Media AWOL in exposing Iraq War’s years of ineptitude
The U.S. war in Iraq ended just before Christmas, and if you blinked you probably missed it.
TV news coaxed some seasonal sentiment out of the troops getting home for the holidays, but the Sunday-morning talk shows where news of consequence is usually autopsied barely noticed. The Beltway sages had weightier matters to discuss, such as the Gingrich ascendancy and the latest congressional standoff.
The silence was understandable because the topic is so awkward. The Iraq war wasnt a defeat, like Vietnam. But it wasnt a win either: Saddam Hussein is long gone, but the strategic menace the invasion was meant to thwart was bogus, the installation of democracy seems shaky at best, and the country seems on the verge of tearing itself apart again.
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Our country isnt unique in making war needlessly, but we may be unique in our insouciance. Attention really should be paid. After all, destroying another country is a big deal. Between 105,000 and 130,000 Iraqi civilians died violently, and half a million more were lost to degraded infrastructure, lousy healthcare and other miseries caused by years of murderous strife uncorked by the U.S. invasion. Some two million Iraqis are now refugees, and hundreds of thousands of ordinary lives have been mutilated.
Youd think some sort of examination is in order: Congressional hearings? A truth and reconciliation commission? At least, an extended segment on 60 Minutes?
Read more here: http://www.miamiherald.com/2012/01/01/2567324/media-awol-in-exposing-iraq-wars.html#storylink=cpy?du