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---------- Forwarded message ----------
Date: Fri, 07 May 2004 07:57:27 -0700
From: Media Research Center <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: MRC Alert: Rather: 'Bush Finally Apologizes,
     But Will He Fire Rumsfeld?'

             ***Media Research Center CyberAlert***
      10:55am EDT, Friday May 7, 2004 (Vol. Nine; No. 77)
 The 1,714th CyberAlert. Tracking Liberal Media Bias Since 1996

> Rather: "Bush Finally Apologizes, But Will He Fire Rumsfeld?"
> CNN Focuses on How Brits "Appalled" by Bush Hiding U.S. War Dead
> Koppel's Topic Thursday Night: "Is Iraq an Unwinnable War?"
> CBSNews.com Chief Rails Against "Chickenhawks" Bush and Cheney

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1) Network reporters complained again Thursday morning about how
President Bush hadn't apologized during his Wednesday sessions
with Arab TV networks (Claire Shipman on GMA: "Eyebrows are being
raised at the fact he never actually apologized") and after Bush
did say he's "sorry for the humiliation suffered by the Iraqi
prisoners," that development led the evening newscasts. But not
all were satisfied. Dan Rather teased the May 6 CBS Evening News:
"President Bush finally apologizes, but will he fire Defense
Secretary Rumsfeld?" Only NBC's Chip Reid noted "a backlash from
many conservative Republicans" as he highlighted how "conservative
talk show host Rush Limbaugh is now leading the charge in accusing
the media and Democrats of hyping the Iraqi abuse story."

2) CNN's Walter Rodgers filed a story from London about how the
British are "appalled" at how the U.S. does not allow television
coverage of returning war dead and that President Bush has yet to
attend a funeral of anyone killed in Iraq. CNN producers liked the
story so much, they ran it Thursday on both Wolf Blitzer Reports
and again on NewsNight. "When the British war dead come home from
Iraq now, they are not hidden," Rodgers condescendingly intoned as
he asserted that "to the British, the fact President George W.
Bush has yet to attend the funeral of a single American soldier
killed in Iraq seems more than strange."

3) Last week Ted Koppel insisted his 35-minute-long Friday night
Nightline reading of the names of all the U.S. servicemen killed
in Iraq, "The Fallen," had no political agenda and that he is not
against the war, but here's how he described the content of
Thursday's Nightline: "Tonight, Hanging in the Balance: Is Iraq an
unwinnable war?" He devoted his half hour to a genial interview of
retired General William Odom, a former chief of the National
Security Agency who, Koppel relayed, now says "it's time to get
out" of Iraq. But Odom opposed the war from the start, so why is
his opposition to it suddenly newsworthy? Meanwhile, Fox News
Sunday moderator Chris Wallace, conducting interviews to promote
his own Sunday tribute to what soldiers in Iraq have accomplished,
charged that "The Fallen" Nightline "came out" as an anti-war
political statement.

4) In an April 30 column posted on CBSNews.com, former CBS Evening
News political producer Dick Meyer, who is now the Editorial
Director for CBSNews.com, blasted George Bush and Dick Cheney as
"chickenhawks" and railed against the "cheek, chutzpah, conceit,
arrogance, condescension" of the Republicans for supposedly
"impugning John Kerry's Vietnam era guts and patriotism."


    > 1) Network reporters complained again Thursday morning about
how President Bush hadn't apologized during his Wednesday sessions
with Arab TV networks and after Bush did say, during an afternoon
appearance with Jordan's King Abdullah, he's "sorry for the
humiliation suffered by the Iraqi prisoners and the humiliation
suffered by their families," that development led the evening
newscasts.

    But not all were satisfied. Dan Rather teased the May 6 CBS
Evening News: "Tonight, new photographic evidence of Iraqi
prisoner abuse. President Bush finally apologizes, but will he
fire Defense Secretary Rumsfeld?"

    Just as on Wednesday night, on Thursday night ABC, CBS and NBC
all devoted four to five stories each to the prisoner abuse and
calls for Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld to resign, but only
NBC's Chip Reid noted "a backlash from many conservative
Republicans" as he highlighted how "conservative talk show host
Rush Limbaugh is now leading the charge in accusing the media and
Democrats of hyping the Iraqi abuse story."

    "APOLOGY" appeared over a shot of Bush in Rose garden as Peter
Jennings teased: "On World News Tonight, President Bush says he is
sorry that Iraqi prisoners were abused and humiliated...."

