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---------- Forwarded message ----------
Date: Thu, 24 Jul 2003 07:59:17 -0700
From: Media Research Center <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: MRC Alert: Media Find Negative Angles on Killing of Hussein's Sons

              ***Media Research Center CyberAlert***
     10:55am EDT, Thursday July 24, 2003 (Vol. Eight; No. 139)
  The 1,546th CyberAlert. Tracking Liberal Media Bias Since 1996

> Miklaszewski Relays Gripe Son Killing Used "Too Heavy Firepower"
> Will We Follow Geneva Convention? Weren't Killings a "Failure"?
> AP: Bush Hasn't "Bothered" to Enforce Assassination Prohibition
> A Good News Day, But NBC's Katie Couric Stresses the Negative
> CBS on Celebratory Gunfire: "Some of It...Most Certainly Anger"
> "There is an Ocean of Blood on the Hands" of Blair and Bush
> ABC: GOP Takeover in CA in Conflict with State's Best Interests?

    #### Distributed to more than 14,000 subscribers by the Media
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1) Just can't win/the media always find a negative angle on good
news, part one. In reporting on the killing of Uday and Qusay
Hussein, on Wednesday's NBC Nightly News Jim Miklaszewski griped
about how "there are questions today why the U.S. military used
such heavy firepower to take down a few lightly armed men." But
his complaint about overkill in firepower came after he recounted
how the U.S. forces escalated their weaponry to overcome the
resistance as the four men in the house opened fire and injured
three soldiers, prompting the U.S. servicemen to "pound the house
with rockets, grenades and heavy machine gun fire while helicopter
gun ships fire rockets through the roof." Yet, in Miklaszweski's
own term, "unbelievably" those inside continued to shoot back.

2) Just can't win/the media always find a negative angle on good
news, part two. At the White House press briefing on Wednesday,
ABC's Terry Moran wanted to know if President Bush felt "bound" by
the Geneva Convention rule that the dead are "honorably
interred...according to the rites of the religion to which they
belong." A few hours earlier in Iraq, international reporters
grilled U.S. Army General Ricardo Sanchez about why the lightly
armed Uday and Qusay were not waited out so they could be taken
alive and questioned. One reporter insisted the operation
represented "a failure" because "you didn't use commandos to come
and surprise them both." CNN's Aaron Brown also wanted to know:
"Why not wait 'em out, starve 'em out? Try and take 'em alive?"

3) Just can't win/the media always find a negative angle on good
news, part three. Odai and Qusai Hussein, as the AP spells their
first names, are the lucky beneficiaries of the fact "that the
Bush administration has not bothered to enforce the prohibition"
on "political assassinations," AP reporter George Gedda asserted
in the lead of a July 23 story. "Odai, Qusai Deaths Go Against
U.S. Ban," announced the AP's headline.

4) Just can't win/the media always find a negative angle on good
news, part four. The best news in weeks, if not since the taking
of Baghdad three months ago, came out of Iraq on Tuesday with the
announcement of the killing of Saddam Hussein's two henchmen sons,
second only to Saddam himself in brutality and instilling fear,
but Katie Couric led Wednesday's Today by pairing the news with
how the good news was "tempered" by how "two more American
soldiers have been ambushed and killed today." In contrast, ABC's
Good Morning America led by trumpeting the good news of the
killings ("a triumphant day for President Bush") as well as
Jessica Lynch's return to her hometown.

5) Just can't win/the media always find a negative angle on good
news, part five. Of the gunfire in Baghdad after the killing of
Uday and Qusay, "some of it was most certainly" in "anger,"
insisted CBS's Byron Pitts in the capital city. His assertion on
the Wednesday Early Show followed a Tuesday Evening News
contribution in which he expressed confusion over whether the
gunfire was prompted by "anger or jubilation."

6) "There is an ocean of blood on the hands of Tony Blair and
George Bush," Boston Globe columnist James Carroll declared on
Tuesday. Carroll accused the Bush administration with committing
"war crimes" as he spewed: "The traditional ethic declares that a
war of aggression is inherently unjust and that every civilian
death caused by such a war is murder. More than 50 air raids, each
with more than 30 Iraqi civilian fatalities, each expressly
approved by Rumsfeld. Absolutely terrible tragedies, every one.
And also -- more evident by the day -- every one a war crime."

