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June 30, 2004

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Greatest Hits, Vol II

By Greyhawk

We've reached the midpoint of the year, and this past week also saw the posting of the 1000th entry on the Mudville Gazette. (Disclaimer: There have been other temporary entries that have been deleted or combined, thus the number of posts is higher than the surviving entries.) Most full-time bloggers would likely consider this a low number of posts for 16 months, but such is the life of a MilBlogger - other things take priority.

Still, I determined to mark the occasion by compiling an update to a previous list done last New Years, a Mudville's Greatest Hits. Those posts that were most visited, in this case for the year 2004 to date, regardless of my personal preferences etc. This exercise admittedly began as a bit of self-congratulatory fluff, but in reviewing these entries I found a similarity in many of them that seemed especially appropriate to note in light of this week's transfer of authority in Iraq: they all dealt with media bias, in many cases a bias that seemed at cross-purposes with the goals of the US mission there.

At the that time they were current many thought that the individual media stories reviewed below were overtly anti-American. Perhaps they were. Viewed collectively the full list (along with so many others that didn't make this list) at least certainly highlights some of the difficulties faced by the Coalition in achieving its goals - difficulties presented both by the nature of warfare and global politics, and by the perception of same cultivated by a media that appears increasingly other-than neutral to a growing number of people.

I hope this compilation can serve as a launching point for future efforts, here in Mudville and elsewhere. This sort of thing should be increasingly common in a thriving blogosphere. Here in chronological order from date of publication, Mudville's Greatest Hits II.

You're Getting Warmer...
A few months before the release of the summer laugh-fest The Day After the British newspaper The Observer published a piece "exposing" a "secret Pentagon report" detailing that the earth was going to end catastrophically in a matter of a very few years due to the effects of global warming, and that the President of the United States knew it. I googled a few key names and detailed the result in the linked entry. My format for presenting the actual facts so blatantly ignored by the Guardian could probably only be used in the Blogosphere. My use of the father/son approach seemed an obvious choice to explain to those who might be tempted to take such a story at face value why a bit of further investigation might be worth their time. I was accused of shooting the messengers - a charge I was not guilty of but one that would be repeated in virtually every entry that follows below. Exposing non-factual information, presenting additional facts, revealing a lack of implied qualification of "experts" or questioning the presence of agendas that override any consideration of truth is quite different from "shooting the messenger." I have open comments for those who'd care to refute anything I say here, but dismissing fact-supported efforts with such an unsupported claim is an actual example of "shooting the messenger". (Chuckling)

Atrocities in Fallujah (and Elsewhere)
The LA Times on their decision to display graphic images from Fallujah: 'While showing the images could erode support for the war, not showing them could have an opposite effect." So they showed them. Media bias? Such issues have been raised countless times since, but it was the brutal killings of contractors in Fallujah that marked a turning point in coverage of Iraq (though perhaps it was just another bend in a long and twisted road). In the minds of many the media seems to have only one filter to determine whether graphic images will be repeated endlessly: will this help or harm the American cause? From this to Abu Ghraib to "flag-draped coffins" to beheadings of Americans and others, the filter has been used, often with the opposite of the desired effect (see "flag-draped coffins" - images that engendered support for Americans and vanished rather rapidly from the public eye) I think they tipped their hand in this self-assessment of coverage of the Fallujah episode, revealing a bias so deep they can't see it - even when it's in black and white.

Heh
I didn't "break" the story on Kos' inexcusable response to the horrors of Fallujah, but as a military blogger I was involved in coordinating a response. And I did bring to light the minor fact reported in Heh - that as with most such actions the results were a ton of publicity and a huge upswing in visitors. (Yes - ironically this entry makes Mudville's most visited list.)

UN In Action
Immediately before Seymour Hersh and 60 Minutes "discovered" the Abu Ghraib story three American prison guards were shot and killed by a fellow guard at a UN-run prison in Kosovo. Described as a "Palestinian from Jordan", the shooter was killed by return fire from others in the group he had attacked. The full story is convoluted and incomplete, and the UN apparently wants it that way. An information clampdown was imposed immediately, big media ignored the story, and to this day there have been no significant updates. Mudville began following the story here and has made numerous follow-ups. Murder by fellow UN "peacekeepers" of two American women and one man apparently isn't newsworthy. Perhaps if there were nude photos...?

Timeline
If you're going to recount a series of events in hopes of clarifying what happened, chronological order is often a useful approach - perhaps the only logical one. The fact that Seymour Hersh knows this and yet jumbled the sequence in his "expose" of the events at Abu Ghraib led me to wonder what the story would read like if the facts were told in a logical manner. This is the result, and in my humble opinion it reads quite differently then Seymour's original piece. A follow up entry here was the first exposure of the connection between Hersh and one of the accused, who was the actual "leak" of the story to the press. (A connection later at least partially verified in a story buried in the New York Times)

The Greyhawk Factor
with links to the previous series on Abu Ghraib. After the timeline Hersh's appearance on O'Reilly revealed more of his agenda and several weak points in his defense of the accused torturers from Abu Ghraib.

