Sunday, July 20, 2003

BAITING THE SOLDIERS

That is what William F. Buckley says Peter Jennings did recently in Iraq.

And he says it is disgusting.
"Lead us not into temptation." I commend this commandment to Peter Jennings of ABC, who did exactly that devil-work with only lightly concealed gusto in midweek on his nightly news.

Here are two or three soldiers, outdoors, their gear still on. The sun is scorching hot. In fact, our soldiers have been hot for four months. And sandswept, early on.

They were fighting a very hot war for six weeks, and maybe one of them, maybe all three, saw other soldiers alongside being killed. And for what seem now the interminable weeks since April 9, when Saddam's statue was toppled and Baghdad surrendered, they haven't known where the next stray bullet or hand grenade will come from, or whether one of them will be its victim.

And it isn't only the hidden assailant who has eyes on them, it's all those Iraqis who scurry about taunting them as infidels and oppressors, and sometimes throwing rocks. Thank God, they all thought until a few days ago, their division would be called back to America in a week or two! -- but no. An order came in canceling their departure, prolonging their tour of duty for who knows how long.

Along comes Peter Jennings' reporter, with the camera and the microphone. "Well, soldier, what do you think about staying on in Iraq (news - web sites)?"

It is a tribute to residual self-control (maybe Mother would be watching?) that the soldier asked that question didn't reply using spiky barracks-talk. Peter wanted to know, what did the soldier think about staying on for a while in Iraq?

What this soldier said was that he wanted to go home, that he could no longer trust the word of the military, that he wasn't sure the whole operation wasn't a bad idea, that he had no good feelings left for the Iraqis, given how badly they were reacting to the GIs.

What would you expect him to say?

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