    Jennings opened the broadcast: "Good evening. We begin tonight
with an apology, from President Bush today, for the 'abuse' and
the 'humiliation' -- those were the President's words -- that
Iraqi prisoners suffered at the hands of U.S. soldiers. A great
many people have been waiting, and some have certainly been
hoping, that Mr. Bush would say just that."

    From the White House, Terry Moran maintained that Bush's
interviews with Arab TV were "not well received, so today he tried
again." Noting how a "chorus of Democrats said Rumsfeld must go,"
Moran contended, "The big question: What did Rumsfeld know and
when did he know it?"

    Following Moran, Jennings gave credibility to a ridiculous
publicity stunt: "This story resonates in so many ways. Just to
emphasize how worked up the Democrats are on Capitol Hill,
Congressman Charles Rangel of New York has filed articles of
impeachment against the Secretary of Defense for his conduct of
the war in Iraq and his handling of the prisoner abuse at Abu
Ghraib."

    Next, Martha Raddatz showed the new picture given to the
Washington Post and how charges are going to be filed against the
soldiers in them, followed by Jonathan Karl on how the
International Committee of the Red Cross had warned of problems at
the Iraqi prison and how Human Rights Watch has cited abuses in
Afghanistan too. Finally, Kate Snow profiled the accused soldiers.

    On the CBS Evening News, after the tease from Dan Rather
quoted above, David Martin covered the new photos, questions if
DOD heeded warnings from the International Committee of the Red
Cross and whether Rumsfeld's policies enabled the abuse since
Iraqi prisoners were not accorded POW status.

    John Roberts, at the White House, explained how Bush's apology
was "meant to mop up a foreign policy disaster." Roberts
explained: "The President's appearances yesterday on Arab TV, in
which he did not apologize, were a glaring miscalculation that
only annoyed the Arab street. By today even the First Lady was
with the program."
    Laura Bush: "Very sorry that Iraqi prisoners were humiliated
at the hands of Americans."

    Roberts moved on to Democrats in Congress attacking Rumsfeld
and how one Congressman "even filed article of impeachment against
him."

    Next, Thalia Assuras profiled the accused soldiers, starting
with some soundbites from the mother of PFC Lindie England, who
claimed her daughter was just following orders. Assuras noted that
Lindie is pregnant, back in the U.S. and involved with another
accused soldier.

    Tom Brokaw teased the NBC Nightly News: "Damage control: The
President apologizes for prisoner abuse in Iraq and says Defense
Secretary Rumsfeld stays."

    Brokaw declared that "this is a full-blown crisis for the
White House," before Nora O'Donnell ran through Bush saying "I'm
sorry," how he's displeased with Rumsfeld, and how John Kerry
demanded that Rumsfeld must go ("As President, I won't be the last
to know what's going on in my command.")

    From the Pentagon, Jim Miklaszewski showed the new pictures
and, over a shot of "Resign, Rumsfeld" on the cover of The
Economist magazine, asserted: "Pressure is building on Secretary
Rumsfeld to step down. Tomorrow's edition of the highly-respected
international news weekly, The Economist, calls on Rumsfeld to
resign."

    Chip Reid next highlighted Democratic attacks on Rumsfeld,
running soundbites from Congresswoman Nancy Pelosi and Senator Tom
Harkin, and insisting that "even some Republicans are frustrated,"
naturally citing John McCain. Reid suggested Rumsfeld would get
"brutal" questioning Friday from Senators in both parties.

    Reid then went where no other broadcast network reporter has
gone: "Now, a backlash from many conservative Republicans. Today,
during debate in the House on a resolution to condemn the Iraqi
abuse, some Republicans also condemned the Democrats, accusing
them of using the issue to score political points against the Bush
administration."
    Tom DeLay, Majority Leader: "The Democrat leadership has
decided to take a political position and is undermining our troops
in the field."
    Reid: "And conservative talk show host Rush Limbaugh is now
leading the charge in accusing the media and Democrats of hyping
the Iraqi abuse story."
    Audio from Limbaugh's Web site of him on his radio show, with
text on screen: "They're not pictures of violence. They're not
pictures of death. They are not pictures of horror. I am not going
to join the chorus of people who aren't even thinking, who are
just reacting with emotions."

    Finally, Andrea Mitchell took up how special operations forces
may also have abused prisoners in Iraq and how an Afghan died in
CIA custody.

