June 21, 2007
THE ALLY KILLER (via Gene Brown):
Getting It Right: David Halberstam and the media's ethos of irresponsibility. (JAMES BOWMAN, June 20, 2007, Opinion Journal)
Halberstam's old employer, the New York Times, took the occasion of his death to run a piece by Dexter Filkins, who writes for the paper from Iraq, comparing now with then. "During four years of war in Iraq, American reporters on the ground in Baghdad have often found themselves coming under criticism remarkably similar to that which Mr. Halberstam endured: those journalists in Baghdad, so said the Bush administration and its supporters, only reported the bad news. They were dupes of the insurgents. They were cowardly and unpatriotic." Small wonder then that, before he died, Halberstam himself "did not hesitate to compare America's predicament in Iraq to its defeat in Vietnam. And he was not afraid to admit that his views on Iraq had been influenced by his experience in the earlier war. 'I just never thought it was going to work at all,' Mr. Halberstam said of Iraq during a public appearance in New York in January." Yet neither Halberstam nor Mr. Filkins mentions one crucial difference between Vietnam and Iraq. In Vietnam, the enemy was militarily formidable even without any assistance from the media. In Iraq, the enemy is militarily weak and can hope to win only by exploiting the media's negativity--and the continuing romance of their role in Vietnam--to make the war seem unwinnable. The role of fearless truth-teller is no longer available, if it ever was. Like it or not, the media are already involved in the action and must pick a side.After noting how, since Halberstam, it has become part of the romance of being a reporter to question the bona fides of America's leaders, Ambassador Holbrooke added: "But everything depended on David getting it right, and he did." This strikes me as being equally revealing. "Getting it right" is of course an admirable ambition for a journalist, but it is an exercise that has little in common with what generals and politicians must do, which is to lead others through situations of mortal peril with appallingly incomplete and inaccurate information to guide them. Getting it wrong is a given. That's what the romance of the Halberstamian example has made journalists--and not only journalists!--forget when they try to apply his lesson from Vietnam to the Iraq war. For the man who must act and not just observe, the only question that matters is how quickly he can recognize and recover from his mistakes and how strong is his will to keep fighting in spite of them and the inevitable setbacks they cause. On the first of these tests, the Bush administration has done rather badly, I think; on the second it has done rather well. But part of the reason for its failures has been that the mind of the media remains obsessed with the question only of its prescience--as if "getting it right" were the only thing that mattered and getting it wrong a fatal disqualification for leadership.
The problem, of course, is that Mr. Halberstam and company got it profoundly wrong, with deadly consequences for millions. The murder of Ngo Dinh Diem that he helped to provoke is one of the few truly black marks on our foreign affairs escutcheon.
MORE:
Top Iraqi Officials Growing Restless (Joshua Partlow and Robin Wright, 6/21/07, Washington Post)
Iraqi Vice President Adel Abdul Mahdi, a senior Shiite politician often mentioned as a potential prime minister, tendered his resignation last week in a move that reflects deepening frustration inside the Iraqi government with Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki.
If it were up to David Halberstam and his ilk we'd have Maliki murdered. Posted by Orrin Judd at June 21, 2007 7:04 AM
Can't blame this one on Bush, so the media will ignore it.
Posted by: erp at June 21, 2007 6:58 AMThe immediate problem was that Halbertam's formative experience was the civil rights
movement; so he tranferred his contempt for
the security forces in Birmingham to the US
Army and the ARVN. Consequently when the crazy Buudhists immolated themselves, he thought Diem had to go. Ironically,the Diem was most likely the strongest political leader then. Big Minh,
the favored figure, went away in 6 monthes; only to come back at the end. The difference between
Halberstam & Bonner; his counterpart in El Salvador, was he wasn't pulled; the same can be
said in this war, for the Burchett clone, Ware,
or Arnett's Ghosh: who unapologetically cheered an IED maker in this week's Time Magazine.
Harry Reid and/or Nancy Pelosi would pull the trigger in a heartbeat, which doesn't say much about JFK and the best/brightest, now does it?
95% of the press huddled in the Green Zone would do the same, because everything they see in Iraq reminds them of jungle and US defeat.
What would Jamil Hussein do?
Posted by: jim hamlen at June 21, 2007 11:09 PM