Live from Baghdad - The Press War

Matt Sanchez is a U.S. serviceman in Iraq. This is his view on the filters through which the is being reported.

[quote]Live from Baghdad
The press’s war.

By Matt Sanchez

In Baghdad, at an informal meeting of the incoming U.S. ambassador to Iraq and members of the media, the ambassador got an earful about how difficult it was to cover this war. Despite the dainty hors d’oeuvre and wine (in the first real glasses I have seen since my arrival in Iraq), the press brought out a laundry list of issues preventing them from doing their job: checkpoints, transportation, the bureaucracy of blood tests at the border, and the need for more personal security. For what was supposed to be a meet and greet, the greet did not last long. Ambassador Ryan Crockerwas gracious, and some thanked him for inviting us to his home, which was rumored to be the former residence of Saddam’s sister. But like so many things here in country it’s not always possible to separate the rumored from the real. Discerning facts from fiction is an obstacle the media trips over daily.

As the current center of national government, the Green Zone is a high-security, exclusive neighborhood, where checkpoints are more common than monuments. On the way back from the ambassador’s residence, we were asked to get out of the car and submit to a search. Several members of the press and State Department were livid; they insisted there was no need for them to break the usual protocol of VIP express entry. The Peruvian guard, whose English was not up to the task of explaining his urgency, tersely insisted everyone leave the vehicle.

While waiting in line for the x-ray machine, I asked the Peruvian if this was normal. He assured me that it was not, and nervously explained they had received very specific information about a bomb threat. The following day, a suicide bomber attacked a hotel just a stone’s throw away. But at the inconvenient checkpoint, a New York Times reporter raised even more of a fit for the guard than he did for the ambassador. With the Iraq war being one of the most dangerous to cover, you’d think some journalists would appreciate the extra security measures, but you’d be wrong about a lot of assumptions concerning the wartime press.

After spending some time with the mainstream media, it’s not hard to understand why the coverage coming from Iraq is, as Staff Sergeant Rodriguez from the 4-9 cavalry out of Texas put it, “Completely wrong . . . in my opinion.”

The media has a conflict of values. A successful insurgent will always get more recognition than a successful infantryman — no matter how many successful infantrymen there are. In an arm-wrestling match between progress and propaganda, the reward of media coverage for bad behavior has a Pavlovian effect on attention-seeking terrorists.

On my trip north, our convoy was hit by an IED. An explosion is a split-second flash, something you could miss if you blink. Like attempting to photograph a lightning bolt when the sky is clear, explosions are tricky to catch on film. You have to point at the right place in the right moment, and even then you’d need luck. Unless, of course, you know when, where, and how the bomb is about to go off.

Unlike any other player on the board, the press has no oversight, no mandate, few penalties, and even fewer consequences. In Fallujah, a suicide bomber kills one victim, but an “unidentified police officer” reports 20 dead and just as many casualties. Because there are not enough reporters on the ground, too many bureaus have outsourced both their reporting and standards to third-party “stringers” whose spectacular videos of explosions and inflated body counts have shown up on both jihadist recruiting sites and American television screens, simultaneously. These hacks-for-hire literally get more bucks for each bang.

Nothing happens? No cash from an image-driven 24-hour news cycle. Have the media made mistakes in coverage? No doubt. But in an industry where some claim to be “keeping them honest,” there’s no penalty for false or misleading reports. With accountability about as valid as last week’s newspaper, reporters still maintain carte blanche in their work. For a group that habitually decries abuse of power and unilateralism, who watches the watchmen?

In 2004, the Iraqi prime minister banned Al Jazeerah from the country for “presenting a negative image of Iraq.” The Al Jazeerah spokesman, whose first name is Jihad (no joke), called the ousting “unjustifiable” and “contrary to the promises of freedom of speech.” Presenting a negative image of the United States is hardly grounds for dismissal and it may even earn an ambitious journalist a Pulitzer Prize, but the men and women fighting in this war have consistently protested against biased coverage that “never shows all the good things that happen.”

Everywhere I have traveled throughout Iraq, I’ve heard troop horror stories of seemingly friendly reporters “burning” them, but reporters defend themselves. An LA Times correspondent insisted she was meticulous about getting quotes right, another journalist from the Army Times said soldiers sometimes regret saying things that look dumb in print. Misled or misspoken? The truth probably lies somewhere in between, but there should be no doubt about the friction between those on post and those in the press. Reporting as if the war were some type of game show, media coverage has been reduced to a running tally of dead servicemen and “expert commentary” from the faraway, air-conditioned offices of a midtown Manhattan newsroom.

