Some thoughts on Iraq coverage today

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Jim Michaels of USA Today reports that airstrikes in Iraq are on the rise this year, with 1,140 airstrikes launched in the first nine months of 2007 compared to 229 in all of last year. Airstrikes are up in Afghanistan, too, with 2,764 bombing runs this year, up from 1,770 last year. Helicopter gunship attacks aren’t included in those numbers. The increase in American troops in Iraq — and their more frequent enemy engagement — has led to the need for more close air support, the Air Force said, and with more insurgents pushed out into the countryside, they’re easier to spot and hit. In both wars, air power is being used in lieu of extensive ground forces, admits Air Force Maj. Gen. Allen Peck, commander of the Air Force Doctrine Development and Education Center. The downside, given only brief mention in Michael’s story, is that these air strikes are more likely to kill civilians, despite the increased smartness of smart bombs, and that turns the Air Force into a recruitment tool for al Qaeda.

Plus, and just as important, they kill civilians, the moral wrongness of which seems to be lost in this story. Yes, it’s good to decrease reasons for locals to hate America, but not killing innocent people is a good unto itself, no? Am I the only one getting tired of seeing civilian casualties as something to be avoided for tactical reasons and not that it’s supposed to be wrong to kill innocent people?

Secondly, O’Brien Browne, who teaches Middle Eastern history and politics at Schiller International University and intercultural communication at Heidelberg University, argues that the reason for Iraq’s problems are those damn colonial straight-edges, wielded by the likes of Gertrude Bell, T.E. Lawrence and Winston Churchill after World War I. So what’s the big deal if Iraq splits up?, he asks. Furthermore, the three new regions in the country formerly known as Iraq should not even be called Iraq, because it’s a made up country anyway, he says. It’s full of people who don’t want to live together, and the Ottomans had it right. Oddly, he present Ottoman rule as one of benign neglect, letting the … whatever the people of the region should be called … run their own affairs as three provinces in the empire.

Well, that may have been true, but a large majority of Iraqis today don’t want the country to be split up. Arabs across the region see any attempt to do so as Zionist plot to divide and conquer the Arabs, and he ignores the thousands of families who are mixed Arab-Kurdish or Sunni-Shi’ite, as well as the ethnically diverse areas of Baghdad, Kirkuk, Basra and the like. Simplistic answers are often emotionally satisfying, but they usually involve body counts. Where does the Monitor get these guys?

1 Comment

I agree with you that killing innocent people is certainly not one of the best ways to get a point across. There is no argument about that what so ever. However, I think the government has their reasons to do such things. For instance, though revenge is also not the best way to fix a problem, it is a tactic that works. Since the government has us believing a connection with 9/11 and Iraq, they kill our innocent people, we do the same to them. The U.S. is not one to be the chicken of the fight. When we get attacked, we do not run and hide, we get back at the attacker.

Along with the revenge thought, is the reason of “get rid of the bad guys”. We can’t just simply find the bad guys easily, because they are smart enough to disguise themselves, so we rid them by ridding the community.

Though you state that most Iraqis don’t want the country to be split up, you also state that it’s imaginary anyway. The U.S. may not be the world police, but they are one of the stronger countries, and are around to help others become just like us. We see that Iraq is having trouble with how to govern their people, so we take a step in to try to help them. With the belief that they tried to hurt us, in maybe an attempt to get us to leave them alone, we saw it as they need more help now more than ever. What we have is something so great, we feel the responsibility to share it with those in need. Splitting the country up into the distinct parts they should be split into would help those who want to live the same, be together, which is an improvement of just having so many different views living together in one area fighting against each other to separate.

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About me


Hi there! Thanks for stopping in. I'm Christopher Allbritton, former AP and New York Daily News reporter. In 2002, I went stumbling around Iraqi Kurdistan, the northern part of Iraq outside Saddam's direct control, looking for stories. (Some might call it "looking for trouble.") In March 2003, I made it back in time for the war, becoming the Web's first fully reader-funded journalist-blogger. With the support of thousands of readers, we raised almost $15,000. You can read my dispatches here. It was one of the moments in journalism when everything worked. It was a grand -- and successful -- experiment in independent journalism. In 2004, I moved to Iraq, where I would spend the next two years. It was a raucous, scary and exciting place with a lot of news going on. But I've since moved on to Beirut and the wider region. I now report for a variety of outlets.

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This page contains a single entry by Christopher published on October 22, 2007 10:08 AM.

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