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AP Story: Troops Kill Children, Shoot Korans, and Other Stuff
***OPINION***
We’re not asking you to be patriotic but couldn’t you at least not run articles with this title: “US strike on al-Qaida kills children“?
We are in Iraq right now because al Qaeda is there. Our troops bombed that truck because
the military said its forces were targeting members of an al-Qaida suicide bombing network. The forces engaged the occupants of a vehicle after they refused to surrender and “exhibited hostile intent.”
How could anyone blame us for collateral damage of this kind? Our enemy wears civilian clothing, they attack us using IEDs in vehicles, and they use suicide bombers. And everyone in Iraq should be accustomed to the rules of engagement by now. If the military is telling you to stop your vehicle and you don’t you have to know that you are going to get shot at and you will probably die.
Shouldn’t the blame be leveled at those “heroic” insurgents? They are the ones, after all, who purposefully try to increase collateral damage. They purposefully blow up civilians. Basically, al Qaeda’s goal is to kill so many civilians that America is forced to leave the front line of the War on Terror.
And that brings us back to our fearless reporters. The first fifteen paragraphs are about “evil” American troops. Three of those paragraphs dedicated to one of our snipers using a Koran for target practice. This, of course, led to demonstrations and a couple deaths in Afghanistan. Yeah, that’s balanced. An American sniper makes a Koran into confetti and they riot. Nineteen “brothers” use OUR BUILDINGS as target practice and were there any demonstrations condemning that in Afghanistan? NO!
But we are big, bad America and we are in the Middle East to steal their oil, corrupt their youth, and destroy their culture. And our media eagerly writes about these incidents for weeks and will continuously cite it as American abuses for years to come. How are we suppose to win anybody’s hearts and minds if we have this virus eating away at our own hearts and minds? Our media systematically works to undermine our war efforts at every turn.
That “other stuff” that was in the AP story was about how the Iraqi’s were trying to take back their country:
Iraqi security forces have launched a series of campaigns to impose their control in areas dominated by armed groups, including Sadr City in Baghdad, the southern city of Basra and the northern city of Mosul.
On Tuesday, some 10,000 Iraqi soldiers and police deployed in Sadr City, which for years was the unquestioned bastion of radical Shiite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr’s Mahdi Army militia. The deployment was enabled by a truce between al-Sadr and the government.
Progress is being made in Iraq. Oh, wait, here’s the next seven paragraphs:
Although the deployment has been peaceful, the No. 2 U.S. commander in Iraq, Lt. Gen. Lloyd J. Austin III, warned it was fragile.
“We’re hopeful that it will hold. But we recognize that, like anything, it is fragile and so there are a number of things that could happen, and we have to prepare ourselves for that eventuality,” he told The Associated Press in an interview Thursday.
He said violence had dropped dramatically in Iraq, with only 288 attacks, or an average of 41 per day, reported last week, the lowest number since April 2004. In a more dramatic example, he said only 15 attacks targeted U.S. forces on Wednesday, but that the military expects “episodic spikes” in the violence as militants try to regroup.
Militia violence has increased in areas of eastern Baghdad near Sadr City.
Three people were killed in clashes late Wednesday in the Obeida district. Among them was Iraqi television cameraman Wissam Ali Auda, of Afaq TV, who was apparently caught in the crossfire on his way home, said Tariq Maher, an Afaq correspondent. The station is affiliated with Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki’s Dawa party.
In a second journalist killing, the bullet-riddled body of Hashim al-Hussein, a correspondent for the Sharq newspaper who was kidnapped Tuesday, was found dumped near the city of Baqouba, north of Baghdad, police and morgue officials said.
Excluding the two deaths reported Thursday, at least 127 journalists and 50 media workers have been killed in Iraq since the war started, according to the New York-based Committee to Protect Journalists.
No wonder so many people think everything is going to Hell in Iraq. The only things that get reported are 1.) troops gone wild, 2.) IEDs and other attacks and 3.) two paragraphs of progress buried deep within 25 paragraphs of numbers 1 & 2. BigT
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May 23, 2008 at 01:08 am by BigT, 126 views, add comment