Setting a Guinness record for distance to commute to work, Time magazine’s Iraq “expert” Joe Klein has managed to get his opinion and analysis to audiences worldwide since 2003. With no military experience (which seems to be a prerequisite for reporting from Iraq), perched above is keyboard in Westchester, N.Y., Klein has been a persistent back-seat driver in the “rush to war”. Finally, after four years of his articles have influenced millions of readers and news outlets throughout the world, Joe Klein has made it into Iraq just in time to declare the effort hopeless.

As I read much of the Western press I wonder, who side are these guys on? Of course, the answer is that they’re supposed to remain neutral, but this neutrality is a luxury afforded the media by a standard that only one side will meet. When Time magazine interviewed a bombmaker claiming to be responsible for “rising American casualties,” they forgot to ask the “sophisticated and tenacious enemy” the tough questions like, “What’s your exit strategy?” or “How broken is the insurgency?” “Could you define victory?” or even the most basic, “Why are you doing this?” The fact that the press demands accountability from one side and offers servility to the other is a very cunning strategy to win an asymmetrical war. That is, it’s as if the press were conducting a war of its own.
— Matt Sanchez is a U.S. serviceman in Iraq.
National Review Online[/quote]

Oh god, I know this isn’t right, but truly I can’t help myself. You see, I read the first two words, which were actually written by TC and I just couldn’t get passed them because I kept thinking what happens when this chappy Matt misses a chance to wash? Why then he becomes, well, a . . .

:nsfw:

HG

Sounds like more of the same, “Well sure twenty American soldiers were killed last week, seventy injured, oh yeah and there were two hundred Iraqi deaths and injures, but…but…an American soldier helped pave a road in Kurdistan! How come that never gets reported, huh? Huh? OK then.”

Ah, yes, “serviceman” Matt Sanchez: Gay porn star, prostitute and semi-pro right-winger who is not now , nor ever has, actually served in Iraq.

In 2003, after a career as an EFL teacher (yay!) gay porn star and hooker, he joined the Marine Corps Reserve at the age of 33 and was trained as a refrigeration specialist. In 2005, as a junior at Columbia, he claimed he was approached by members of the International Socialist Organisation, who supposedly called him “baby-killer”. He used this claim to fame to pole-vault on to various right-wing talk-shows, received the Jeanne Kirkpatrick Freedom Award and appeared at the Conservative Political Action Conference, posing with Ann Coulter, who had just called John Edwards a faggot.

Which does not of course in any way imply that he is not a totally unbiased regular guy just giving his patriotic opinion.

[quote]The Corps on Friday was slated to wrap up an investigation into allegations that a corporal in the Individual Ready Reserve who appeared in gay porn films before enlisting solicited more than $12,000 from private organizations by asking them to fund a deployment to Iraq he never made, according to e-mails from the investigating officer forwarded to Marine Corps Times.

Reserve Col. Charles Jones, a staff judge advocate called to Marine Corps Mobilization Command in Kansas City, Mo., on temporary orders that expire Saturday, informed Reserve Cpl. Matt Sanchez of the allegations against him in a March 22 e-mail that advised Sanchez of his rights.

Jones wrote that Sanchez’s participation in porn films was part of the investigation, but that two of the three allegations against him involved lying “to various people, including but not limited to, representatives of the New York City United War Veterans Council and U-Haul Corporation” about deploying to Iraq at the commandant’s request.

“Specifically, you wrongfully solicited funds to support your purported deployment to Iraq” by coordinating a $300 payment from the UWVC and $12,000 from U-Haul, Jones wrote.

In an interview Thursday with Marine Corps Times, Sanchez said the fund-raising allegations are “demonstrably false” and that he never collected money from either organization.[/quote]

marinecorpstimes.com/news/2007/03/

He is currently a free-lance reporter (not an active service member) embedded (no pun intended) with a military unit.