7) An ABCNews.com plug for Wednesday's Nightline on the recall
effort against California Governor Gray Davis, a Democrat,
promised the show would explore this question: "Was this recall
effort a Republican tactic to win over California, or is this the
best thing for the state?" As if the two possibilities are in
conflict?


    > 1) Just can't win/the media always find a negative angle on
good news, part one. In reporting on the killing of Uday and Qusay
Hussein, on Wednesday's NBC Nightly News Jim Miklaszewski griped
about how "there are questions today why the U.S. military used
such heavy firepower to take down a few lightly armed men. And did
the U.S. lose valuable intelligence when they killed Saddam's
sons?"

    But Miklaszewski's complaint about overkill in firepower came
after he recounted how the U.S. forces escalated their firepower
to overcome the resistance as the four men in the house opened
fire and injured three soldiers, prompting the U.S. servicemen to
"pound the house with rockets, grenades and heavy machine gun fire
while helicopter gun ships fire rockets through the roof." Yet, in
Miklaszweski's own term, "unbelievably" those inside continued to
shoot back, "so at 1 o'clock the Americans fire ten anti-tank TOW
missiles....But somehow Qusay's son, Mustafah, survives. As U.S.
troops approach, he opens fire. The Americans shoot back..."

    From the Pentagon on the July 23 NBC Nightly News,
Miklaszewski ran through the sequence of events. Miklaszewski
reported how the troops entered the house, found Uday, Qusay, a
bodyguard and Qusay's 14-year-old son in a safe room "surrounded
by double-thick bullet-proof glass. The four opened fire, wounding
three soldiers. The Americans retreat and call in bigger guns.
Over the next three hours U.S. troops pound the house with
rockets, grenades and heavy machine gun fire while helicopter gun
ships fire rockets through the roof. Unbelievably, those
barricaded inside are still shooting back. So at 1 o'clock the
Americans fire ten anti-tank TOW missiles finally killing Uday,
Qusay and he bodyguard....But somehow Qusay's son, Mustafah,
survives. As U.S. troops approach, he opens fire. The Americans
shoot back, killing the 14-year-old.
    "But there are questions today why the U.S. military used such
heavy firepower to take down a few lightly armed men. And did the
U.S. lose valuable intelligence when they killed Saddam's sons?
General Rick Sanchez says the Hussein brothers were not willing to
surrender and U.S. forces could not let them escape."

    Miklaszewski then ran a short soundbite from Sanchez at his
news briefing.



    > 2) Just can't win/the media always find a negative angle on
good news, part two. At the White House press briefing on
Wednesday ABC's Terry Moran wanted to know if President Bush felt
"bound" by the Geneva Convention rule that the dead are "honorably
interred...according to the rites of the religion to which they
belong."

    A few hours earlier in Iraq, international reporters grilled
U.S. Army General Ricardo Sanchez, the commander of the Iraqi
operation, about why the lightly armed Uday and Qusay were not
waited out so they could be taken alive and questioned. One
reporter insisted the operation represented "a failure" because
"you didn't use commandos to come and surprise them both." That
reporter also fretted about the killing of "the child of Qusay."

    And on Tuesday's NewsNight, CNN's Aaron Brown wanted to know:
"Why not wait 'em out, starve 'em out? Try and take 'em alive as
opposed to engaging in this gun battle? Once they had 'em
surrounded and cornered, they weren't going anywhere."

    -- At the White House press briefing, ABC's Terry Moran, MRC
analyst Ken Shepherd noticed, pressed Press Secretary Scott
McClellan: "Article 17 of the Geneva Conventions requires
countries at war to, quote, 'ensure that the dead are honorably
interred, if possible, according to the rites of the religion to
which they belong.' Does the President, as Commander-in-Chief,
believe that the United States is bound by that, when it comes to
the bodies of Uday and Qusay Hussein?"
    McClellan, stumped by the wacky question: "Terry, I'd have to
look at the specific. I'm just not familiar enough with it to
respond to that question right now."

    -- Some of the questions at the briefing in Iraq, by General
Ricardo Sanchez, on the killing of Uday and Qusay, as tracked down
by MRC analyst Patrick Gregory:

    # Ibraham Hayat: "I would like to ask you, don't you regret
the fact that you couldn't get Uday and Qusay alive? It would have
been probably the source of a lot of information you would have
got from them both. Also, wasn't it a failure in a way because you
didn't use commandos to come and surprise them both? You conducted
the operation in the very traditional way. How would you describe
it? All these attacks preparation was only to surround five
probably or four people who are armed with light weapons. And also
what about the child of Qusay?"