    Thursday morning on ABC's Good Morning America, Claire
Shipman, in studio with Charles Gibson, had insisted: "Eyebrows
are being raised at the fact he never actually apologized."
Shipman did, however, add that White House officials said "this
was on purpose. They don't feel it's appropriate for the President
himself to actually apologize."

    Over on CBS's The Early Show, Bill Plante used the same
language as he had the night before: "In the interviews, the
President deplored what happened but he didn't make any outright
apology."

    A few minutes later, MRC analyst Brian Boyd noticed, Rene
Syler pressed Senator John McCain: "I want to talk to you about
the actions of the president yesterday. He appeared on Arab
television. He said the images were abhorrent but he did not
apologize. He did not come out and say he was sorry, although,
National Security Advisor Condoleezza Rice did along with two top
generals. Should the president have actually uttered the words
'I'm sorry'?"

    Several hours later, Syler got her wish.

    On NBC's Today, Dawna Friesen, the MRC's Geoff Dickens
observed, emphasized how in the Arab TV interviews Bush had
offered "no apology for the abuse of Iraqi prisoners, but
assurances the soldiers involved don't reflect America's values."

    She countered: "In Baghdad there was cynicism. 'The soldiers
do represent the Americans,' this man says, 'so I think we should
blame all of America's military. I hope they leave the country
soon.' This Iraqi journalist says people are growing increasingly
impatient."
    Saad Al Hassani, Iraqi journalist: "The schism that the, the,
the division in between the American forces in Iraq and, and the
Iraqi people, themselves, started to, to, to be bigger and bigger
everyday."
    Friesen: "In Cairo the President's words appeared to have
little impact."
    Woman: "It hurts that it actually did happen but, I mean, his
apology or his speeches are not gonna make anything better."
    Friesen: "This Arab language newspaper editor says Bush's
reputation in the Middle East is in shreds."
    Abdel Bari Atwan, Al-Quds Al-Arabi, editor: "I said in my
front page editorial this morning, President Bush is the greatest
liar of our modern history. He lied about weapon [sic] of mass
destruction, he lied about democracy in Iraq."
    Friesen: "These latest pictures of abuse by U.S. soldiers will
make salvaging America's and the President's reputation even
harder. For Today, Dawn Friesen, NBC News, London."

    Earlier coverage. The May 6 CyberAlert recounted: The All the
networks on Wednesday night stressed how, in his interviews with
two Arab-language TV networks, President Bush did not apologize
for the treatment of some Iraqi prisoners. "But while the
President denounced the abuse of Iraqi prisoners," ABC's Terry
Moran noted, "he pointedly did not apologize for it." CBS's
Bill Plante emphasized how "President Bush deplored the abuses,
but stopped short of an outright apology." On CNN's NewsNight,
John King pointed out how "the President did not use the words
'I'm sorry' or apologize in any way." Three times in under two
minutes NBC Nightly News viewers heard about the lack of an
apology. CBS's Plante claimed the situation "threatens to spin out
of control" as he ran an expert soundbite about how the war in
Iraq is now lost, but NBC's David Gregory directed viewers to an
expert who saw Arab hypocrisy since Arabs "have been silent about
torture throughout Arab prisons." See:
http://www.mediaresearch.org/cyberalerts/2004/cyb20040506.asp#1



    > 2) CNN's Walter Rodgers filed a story from London about how
the British are "appalled" at how the U.S. does not allow
television coverage of returning war dead and that President Bush
has yet to attend a funeral of anyone killed in Iraq. CNN's
producers liked the story so much, they ran it Thursday on both
Wolf Blitzer Reports at 5pm EDT and again on NewsNight at 10pm,
repeated at 1am EDT.

    "When the British war dead come home from Iraq now, they are
not hidden," Rodgers condescendingly intoned as he asserted that
"to many British, it seems bizarre that the Pentagon, citing
concern for family privacy, does not allow pictures of its honored
dead returning." Rodgers explained how "to the British, the fact
President George W. Bush has yet to attend the funeral of a single
American soldier killed in Iraq seems more than strange." (But
Rodgers never specified whether Tony Blair has attended any
individual funerals.)

    Rodgers reported that "under Bush administration restrictions
for covering the return of the American war dead, pictures like
these broadcast by Britain's ITN," of flag-draped caskets coming
off an airplane, "could not be gathered in the United States." In
fact, the rule barring news coverage of the return of bodies at
Dover Air Force Base in Delaware went into effect in 1991 and was
maintained throughout the Clinton years.