[quote=“TainanCowboy”]As I read much of the Western press I wonder, who side are these guys on? Of course, the answer is that they’re supposed to remain neutral, but this neutrality is a luxury afforded the media by a standard that only one side will meet. When Time magazine interviewed a bombmaker claiming to be responsible for “rising American casualties,” they forgot to ask the “sophisticated and tenacious enemy” the tough questions like, “What’s your exit strategy?” or “How broken is the insurgency?” “Could you define victory?” or even the most basic, “Why are you doing this?” The fact that the press demands accountability from one side and offers servility to the other is a very cunning strategy to win an asymmetrical war. That is, it’s as if the press were conducting a war of its own.
—[color=blue] Matt Sanchez is a U.S. serviceman in Iraq.[/color][/quote]

[quote=“National Review Online”]As I read much of the Western press I wonder, who side are these guys on? Of course, the answer is that they’re supposed to remain neutral, but this neutrality is a luxury afforded the media by a standard that only one side will meet. When Time magazine interviewed a bombmaker claiming to be responsible for “rising American casualties,” they forgot to ask the “sophisticated and tenacious enemy” the tough questions like, “What’s your exit strategy?” or “How broken is the insurgency?” “Could you define victory?” or even the most basic, “Why are you doing this?” The fact that the press demands accountability from one side and offers servility to the other is a very cunning strategy to win an asymmetrical war. That is, it’s as if the press were conducting a war of its own.

—[color=blue] Matt Sanchez is currently embedded in Iraq, as a member of the media. He is also a corporal in the United States Marine Corps reserves.[/color][/quote]

Well that explains that little bit of editorializing at the end. I was wondering about that.

And of course Mr.Sanchez, who does not speak Arabic and has been in Iraq for a total of six weeks, knows exactly what is going down- far more so than reporters who have spent years and multiple tours in the country.

Crikey! I thought you were joking, but goddamit you are right, he really is quite the dirty little Sanchez! Apparently he was also a man whore available for “US$200 an hour as a good top.” Not that there is anything wrong with any of that, of course. Is he getting more an hour these days?

Still, anybody eager to go there and get the story out deserves some applause in my book. Sadly, however, having a long-term presence in the region, an ability with the language and extensive network of local contacts doesn’t seem to stop the critics that have never been anywhere near the region from writing off the likes of Robert Fisk.

HG

[quote=“spook”][quote=“TainanCowboy”]As I read much of the Western press I wonder, who side are these guys on? Of course, the answer is that they’re supposed to remain neutral, but this neutrality is a luxury afforded the media by a standard that only one side will meet. When Time magazine interviewed a bombmaker claiming to be responsible for “rising American casualties,” they forgot to ask the “sophisticated and tenacious enemy” the tough questions like, “What’s your exit strategy?” or “How broken is the insurgency?” “Could you define victory?” or even the most basic, “Why are you doing this?” The fact that the press demands accountability from one side and offers servility to the other is a very cunning strategy to win an asymmetrical war. That is, it’s as if the press were conducting a war of its own.
—[color=blue] Matt Sanchez is a U.S. serviceman in Iraq.[/color][/quote][/quote]
spook - You are a liar. I did not write the above quote that you attribute to me.

I see no comments from you who favor the “Dirty Sanchez” in your salad that refute anything posted in the OT.

Spending too much time smelling your thumbs laddies?

And nothing posted yet shows that the Matt Sanchez you are obsessing about is the same person who wrote the National Review Online article under discussion.

Sorry Mikey…you lose…again.

[quote=“TainanCowboy”]And nothing posted yet shows that the Matt Sanchez you are obsessing about is the same person who wrote the National Review Online article under discussion.

Sorry Mikey…you lose…again.[/quote]

Really?

matt-sanchez.com/2007/05/ore … d_han.html

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Matt_Sanchez

I really don’t understand the dig at Joe Klein. Klein has had a collumn with Time since 1993, mostly commenting on domestic politics. He’s no war correspondent, although obviously given his lengthy career covering the political stage, he does comment on Iraq.

Erh, in 1993 this is what our man Sanchez under the stage name “Pierre LaBranche” was up to. Again, not that there is anything wrong with that.

MONTREAL MEN
(90 mins. Canada)
Synopsis: An incredible sexcapade to Montreal’s rough and wild underworld, where hot French-Canadian men roam the dark, narrow streets in search of pleasure and adventure. 11 of the hottest, sexiest men come together again and again, as only Kristen Bjorn knows how to show you.