    # Another reporter followed up, leading to this humorous
exchange: "General, I'd like to try and see if you could address
more of the first question which we had from our colleague at the
front. The Americans are specialists at surrounding places,
keeping people in them, holding up for a week, if necessary, to
make them surrender. These guys only had, it appears, AK-47s, and
you had an immense amount of firepower. Surely, the possibility of
the immense amount of information they could have given coalition
forces, not to mention the trials that they could be put on for
war crimes, held out a much greater possibility of victory for
you, if you could have surrounded that house and just sat there
until they came out, even if they were prepared to keep shooting."
    Sanchez: "Sir, that is speculation. Next-"
    Reporter: "No, sir, it's an operational question. Surely, you
must have considered this much more seriously than you're
suggesting."
    Sanchez: "Yes. It was considered and we chose the course of
action that we took."
    Reporter: "Why, sir?"
    Sanchez: "Next question, please."

    -- CNN's Aaron Brown posed this question on the July 22
NewsNight to Brigadier General David Grange, U.S. Army retired, as
picked up by the MRC's Ken Shepherd: "Let me ask this. Not to be
unduly provocative. Why not wait 'em out, starve 'em out? Try and
take 'em alive as opposed to engaging in this gun battle? Once
they had 'em surrounded and cornered, they weren't going
anywhere."
    Grange: "Yeah, I'm not sure, Aaron, that they knew 100 percent
who was in the building. I mean, that's what the report is and I'm
not sure that the report from the Iraqi that gave the information
to the coalition forces, if that was vetted by other sources at
all. And they tried to go in in a smaller force manner to probably
take these people prisoner. And then when they found out that it
was barricaded and that they'd probably lose American lives, the
on-scene commander made the decision to tear down those defenses
and in so doing, kill the people inside."



    > 3) Just can't win/the media always find a negative angle on
good news, part three. Odai and Qusai Hussein, as the AP spells
their first names, are the lucky beneficiaries of the fact "that
the Bush administration has not bothered to enforce the
prohibition" on "political assassinations," AP reporter George
Gedda asserted in the lead of a July 23 story. FNC's Brit Hume, on
his show Wednesday night, highlighted how the veteran of the AP's
Washington bureau began a July 23 story.

    "Odai, Qusai Deaths Go Against U.S. Ban," announced the
headline over the noontime dispatch as posted by Yahoo.

    An excerpt:

WASHINGTON -- In theory, pursuing with intent to kill violates a
long-standing policy banning political assassination. It was the
misfortune of Saddam Hussein's sons, Odai and Qusai, that the Bush
administration has not bothered to enforce the prohibition....

Officials said people inside the villa opened fire first -- but
left little doubt what the U.S. troops hoped to accomplish.

"We remain focused on finding, fixing, killing or capturing all
members of the high-value target list," Lt. Gen. Ricardo Sanchez,
commander of coalition troops in Iraq, announcing the deaths of
Odai and Qusai.

The ban has been overlooked so often in recent years that some
wonder why the administration doesn't simply declare the measure
null and void.

Earlier this week, the U.S. administrator for Iraq, L. Paul
Bremer, stated in unusually candid terms the administration's
disregard for the assassination ban. Appearing on NBC TV's "Meet
the Press," Bremer said U.S. officials presumed that Saddam was
still alive and that American forces were trying to kill him.

"The sooner we can either kill him or capture him, the better,"
Bremer said. Often in the past, officials resorted to winks and
nods or other circumlocutions when asked about U.S. actions that
gave the appearance of homicidal intent.

Consider President Reagan's response when he was asked whether the
bombing of Moammar Gadhafi's residence in 1986 constituted an
effort to kill the Libyan leader.

"I don't think any of us would have shed tears if that had
happened," Reagan said. Over the past five years, U.S.-sponsored
assassination attempts have been on the increase. Targets have
included Osama bin Laden, former Yugoslav President Slobodan
Milosevic among others.

Former White House spokesman Ari Fleischer said before the start
of the Iraq war that the assassination ban would not apply once
hostilities broke out....

The ban on assassinations, spelled out in an executive order
signed by President Ford in 1976 and reinforced by Presidents
Carter and Reagan, made no distinction between wartime and
peacetime. There are no loop holes; no matter how awful the
leader, he could not be a U.S. target either directly or by a
hired hand....