Abu Ghraib was an aberration, a tragic and horrible consequence of war. Those who would distort the truth or obstruct it's discovery for their own personal or political gain should be (at the very least) exposed. Mudville led the way in watchdogging the media on this issue, but that watchdog function is a rapidly developing role of the blogosphere in current events, and one at which an increasing number of bloggers excel.

Tagubagate?
Media spin was virtually out of control by this point, and knowing who was attempting legitimate reporting, who was being deceptive, and who was being deceived was perhaps completely and utterly impossible. In this "watchdog" function there's a fine line between desire for finding the truth and sheer paranoia, but sadly, previous examples cited above might lead one to believe an agenda was being pursued.

Shortly after, the first of the beheading videos made its way onto the internet. The issues of what images should and shouldn't be shown and who is responsible for the actions of others were debated anew. And so it goes.

But arguably, the images question as framed today dates back to 911 (don't most issues?), when networks decided to stop replaying the coverage out of stated concerns for the sensitivity of the audience. I note with some pride that the most visited page in Mudville in 2004 was actually first posted in September 2003 marking the anniversary of that tragic day. Unlike the stories above, this one has not been linked by any "giants" of the blogosphere, has apparently risen to the top on it's own merit and virtual "word of mouth". It's also a story I certainly don't consider "mine" as it's a recounting of the heroism of one man on that day. Rick Rescorla's name should live forever.

Afterword:

Popularity of entries determined by hit count on 30 June 2004 as determined by onestat sitemeter.

If a tree falls in the blogosphere and no one links, does anyone care? Special thanks to the many referrers who made these pages the most visited. In random order:

Glenn Reynolds
Hugh Hewitt
Jonah Goldberg
Lucianne.com
James Lileks
Little Green Footballs
Tim Blair
Roger Simon
Citizen Smash
Blackfive
Misha

And if it weren't for readers I'd never be read. Thanks to you for being here.


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Posted by Greyhawk / June 30, 2004 9:53 PM | Permalink

3 Comments

Congratulations!! It's a great site and you should be VERY proud of what you've accomplished.

Love the Greatest Hits VII list, it's like a walk down memory lane!!

Here's to many many more great posts.

No

Thank YOU for providing it tp us Grey!

Thank you for the privilege, it's always a pleasure to visit your site, wish I had more time to visit more often.

Mrs G copy.png

March 19, 2010


Dawn Patrol 03/19/2003
[Greyhawk]
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"Welcome to the Dawn Patrol, our daily roundup of information on the War on Terror and other topics - from the MilBlogs and various sources around the world."

Mudville was founded in March, 2003. Our efforts to bring the thoughts, words, and deeds of milbloggers to a wider world evolved to become The Dawn Patrol in March, 2005. With today's entry we're going to reset the clock - but not re-write the history - and recreate the world as it was - on a day the world changed...

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(More front pages here.)

Updating... more to follow....

MILBOGS

Andrew Olmsted, 19 Mar 2003, Stateside: It would appear that the liberation of Iraq has begun.

Greyhawk, 18 Mar 2003, Germany: A united world could have, just maybe, brought down Saddam without firing a shot. We will never know. 19 Mar: We'll never know what a united world could have achieved... the UN could not agree on anything, the situation degenerated, and here we are. Status quo was not working. The French were too desperate for oil and trade at any cost. Well-intentioned Americans were led into the streets by Communists (and others) with an agenda. The media distorted the split. Many in America and abroad thought they could manipulate the situation to their personal gain. They miscalculated. The fire is lit.

Pontifx ex Machina, 18 Mar, undisclosed location: Rolling out the gate, the guard gets a quick "hook-em, horns" sign as we weave through the barricades. Then we're off, cruising through the desert in a battered-up SUV. On the eve of war, only one thing passes through our minds: is there going to be any appropriate music on the radio?

Lt Smash, 19 Mar, undisclosed location: Read the President's speech today. The clock is ticking.

Chief Wiggles, 22 Mar, Kuwait: The war started Wednesday morning for us right after the president gave a speech to the American people that lasted about 4 minutes. We were all very anxious for this whole thing to be either over or get it on its way.

Will, 22 Mar, en route: I am going to Baghdad to personally shoot that paper hanging son of a bitch!

Lt Smash 20 Mar, undisclosed location:
From: Public Works Department
To: Saddam Hussein
Subj: BLASTING OPERATIONS IN YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD

Sgt Stryker, 20 Mar, Stateside: Iraq to File U.N. Complaint About Attack

Primary Main Objective, 30 Mar, undisclosed location I Dare Kofi to Come Get Me.