Cast: Pierre LaBranche, Lucien Fortier, Luc Cote, Phil Bradley.

Personally I think he was at his very best in Tijuana Toilet Tramps.

In any case, it looks like he’s about to get, no pun intended, shafted from the army. However, i think it would be a fabulous opportunity for Sanchez to rally some of his political friends and get some acceptance for gays in the military. Do you think Anne Coulter will get involved?

[quote]Sanchez investigation wraps up today
By John Hoellwarth - Staff writer
Posted : Sunday Apr 1, 2007 8:22:25 EDT
The Corps on Friday was slated to wrap up an investigation into allegations that a corporal in the Individual Ready Reserve who appeared in gay porn films before enlisting solicited more than $12,000 from private organizations by asking them to fund a deployment to Iraq he never made, according to e-mails from the investigating officer forwarded to Marine Corps Times.

Reserve Col. Charles Jones, a staff judge advocate called to Marine Corps Mobilization Command in Kansas City, Mo., on temporary orders that expire Saturday, informed Reserve Cpl. Matt Sanchez of the allegations against him in a March 22 e-mail that advised Sanchez of his rights.

Jones wrote that Sanchez’s participation in porn films was part of the investigation, but that two of the three allegations against him involved lying “to various people, including but not limited to, representatives of the New York City United War Veterans Council and U-Haul Corporation” about deploying to Iraq at the commandant’s request.

“Specifically, you wrongfully solicited funds to support your purported deployment to Iraq” by coordinating a $300 payment from the UWVC and $12,000 from U-Haul, Jones wrote.

In an interview Thursday with Marine Corps Times, Sanchez said the fund-raising allegations are “demonstrably false” and that he never collected money from either organization.

Sanchez, 36, recently admitted to appearing in such films as “Man to Men” and “Jawbreaker” in the early 1990s under the name Rod Majors after liberal bloggers identified him from photos taken at the Conservative Political Action Conference in Washington, D.C., during the first week of March.

In a March letter addressed to MobCom commander Brig. Gen. Darrell Moore, who will ultimately decide what to do with Jones’ investigation, Sanchez said he’s never done anything to bring dishonor on the Corps since enlisting and that “my past is behind me.”

“The Marine Corps is a conversion experience, what men were before they joined is not as important as what they become,” Sanchez wrote.

Sanchez has risen to prominence in recent months after accusing other students at Columbia University, where he is also a student, of publicly ridiculing him for serving in the military. They have also posted signs of him around campus as part of an anti-war campaign.

Sanchez wrote columns for newspapers, including Marine Corps Times, explaining his side of the Columbia dispute. He also appeared at the conservative conference in Washington, where he was embraced by right-wing personalities. Shortly after that appearance, news of his gay porn past came to light.

Jones, who is also a history writer, pens a monthly “Lore of the Corps” item in Marine Corps Times.[/quote]

HG

And another point. The “media” was kicked out of te Green Zone in late '05. They base now in the Palestine Hotel across the river.

“They have a very nice bar on the 20th floor of the Palestine Hotel. ;-)”

Pic & comment courtesy of ‘Allegra’ who has been riding the elephant for quite a while.

HGC -
Yeah…really.


Screencapture from the article linked in the OP.

Do we have to assume the first sentence in the OP wasn’t written by you either?

Pop-Up -
You can ass-ume anything you want.

Just don’t do it around me.

[quote=“TainanCowboy”]Pop-Up -
You can ass-ume anything you want.

Just don’t do it around me.[/quote]
Ok, then here is your chance to clear it all up and explain the, aeh, discrepancy.

From Michael Yon -

[quote]"Speaking through an American interpreter, Lieutenant David Wallach who is a native Arabic speaker, the Iraqi official related how al Qaeda united these gangs who then became absorbed into “al Qaeda.” They recruited boys born during the years 1991, 92 and 93 who were each given weapons, including pistols, a bicycle and a phone (with phone cards paid) and a salary of $100 per month, all courtesy of al Qaeda. These boys were used for kidnapping, torturing and murdering people.