    END of Excerpt

    For the AP story in its entirety:
http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&cid=536&ncid=536&e=14&;
u=/ap/20030723/ap_on_go_pr_wh/assassination_ban



    > 4) Just can't win/the media always find a negative angle on
good news, part four. The best news in weeks, if not since the
taking of Baghdad three months ago, came out of Iraq on Tuesday
with the announcement of the killing of Saddam Hussein's two
henchmen sons, second only to Saddam himself in brutality and
instilling fear, but Katie Couric led Wednesday's Today by pairing
the news with how "two more American soldiers have been ambushed
and killed today."

    In contrast, ABC's Good Morning America led by trumpeting the
good news of the killings ("a triumphant day for President Bush")
as well as Jessica Lynch's return to her hometown.

    Couric opened the July 23 Today on NBC: "Good morning.
Saddam's sons, Uday and Qusay Hussein, are dead, but the violence
in Iraq goes on. Two more American soldiers have been ambushed and
killed today, Wednesday July the 23rd, 2003."

    After the top of the show theme music and announcement, Couric
continued, as taken down by MRC intern Susan Vaughan: "And welcome
to Today on this Wednesday morning everyone I'm Katie Couric."
    Matt Lauer: "And I'm Matt Lauer. The coalition forces had good
intelligence; they were acting on a tip on Tuesday in the northern
city of Mosul there was a ferocious firefight and in the end Qusay
and Uday were dead."
    Couric: "That's right and while President Bush will be in the
Rose Garden this morning presumably to praise the troops and boost
morale in the wake of the incident, it will be tempered by the
ongoing attacks on American troops. As we said, two more soldiers
were killed in ambushes this morning; more than forty have been
killed since May 1st. Also this morning an Arab satellite network
is broadcasting a tape said to be the voice of Saddam recorded
just two days ago. We'll talk with two experts about what might
happen next in Iraq. Meanwhile for one soldier it was home sweet
home. Private Jessica Lynch was warmly welcomed back to her
hometown of Palestine, West Virginia on Tuesday. We'll get an
inside look at how the day unfolded for her from a cousin who was
at her side."

    Over on ABC, Charles Gibson stayed positive in opening Good
Morning America: "This morning in Iraq U.S. officials set to
release the death photos to prove to Iraqis that Saddam Hussein's
two sons are dead. Also this morning, in West Virginia Jessica
Lynch settles in back home as friends and neighbors marvel at her
courage, her poise and that new ring she's wearing from the man
she loves...."

    Gibson soon added: "After two weeks of criticism over his
going to war and the reasons for going to war, finally, a
triumphant day for President Bush."

    But NBC won't even give him a day.



    > 5) Just can't win/the media always find a negative angle on
good news, part five. Of the gunfire in Baghdad after the killing
of Uday and Qusay, "some of it was most certainly" in "anger,"
insisted CBS's Byron Pitts in the capital city. His assertion on
the Wednesday Early Show followed a Tuesday Evening News
contribution in which he expressed confusion over whether the
gunfire was prompted by "anger or jubilation."

    The July 23 CyberAlert recounted: Reporters in Baghdad for ABC
and NBC believed the firing off of guns in the capital city
reflected happiness over news of the deaths of Saddam Hussein's
sons at the hands of U.S. soldiers, but CBS's Byron Pitts wasn't
so sure. "It rained bullets in Baghdad as the city celebrated,"
asserted ABC's Jeffrey Kofman. NBC's Tom Aspell found: "Gunfire in
Baghdad tonight -- celebration as word spread that Saddam
Hussein's two sons are dead." But Pitts expressed confusion on the
July 22 Evening News.

    As he crouched behind a railing, he relayed: "Tonight the sky
over Baghdad is live with gunfire. We're on the roof of our hotel
where often times the shots have been loud and close. This all
started about the time the news began to spread that Saddam
Hussein's two sons might have been killed by U.S. forces. We're
not certain if these are shots of anger or jubilation or a
combination of both."

    Fast forward to Wednesday, July 23, and MRC analyst Brian Boyd
noticed how on the Early Show Pitts was sure "some of it was most
certainly anger." He checked in from Baghdad: "Behind their
father, the Hussein brothers were the most powerful and feared men
in all of Iraq. By nightfall Tuesday, news of their death had
spread to Baghdad where the skyline lit up with gunfire, a
traditional sign of celebration here, but in this case, some of it
was most certainly anger."