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BruceR, Flit, 19 Mar, Canada: AND SO IT BEGINS. Godspeed, Yanks. Come home safe and soon.

Andrew Olmsted, 20 Mar 2003, Stateside: The most important thing to remember over the next few days is this: the first reports are almost always inaccurate. First reports are generally submitted in the heat of battle before any real analysis can take place. Therefore, they're highly subjective, based on limited information, and rarely hit the mark. So as the first reports of 'surgical strikes' on Iraqi forces come in, it's best to take those reports with a grain of salt...

Iraqi Blogs

Salam Pax, Baghdad: The bombing aould come and go in waves, nothing too heavy and not yet comparable to what was going on in 91. all radio and TV stations are still on and while the air raid began the Iraqi TV was showing patriotic songs and didn't even bother to inform viewers that we are under attack. at the moment they are re-airing yesterday's interview with the minister of interior affairs. THe sounds of the anti-aircarft artillery is still louder than the booms and bangs which means that they are still far from where we live, but the images we saw on Al Arabia news channel showed a building burning near one of my aunts house...

Other Blogs

Andrew Sullivan, The Daily Dish: How much more morally indefensible is appeasement when we also have complete international authority to do what must be done? I think we will look back in the future and not ask, as so many now are, how it was that diplomacy didn't get unanimity on this matter. We will look back and see the moral obtuseness of Chirac and Putin and Schroder and Carter and feel nothing but contempt for them, and their preference for state terror over the responsibilities of the free world. That's why I felt enormous pride tonight in the stand being taken by Blair and Bush. The president's speech was measured, firm, just. Blair's political risks - in order to do what he believes is plainly right - will confirm him in history as a great prime minister, the conscience of his party, and the leader of his country. I say that before this war begins, because the cause is just whatever vicissitudes of conflict await us...

Charles Johnson, Little green Footballs: SPEED BUMPS - I just had to go into Westwood (here in Los Angeles) and couldn't make it, because a small group of "peace activists" is blocking traffic and getting into scuffles with police. Unbelievable footage on local TV of these creeps taunting police, trying to grab their batons, sticking cameras into their faces...

Glenn Reynolds/Instapundit: WAR SEEMS HAVE BEGUN IN EARNEST: Not much more to say at the moment. I hope it goes well, and quickly...
Of course, he's got a ton of links.

Other Opinions

Mark LeVine, Alternet - 'Bush Wins': The Left's Nightmare Scenario: ...With war seemingly imminent, the movement is being forced to fall back on a second scenario, "Everyone Loses," in which the warnings of a protracted and bloody war that destabilizes the Middle East and increases terrorism bear their bitter fruit.

However unpalatable in terms of destroyed lives and infrastructure, this latter scenario would at least quash the Administration's imperial dreams and force the kind of soul searching of United States' policies that is a major goal of the movement. But this outcome is less likely than many assume, and the antiwar movement would be well advised to plan for a third scenario: "Bush Wins."

In this third scenario, the war is over quickly with relatively low U.S. casualties, some sort of mechanism for transitional rule is put in place and President Bush and his policies gain unprecedented power and prestige. From my recent conversations with organizers and their latest pronouncements, it is clear that this possibility has yet to be addressed. Waiting much longer could spell disaster for the antiwar movement...

The social and political forces unleashed by the end of decades of Hussein's murderous rule will not easily be penned in by a US-sponsored show-democracy; but whether these forces use a reopened public sphere or turn to violence to respond to the likely betrayal depends in good measure on how adroitly the world progressive community can lay fast but deep roots in Iraq.

Newpapers

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Updating... more to follow....


(The Dawn Patrol's Archives are here.)



Posted 2:33 PM | Permalink | Comments (0) | Trackbacks (0)


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The Mudville Gazette is the on-line voice of an American warrior and his wife who stands by him. They prefer to see peaceful change render force of arms unnecessary. Until that day they stand fast with those who struggle for freedom, strike for reason, and pray for a better tomorrow.
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The Mudville Gazette is written and produced by Greyhawk. Unless otherwise credited, the opinions expressed are those of the author, and nothing here is to be taken as representing the official position of or endorsement by the United States Department of Defense or any of its subordinate components. Furthermore, I will occasionally use satire or parody herein. The bottom line: it's my house.

I like having visitors to my house. I hope you are entertained. I fight for your right to free speech, and am thrilled when you exercise said rights here. Comments and e-mails are welcome, but all such communication is to be assumed to be 1)the original work of any who initiate said communication and 2)the property of the Mudville Gazette, with free use granted thereto for publication in electronic or written form. If you do NOT wish to have your message posted, write "CONFIDENTIAL" in the subject line of your email.

Original content copyright © 2003 - 2009 by Greyhawk. Fair, not-for-profit use of said material by others is encouraged, as long as acknowledgement and credit is given, to include the url of the original source post. Other arrangements can be made as needed.

Contact: greyhawk at mudvillegazette dot com

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