
One Marine's words
Nov 25, 2005
by Mona Charen
I don't know if the war in Iraq is ultimately unwinnable, but what I do know
makes me skeptical of those who say so.
I do know that since Vietnam, liberals have viewed every exercise of American
military power (with the exception of those undertaken by Bill Clinton) as
preludes to disaster. The very first question Ronald Reagan was asked at his
first presidential press conference concerned El Salvador. The question: Did he
think it was going to turn into another Vietnam? Democrats invoked Vietnam with
every other sentence during the long and nasty controversy about aiding the
resistance in Nicaragua. More recently, just days into the Afghanistan war, The
New York Times ran a front-page lament calling that conflict a new
"quagmire."
Liberals seem always to believe that America will lose its wars, and when it
doesn't, that it should.
It is obviously deeply painful to contemplate the more than 2,000 American dead,
and many others gravely injured in Iraq. And charities like Fisher House (www.fisherhouse.org)
welcome concrete demonstrations of Americans' concern for military families. But
one does not sense that members of the military share the belief so widespread
in the press and Congress that the Iraq war is going very badly and that the
original decision to fight was a mistake.
One
Marine, Sgt. Todd Bowers, who did two tours in Iraq, described the attitude of
many press types. "They didn't want to talk to us." Why? I asked.
"Because we were gung-ho for the mission." Bowers, who was saved from
grievous injury when a bullet lodged in the sight of his rifle (a sight his
father had purchased for him), is chary about the press.
In his first tour, he noticed that members of the press were reluctant to
photograph Iraqis laughing, giving the thumbs up sign, or cheering. Yet Bowers
saw plenty that would have made fine snapshots. In Baghdad, Al Kut and Al-Nasiriyah,
Bowers reported no signs of anti-American feeling at all among Iraqis.
Fallujah,
of course, was different, as the city was a hotbed of terrorism, and the battle
of Fallujah was one of the fiercest engagements of the war. During the battle,
Bowers found himself sharing a ride with an embedded reporter for the AP. He was
asked what he thought of the destruction. Bowers responded that it was
"Incredible, overwhelming. But it definitely had to be done." He also
stressed that because the enemy had fought so dirty, tough calls had to be made.
Later, he saw himself quoted in newspapers around the country to the effect that
the destruction was "overwhelming" as if he could not cope. He had
also made some anodyne remarks about rebuilding the damaged areas of the city,
and responded "Where to begin?" when asked about the plans. He was
speaking of the water treatment plants, medical facilities, and schools American
forces were about to help build, but his comments were offered as evidence of
the futility of the situation -- the very opposite of this eager Marine's
intent.
There was plenty of progress to report, if the press had been interested. When
the battle of Fallujah was over, the Marines set up a humanitarian relief
station in an abandoned amusement park. Together with Iraqis locally hired and
trained for the purpose and with an assist from the Iraqi ministry of the
interior, they distributed rice, flour, medical supplies, baby formula, and
other necessities to thousands of Iraqis. For six weeks, Bowers reports, the
distribution went beautifully, "like a well-oiled machine." Not worth
a story, apparently. Only when something went wrong did the press see something
worth reporting. A small group of Iraqis were turned away from the food
distribution point, though they had been waiting in line for hours. They were
given vouchers and told they could come to the front of the line the next
morning when supplies would be replenished. These few unhappy souls were then
besieged by press types eager to tell their story.
At the same site, the Marines had repaired an old Ferris wheel. The motor was
dead, but when two Marines pushed and pulled by hand they could get the thing
turning to give rides to the children of the Iraqi employees. They did so for
hours on end. A photographer from a large American media company watched
impassively. "Why don't you take a picture of this?" demanded one
Marine. The photographer snorted, "That's not my job."
Mona
Charen is a syndicated columnist and political analyst living in the Washington,
D.C., area.