involvement in our lives. An NPR interview this AM about Teddy Roosevelt and his desire to go to war not only made me realize that the US has been in the war business for a long time, but also that our wars have been used by Roosevelt and others for their own self-interests (Teddy felt that he and the nation were becoming weak because they hadn't forged themselves in the crucible of war for a while). So, Bill, as long as you come back every so often to remind us of the idiocy of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, you're welcome to venture into other topics.



Christopher, You summarized

Christopher,

You summarized my views perfectly. Too bad you cannot divorce a country: say three times--I divorce thee and sever all connections with thee--and the separation is complete. No more taxes to support a spouse drunk with military illusions. No more special forces operations done in my name. No more trainloads full of money for kleptocrats. No more Guantanamos. No more handouts to health insurers. Wouldn't it be great if it were that easy? Only they still have their hands on my wallet to achieve their odious goals.



No war reporting?! No

No war reporting?! No demonstrations against the war?! Reporters not visible because Obama is in office?! Don't make me choke. War on terror?! The chutzpah leaves me gasping! The folks who take pride in declaring that freedom isn't free need to wake up and smell the roses. The war isn't over there. It's right here and right now. Always has been. We are the enemy we are taught to fight. It's what keeps us in line. I love my country. It's where I grew up. It's the business of running the country that makes me angry, and I don't mean just the government. Or just big business. Or just the banks. It's all of that, and it's us.



"The wars in Iraq and

"The wars in Iraq and Afghanistan affect every living American well beyond the impact of the flesh-and-blood conflicts..."

Yeah... well... it's affecting every living (so far) Iraqi and Afghan even more. It seems that it's THEIR flesh-and-blood that is is getting most of the punishment. That's important, yes?



Thanks for this important

Thanks for this important article!
Please talk about the class issues of privilege in the next one.



Pitt does well to remind us

Pitt does well to remind us how against the Iraq war we were when G.W. waged it. How I raged against David Brooks when he--a clever man--would not denounce the Bush war policy for the criminal enterprise it was! I campaigned fervently for Obama, and wished him well upon his election. Now it is time to admit that the Afghan adventure has taken on almost all the the unjust, cruel, and doomed aspects that were part of the Iraqi adventure from the start. I propose it is time--and then some--for us to admit that in the transition from campaign to governance the Obama phenomenon has morphed into G.W.'s third term. The notion we can "stabilize" Afghanistan at the point of a gun, and THEN assist social reform there (if, indeed, that is our purpose), is arrogant and contrary to all psychology and to the lessons of history. It is time for us to learn from the mistakes of Brooks and company by not imitating their misguided loyalty, and to denounce this agenda at the top of our lungs for the murderous stupidity it is.



Ron Paul's Opposition

Ron Paul's Opposition Continues - he was right from the beginning, yet Pitt give zero credit, while making reference to 'crazies in the street' stereotype of a monolithic tea party movement - which it is not. How about doing something constructive and pointing out the common ground between peace lovers on the Left and peace lovers on the Right? How about taking the opportunity to examine this failure to end the war as evidence of the Lie of the Left/Right paradigm itself? Don't be a dinosaur Mr. Pitt - there is a large population in the streets protesting this war and you dismiss them as 'teabaggers' while failing to distinguish the Paul group from the Palin group.



I'm still an active war

I'm still an active war resister. I wrote Mr. Obama weekly during his first year--until his West Point and Oslo declarations. One thing he has made "crystal clear" is that he doesn't give a damn about us or our position. Neither do the many members of congress, the many citizens who live near me, nor anyone else in a position to "make a difference."

When I do receive the rare responses from members of my government, they are lectures about why their position in favor of the usual killing, bombing, and bribing is correct, moral, and necessary--and why my and my fellow resisters' positions are a recipe for Apocalypse Now.

I've been on the street, and still am. I do "Arlington South" and still do. My organization of like-minded pacifists has had its communication disrupted by Comcast limitations. We have experienced fist-fights, thrown razor blades, not to mention the cursing, swearing and displays of the single IQ point most of the passers-by gesture at us.

Mr. Obama, and the rest, B[r]ush us off as lint on their dark-suited shoulders. They seem to have no conscience at all and certainly no pity for the victims (on either side).

What can we do but lament with Mr. Pitt? The Rupert Murdoch-owned media will not allow the journalists to show or tell the public about the wars and too few know (or read) Mr. Pitt or Truthout or any alternative media.

What can we do but send our nickels and dimes to Mr. Kucinich (and perhaps Swanson, Scahill, Hedges and Wright)--the only living people in Washington?

And tend our own gardens (as Candide decides in the end) and occasionally disturb traffic by standing on street corners with signs.



Oh, one more thing, I don't

Oh, one more thing, I don't "love" my country any more. If God doesn't damn America in the end, he is not a just god.



Will Americans ever get a

Will Americans ever get a clue, grow up, and realize that Republicorp politicians = Democorp politicians = a "user interface" for what amounts to a crime syndicate that's more than happy to wage war and perpetuate fraud on a global scale?

Yes, hopers for "change," Obama, Bush No. 2, Bill Clinton, and Bush No. 1 simply function(ed) as interchangeable game pieces on the bankster enabled corporate game board. The major "news" media is just another piece on the same game board, which explains the status of war "reporting" by such media.

Americans aligned with either prepackaged political philosophy of the "left" or the "right" cannot perceive the simplest things, which should be discernable well ahead of time to anyone other than the easily deceived.

Alas, the deceived do not know that they are deceived. And in America, the deceived don't even suspect that they could possibly be deceived. P.T. Barnum was right - there's a sucker born every minute. Especially among American citizens.

America, even among its so-called "educated" classes, has become a version of Idiocracy, but with a twist in that there's an Idiocracy of the "left" and an Idiocracy of the "right."



>>> ...stems from the fact

>>> ...stems from the fact that Obama is in office now, so everything must be OK. <<< No, our inaction and appearance of apathy is because the guy we elected to make things better has turned out to be just another war-monger who enjoys playing with tanks and missiles. We feel helpless because the system has betrayed us and shut us out and we have no one else to turn to. Does no one (except the late Howard Zinn) care about the thousands of lives we're destroying?



What the world needs now is

What the world needs now is more war, another disaster just like in Iraq but this time in the USA, you folks need a reality check, big time! Drop a few nucs on major cities give weapons to street gangs and get on down! Kill each other for a change! The rest of the world will not interfere, just get it on as only you can do, and leave the rest of us out of it. You are the HATE MONGERS with OBAMA the COWARD to lead you! Go for it!!



Dear Ken: I hope you're

Dear Ken: I hope you're getting help.



Most missing of all is

Most missing of all is anything about the people of Afghanistan, their dire situation after 30 years of being Great Gamed, and what we might to that's actually constructive.



ugg australia outlet uk

cheap kids ugg boots uk to your friends RxpyfYpB http://www.uggboots--uk.net/



lv online outlet

you love this? lv store online for gift JzcdZNQK http://www.louisvuitton--onlineshop.com/



chanel bags outlet

look at chanel outlet and check coupon code available lJfHydPI http://www.chaneloutlet-handbags.com/



christian louboutin outlet chicago

get christian louboutin outlet for more detail kastbHLE http://www.christianlouboutin-outletstore.org/



uggs outlet stores

I'm sure the best for you uggs outlet camarillo for promotion code PrxydajV http://www.uggs--outlet.com/



replica bags

look at replica handbags at my estore GbVYvQmt http://www.replica--bags.com/



ghd australia rgjnpf

coach outlet mxyjmmgz coach usa znyqrioa coach factory outlet qgxbvcmu coach factory sdjpuxbx