At first, he said, they would only target Shia, but over time the new al Qaeda directed attacks against Sunni, and then anyone who thought differently. The official reported that on a couple of occasions in Baqubah, al Qaeda invited to lunch families they wanted to convert to their way of thinking. In each instance, the family had a boy, he said, who was about 11 years old. As LT David Wallach interpreted the man’s words, I saw Wallach go blank and silent. He stopped interpreting for a moment. I asked Wallach, “What did he say?” Wallach said that at these luncheons, the families were sat down to eat. And then their boy was brought in with his mouth stuffed. The boy had been baked. Al Qaeda served the boy to his family."(story continues at the link)
Michael Yon Online[/quote]

His referenced Update -
Bless the Beasts and Children…this is very graphic…may not be suitable for the easily sickened.

[quote=“TainanCowboy”][quote=“spook”][quote=“TainanCowboy”]As I read much of the Western press I wonder, who side are these guys on? Of course, the answer is that they’re supposed to remain neutral, but this neutrality is a luxury afforded the media by a standard that only one side will meet. When Time magazine interviewed a bombmaker claiming to be responsible for “rising American casualties,” they forgot to ask the “sophisticated and tenacious enemy” the tough questions like, “What’s your exit strategy?” or “How broken is the insurgency?” “Could you define victory?” or even the most basic, “Why are you doing this?” The fact that the press demands accountability from one side and offers servility to the other is a very cunning strategy to win an asymmetrical war. That is, it’s as if the press were conducting a war of its own.
—[color=blue] Matt Sanchez is a U.S. serviceman in Iraq.[/color][/quote]
spook - You are a liar. I did not write the above quote that you attribute to me.[/quote][/quote]

Whoever wrote “Matt Sanchez is a U.S. serviceman in Iraq.” is a liar. I don’t suppose you have any idea where that came from, do you?

Spook, I think you’re missing the point. In any case that sort of tag is written in by whoever put that up on the website, it’s the sort of thing often updated. And what’s more, it’s technically not a lie. He is a reservist in Iraq but not on the military’s time.

The REAL story is how the army hasn’t given a shit about him being a man whore and gay porn star, only his other false claims.

HG

[quote=“spook”][quote=“TainanCowboy”][quote=“spook”][quote=“TainanCowboy”]As I read much of the Western press I wonder, who side are these guys on? Of course, the answer is that they’re supposed to remain neutral, but this neutrality is a luxury afforded the media by a standard that only one side will meet. When Time magazine interviewed a bombmaker claiming to be responsible for “rising American casualties,” they forgot to ask the “sophisticated and tenacious enemy” the tough questions like, “What’s your exit strategy?” or “How broken is the insurgency?” “Could you define victory?” or even the most basic, “Why are you doing this?” The fact that the press demands accountability from one side and offers servility to the other is a very cunning strategy to win an asymmetrical war. That is, it’s as if the press were conducting a war of its own.
—[color=blue] Matt Sanchez is a U.S. serviceman in Iraq.[/color][/quote]
spook - You are a liar. I did not write the above quote that you attribute to me.[/quote]

Whoever wrote “Matt Sanchez is a U.S. serviceman in Iraq.” is a liar. I don’t suppose you have any idea where that came from, do you?[/quote][/quote]
Post attributed to an article on National Review Online.
Didn’t notice that or just found it more convenient to ignore it?
Pretty sad spook.
By the way…you still haven’t proven any errors in this article.

Just dancing around the edges as usual?

While the Western folks may be the talking heads on TV, or the credited journo in the paper/on the net, the vast majority of the research, reporting, information gathering, location footage etc is gathered by Iraqi’s - at great risk to themselves.

If the media are getting it as wrong as you suggest, TC, then why the hell are their Iraqi staff risking their lives on a daily basis, in probably the most dangerous job in the world (more dangerous than the soldiers, as the reporters can’t shoot back or call in an airstrike or Apache gunship)? I mean, really, do you honestly think they’d be that stupid?

CFI -
Good question. IMO its because they are paid by the job. Harsh opinion I know - but they are getting a paycheck for the vid/film/tape they turn in at the end of the day.
They are not paid on the ‘final’ product. They are paid on a daily rate basis. And its a good job in a place where jobs such as theirs are hot property.
This is just my opinion. But I think it might be pretty close to the truth. And frankly, I don’t think those working steady see much of the final cut and have even less say on what that looks like.
What do you think of this? I’ve done stringer work in some places that were X’ed off the tourist scene and frankly, I worked for the money - and had no say over the final editing. But I could walk away.