[Am-info] Fwd: Letter from an Army Chaplain in Iraq
John Angelico
John Angelico" <talldad@kepl.com.au
Sat, 30 Oct 2004 13:35:15 +1000 (AEST)
My last post <g> on this is a fwd fwd from INSIDE Iraq
Best regards
John Angelico
OS/2 SIG
talldad@kepl.com.au
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<>Letter from an Army Chaplain in Iraq:
Dear Friends and Family:
I am addressing this letter to you to express a frustration that I know
has been voiced time and again, yet is met with little change. It
concerns the media coverage of this war and the effect of that coverage
on the morale of our troops. As a battalion chaplain I hear the comments
and complaints of soldiers who, while performing an incredibly difficult
job under hostileand stressful conditions, constantly see their efforts
portrayed as futile. NBC's coverage this morning (your Thursday evening,
16 September 2004) is a prime example that I believe shows the gulf that
exists between the truth of what is happening here and the deceitful
agenda of the mainstream media at home and abroad.
Only 24 hours ago the NBC media crew arrived here and filmed hours of
footage with our unit. They were told of numerous projects in which our
unit is involved, not only in the area of force protection and Troop
Medical Clinic support, but also in humanitarian aide to a local village
here in Baghdad. Here is an example of some of the projects to which
they were introduced:
1. The reconstruction and furnishing of a clinic
2. Miscellaneous enhancements for a local elementary school and a local
day care center
3. Reconstruction of the decimated electrical, sewer and water systems
4. Reparation of exterior walls and gates surrounding the village
5. Rubble and garbage removal projects to clean up the entire village
6. Construction of a protective chain link fence around the local Shi'a
Mosque
7. Studies to examine the development of agricultural systems and a
garment industry to help the locals provide for themselves
8. The ever-growing clothing and school supplies drive for the children
of the village
In the roughly one minute clip that they drew from their day of filming,
what did they show? The First Lieutenant who is the primary driver of
these projects was shown with one quote about never believing he would
be in Iraq, being a National Guard soldier. This was followed by their
interview of another soldier's wife, saying her husband was supposed to
have retired this summer, that his responsibility to the military should
be over and that he should be home. They showed NOTHING of the great
humanitarian efforts that are going on here!
It is coverage like this that is convincing more and more soldiers that
the consistent media agenda is to show you, the American people, the
futility of our current efforts and how everything is going wrong. There
is no apparent attempt to show all the good that is happening that, for
those of us who are here, far outweighs the very weak, though
spectacular, moments of insurgency. And we see it via satellite, just as
you do. In a day of great violence across the country, last Sunday,
where the insurgency failed to take one American life, what one film
clip was shown over and over? They showed the lone burning Bradley
fighting vehicle, with Iraqis dancing on and around it, waving flags of
the insurgency. Out of the thousands of troops who made it safely around
Baghdad and the country that day, the media focused on one piece of
impressive footage and repeated it over and over until the viewer
receives the message that this is all that went on in Iraq today - an
insurgent victory. I also remember how the body count, for two days
thereafter, was printed in ever-increasing increments, never mentioning
who the casualties were - giving the impression that they were American
casualties.
The despair and depression, as well as the thankfully limited anti-war
sentiment, over our country's efforts in Iraq are not based upon all of
the facts. They are rather based on what the media has chosen to show -
and what they have chosen NOT to show. The media knows that they can
always find those willing to complain, grouse, protest and disagree. And
they splash those voices all over their screens and pages, drowning out
the voices that will tell you, as I am, that there is good going on here.
There are things going on here you would be proud of, things that would
bring tears to your eyes; like the looks of parents whose children are
going to school for the first time in years, equipped with pencils, pens
and paper and clothed with clean new clothes. There are essential
services being provided to people to whom they were denied under the
oppressive regime of Saddam Hussein. There is a trial going on for that
man and at least eleven of his evil cronies who, let us remember, killed
over 300,000 people under the watchful eye of the United Nations (pun
intended) during the 12 years they had responsibility for the health and
welfare of this nation (yes, the same, inept organization that is
currently ignoring the Darfur, Sudan, slaughter of Christians by Islamic
fundamentalists). This was the same time that the oil-for-food program
monies were being used to line the pockets of Saddam and his friends and
build luxurious palaces like the ones our forces now occupy as he had
quarters all over this nation. And Saddam all the while complained that
it was "American Sanctions" that were killing his people. I don't
remember a sanction that required a mass grave.
Please know that the media is NOT giving you the right picture, much
less the WHOLE picture. They have an agenda, it is clear, and that
agenda does not include the current administration claiming success in
this endeavor. It is unclear if their sensationalist "reporting" will
change if the administration changes. The one thing I know as I watch
the morale of the men who are here doing the job is that every time the
enemy's paltry attacks are made out by the media to be marker events in
Iraq, it becomes a little harder for soldiers to see value in even the
greatest things we are doing. Your care packages, your letters and your
constant prayers are the only
things that remind us that the majority of thoughtful Americans are
truly behind this effort and that what we are doing has great value.
Don't let that go. Keep supporting your troops, not just in word, but in
action. Remember this: You cannot support the troops AND denigrate the
war effort. It is a logical and a practical inconsistency. While the
soldier fights the enemy, he needs those behind him to offer support to
his back, not daggers.
The news media is one of the greatest threats to this war. Just ask a
terrorist. Every time he can do something desperate and spectacular and
have the effect with one man blowing himself up in a crowd that an
entire U.S. Brigade has in securing a city, the media has thrown terror
the victory. It is not the side that wins the most ground anymore that
is victorious, but the one that can satiate the blood-hungry media. We
have given them the stories they need to show how much we are truly
doing. The question then must turn to why they have a fascination with
making the villain the victor. If we win this war, it may not be much of
a story for them, but if we lose it...
Your troops are doing amazing things here - things many of them are not
even trained to do, like a medical platoon leader doing public works
projects! I hope that either the media start showing the REAL stories
here or that you will show your contempt of their deceitfulness with
your complaints and, ultimately, with your vote. Don't watch the news
media that thrives on the death of American soldiers to bump their
ratings! And remember your troops. Support of victory is support of your
troops.
Sincerely, CH (CPT) Chris Bassett Baghdad, Iraq
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