Accuracy in Reporting
Is the reporting out of Afghanistan and Iraq accurate? It's hard to say. Sometimes you need to hear from an independent voice -- someone who's been there, but who isn't associated with the Mainstream Media. Today, Michael Yon fact checked the Wall Street Journal:
I've never posted a rebuttal to a news story. Today is an exception. Last week I participated on a panel at the Marine Command General Staff College in Quantico, Virginia. The dais was stacked with distinguished journalists -- I was the baby in the room -- who addressed a large group of military officers. I traveled from Afghanistan just to speak there after a scheduling conflict with their first choice, Joe Galloway, resulted in his recommendation that I fill his seat. When Joe Galloway talks, people listen. I was honored by his recommendation and privileged to join the panel in a vigorous debate of the symposium theme: "Selling the Truth: Media Portrayal of Insurgents, the Government, and the Military."
As the day opened, a Marine officer was asked to pick a story about current events and comment on it. He held a copy of the Wall Street Journal, a paper I first started reading as a teenager. The WSJ is a reliable source, and so I've stuck with it through the years. The Marine was holding a WSJ in front of this distinguished group of military officers that also included DEA and FBI officials, not to mention the representatives of CBS, CNN, Al Jazeera and others. As the Marine opened the paper, I said something like, "That's yesterday's Wall Street Journal? That's easy. Turn to page A16 and there is a commentary about Afghanistan. It's pure bullshit." There was a microphone in front of me, but luckily, the crowd was mostly military and they laughed off the language.
...
In fact, the media is not up-playing the danger in Afghanistan but seems to be grossly missing it. Unfortunately, I predict NATO and other forces will lose increasing numbers of soldiers in Afghanistan. The place is bad. Really bad. And it's getting worse. Yesterday an Indian engineer was murdered. They cut off his head. Also, yesterday, the car bomb in the photo above exploded close by some employees of a friend. I was close by two bombings in just six days in Lashkar Gah, a place they used to call "safe."
This entry was tagged. Afghanistan Iraq