LET’S START with this: Donald Rumsfeld needs to go. Give him a
pat on the back for Afghanistan, maybe even another Medal of
Freedom, since the president is feeling particularly generous with
those these days. But he’s got to go.
I reached that conclusion along with the rest of our editorial
board back in May, when we first called for his departure. That was,
in particular, over Abu Ghraib. As we said then, our mission in Iraq
is far too important to be threatened by a figure who seemed to
embody for the world the disparity between American ideals and
practices in the war on terror.
That was enough, but add any other reasons you like — his failure
to recognize that Iraq wasn’t Afghanistan, that we would need enough
troops to secure the country after toppling Saddam. And that they
would need armor. Or take his attitude toward recent questions about
that lack of armor. You’d think he was smart enough to know that the
morale of the troops, and of the folks back home, is just as
important as ammunition to success in Iraq.
Which brings me to my subject. As I said, the man’s got to go.
But it’s not the business of newspaper reporters to push him out the
door, especially not if they manipulate events to do it.
Specialist. Thomas Wilson of the Tennessee National Guard
performed a service to his comrades when he confronted the secretary
of Defense with the fact that he and thousands of others were going
into harm’s way in inadequately armed vehicles. The exchange made a
huge splash, because it was seen as coming from an ordinary
citizen-soldier speaking truth to power.
So good for him. But not so good for one Edward Lee Pitts,
reporter with the Chattanooga Times Free Press, who apparently
boasted in an e-mail of having prompted Spec. Wilson to ask the
question. “I just had one of my best days as a journalist today,”
Mr. Pitts has been quoted as writing. “I was told yesterday that
only soldiers could ask questions so I brought two of them along....
Before hand we worked on questions to ask Rumsfeld.... I went and
found the Sgt. in charge of the microphone... and made sure he knew
to get my guys out of the crowd.... I have been trying to get this
story out for weeks.... But it felt good to hand it off to the
national press.”
Mr. Pitts’ publisher later confirmed the role his reporter had
played. The publisher added, “It was supposed to be in our story,
how the question got asked, but it was not.”
I have no doubt Spec. Wilson asked a question close to his and
his buddies’ hearts, and I’m glad that it may lead to real action to
address the problem. But the reporter’s role as stage manager in
this gives me the creeps.
I hadn’t focused on this until a colleague from another state
sent an e-mail to a bunch of us editors raising the issue. He was
disturbed that other journalists he had talked with thought there
was little to nothing wrong with what the reporter had done. “I’m
not sure why this incident bothers me so much,” he wrote.
I couldn’t help responding:
“I know why it bothers me. My problem is that since it happened,
it’s taken on a life of its own as emblematic of what’s happening in
Iraq. Not that the issue of our vehicles not being properly armored
isn’t a real problem. It is, and it should be addressed — and yes,
maybe reporters should have been asking about it all along. But this
one guy (who was egged on by a reporter, even though he didn’t have
to ask the question if he didn’t want to) is being held out as
representing the attitude of our troops in-theater — they feel
betrayed by the administration, and they’re ticked off and not gonna
take it any more. In just a few days, he’s practically become this
war’s GI Joe or Willy.
“Over the weekend, an AP analysis by Tom Raum spun this incident,
the lawsuit over extended tours of duty and the recent refusal by an
SC Guard unit to go on a mission into ‘a lessening of faith in the
Iraq mission’ and a ‘growing restiveness of U.S. troops’ that
‘echoes a drop in optimism at home that a stable, democratic
government can be established in Iraq.’ The ‘town hall’
confrontation seems to have been the straw that caused this piece to
be written, as it dominates the text.
“Maybe such ominous conclusions are warranted. Or maybe not. A
piece in the NYT’s Week in Review made much of a group of Marines
going out on a risky raid with unarmored vehicles (they came back
safely, at least from this one), and of course cited the Rumsfeld Q
and A confrontation up high and prominently. (‘Though they had no
inkling of it, the vulnerability with which they were setting out
would soon become the focus of a new dispute over the war.’)
“But then, you get to the jump — to the very end of the piece,
really — and find that morale in the unit in question is just fine.
(‘But one striking thing about life with the 2/24, as with other
units struggling with inadequate equipment, was the absence of
grinding complaint. These marines have bolted the hardships of their
deployment onto the corps ethos of unremitting toughness, to the
point that deprivation is less complained about than celebrated, as
proof that the marines can overcome.’) But then, maybe it’s just
that this is the Marine Corps, and they’ve been making do with
inadequate, hand-me-down equipment at least since World War II.
“So which snapshot provides the accurate picture of morale among
most of our troops over there? I have no idea, and that’s
frustrating, because the answer to that question is critical to
whether we succeed in Iraq. Tom Friedman recently wrote that he will
cling to hope about our mission there as long as the troops do. So
will I. So will the majority of Americans.
“But how are we supposed to know WHAT the situation is if a
reporter manipulates the popular perception of our troops’ morale in
the field, and does so with such spectacular success as this one
did?
“THAT’s what bothers me about it.”
Write to Mr. Warthen at bwarthen@thestate.com.