    > 6) CyberAlert doesn't normally care much about columnists,
but sometimes when they go to extreme extremes it's worth
highlighting their hatreds. In Tuesday's Boston Globe, op-ed page
columnist James Carroll declared: "There is an ocean of blood on
the hands of Tony Blair and George Bush."

    Noting how Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld had to
personally approval any bombing which could kill 30 or more
civilians, Carroll accused him and the Bush administration of
committing "war crimes." Carroll contended in the piece brought to
my attention by the MRC's Rich Noyes: "The traditional ethic
declares that a war of aggression is inherently unjust and that
every civilian death caused by such a war is murder. More than 50
air raids, each with more than 30 Iraqi civilian fatalities, each
expressly approved by Rumsfeld. Absolutely terrible tragedies,
every one. And also -- more evident by the day -- every one a war
crime."

    An excerpt from Carroll's July 22 column, "Was the war
necessary?"

Why does the apparent suicide of David Kelly strike such a chord?
The British weapons expert found himself in the middle of the
controversy over the Bush-Blair hyping of the Saddam Hussein
threat....

Kelly gives a name and a face to the fact that the dispute over
intelligence manipulated to justify a "preventive war" is a matter
of life and death. This is not a mere question of politics
anymore, another argument between liberals and conservatives. When
told of Kelly's death, Prime Minister Tony Blair called it "an
absolutely terrible tragedy." But the burden that broke this man
was, at bottom, weight of the absolutely terrible question, Was
the British-American war against Iraq necessary?...

The coalition air war commander, Lieutenant General T. Michael
Moseley, revealed this weekend that Secretary of Defense Donald
Rumsfeld had to personally sign off on any airstrike "thought
likely to result in deaths of more than 30 civilians," as The New
York Times reported. "More than 50 such strikes were proposed, and
all of them were approved."...

One sees the traditional just war ethic at work: A necessary war
can involve the "collateral damage" of civilian deaths -- tragic,
but acceptable. But was the war necessary? That question defines
the stakes in the dispute over the ways George Bush and Tony Blair
misrepresented the prospect of Saddam Hussein with nuclear,
biological, and chemical arms. When allied warplanes knowingly and
repeatedly attacked targets that would kill significant numbers of
civilians, only the urgent effort to prevent Hussein's
mass-destructive and imminent aggression could have justified such
carnage. But now the proffered rationale of necessity is being
shown to have been false. The "preventive war," as it turns out,
prevented nothing.

At a press conference in Japan the day after David Kelly's body
was found, Tony Blair was asked, "Have you got blood on your
hands, prime minister?" Alas, there is an ocean of blood on the
hands of Tony Blair and George Bush. Whether shown to be "lying"
or not, they shunted aside the ambiguities and uncertainties that
characterized the prewar intelligence assessments of Hussein's
threat....

Citizens of the United States do not like to think of themselves
as wanton killers. No wonder American soldiers in Iraq are openly
expressing doubts....The issue is mortal: Was George Bush's new
style "preventive" war just another war of aggression, after all?

Tony Blair was asked if he would resign, and at least one
prominent Democrat hurled the word impeachment at the President.
But the political consequences of this controversy begin to take
second place to the moral, and even legal. The traditional ethic
declares that a war of aggression is inherently unjust and that
every civilian death caused by such a war is murder. More than 50
air raids, each with more than 30 Iraqi civilian fatalities, each
expressly approved by Rumsfeld. Absolutely terrible tragedies,
every one. And also -- more evident by the day -- every one a war
crime.

    END of Excerpt

    For the column in full:
http://www.boston.com/dailyglobe2/203/oped/Was_the_war_necessary_+.shtml



    > 7) An ABCNews.com plug for Wednesday's Nightline on the
recall effort against California Governor Gray Davis, a Democrat,
promised the show would explore this question: "Was this recall
effort a Republican tactic to win over California, or is this the
best thing for the state?"

    As if the two possibilities are in conflict?

    The plug in full, which was posted Wednesday night on the
Nightline page:
    "California Crisis
    "Wednesday, July 23
    "The state of California is already experiencing major budget
cuts. And now may lose it's governor in a recall election. Was
this recall effort a Republican tactic to win over California, or
is this the best thing for the state?"

    That was online on this page:
http://abcnews.go.com/sections/nightline/index.html


-- Brent Baker


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