    Blitzer ended his May 6 show, the MRC's Ken Shepherd noticed,
with the Rodgers story. He introduced it: "In this country, the
Pentagon usually doesn't allow pictures of coffins for American
troops who have died in Iraq. It says it's the policy of the U.S.
government to protect families' privacy. But across the Atlantic,
there's a very different attitude about honoring fallen service
members."

    On screen during the first half of the Rodgers piece:
"Honoring the Dead
Stark Differences"

    Mid-way, that changed to:
"Honoring the Dead
UK Has Public Grieving Process"

    Later, NewsNight anchor Aaron Brown plugged the Rodgers story:
"Ahead on NewsNight, they fight side by side. They come home
worlds apart. Two views of fallen soldiers, Americans and
British."

    Brown set up the Rodgers story, which he made his program's
"Segment Seven" piece: "It is has been said the British and
American experience in Iraq is a study in differences, different
approaches to governing and policing, to fighting and to dying.
>From theater to home, the American way of death is intensely
private and officially secretive, some would argue needlessly so.
The British way is otherwise."

    Throughout the Rodgers story on NewsNight, beneath "Segment
Seven" on screen, viewers saw: "Death and Dignity."

    Over video of the Queen at a wreath-laying ceremony with bells
tolling, Rodgers began his piece by painting the British as
superior because their top officials publicly honor their war dead
every November 11. But while "Veteran's Day" in the U.S. may not
be as prominent as Britain's "Armistice Day," U.S. Presidents,
including the current one, always attend very high-profile wreath-
laying ceremonies on Memorial Day in May to honor the war dead.

    Nonetheless, Rodgers intoned: "This is how the British honor
their war dead. At the 11th hour of the 11th day of the 11th
month, the exact moment of the armistice in 1918 ending the great
war. Even 84 years later, the dead are not forgotten. Led by the
Queen, all Britain's war dead are honored with dignity and
beauty."

    Over video of flag-draped coffins being carried off a plane,
Rodgers continued: "When the British war dead come home from Iraq
now, they are not hidden. Grieving is public. Important
dignitaries and families gather for the return of those killed. TV
cameras are kept at a discrete distance, but the reality of war is
not denied. To many British, it seems bizarre that the Pentagon,
citing concern for family privacy, does not allow pictures of its
honored dead returning."
    Geoffrey Wheatcroft, journalist: "To an Englishmen, it is very
strange indeed because we have in fact this long tradition of
honoring the dead and of treating war with great solemnity and
making almost a cult out of the fallen."
    Rodgers, over video of Prince Charles in church: "Last
October, the royal family, the Prime Minister and families of
fallen soldiers all came together at St. Paul's Cathedral to honor
Britain's Iraq war dead. To the British, the fact President George
W. Bush has yet to attend the funeral of a single American soldier
killed in Iraq seems more than strange."
    Wheatcroft: "It would seem from this perspective that the
statement he's trying to make is that he would wish away the fact
that any Americans have been killed there, which, of course, he
can't do."
    Back to scenes of caskets being taken off a plane, Rodgers
complained: "Under Bush administration restrictions for covering
the return of the American war dead, pictures like these broadcast
by Britain's ITN could not be gathered in the United States."
    Voice of a female TV news anchor, video interspersing flag-
draped caskets and photos: "On that flight, five Royal Marines,
the first, 34-year-old Major Jason Ward from Plymouth. Next came
his colleague, Captain Philip Guy from North Yorkshire."
    Rodgers chided: "Those who carefully track this war here are
appalled."
    David Mulholland, Jane's Defense Weekly: "In the U.K., there's
an effort to honor those who have died. In the U.S., under this
administration, it seems there's a real effort to hide the cost of
the war both in terms of the number of lives lost and in terms of
money."
    Rodgers concluded: "As they did in the Great War, the British
and the Americans marched off together again, this time in Iraq.
But for those who paid the ultimate price, they come home in a
very different manner. Walter Rodgers, CNN, London."

    For a photo of a much younger-looking Wheatcroft, who appears
to be a freelancer without a particular political agenda, see a
bio of him on The Atlantic magazine's Web site:
http://www.theatlantic.com/about/people/gwbio.htm

    For a picture and bio for Rodgers, a veteran of ABC News:
http://www.cnn.com/CNN/anchors_reporters/rodgers.walter.html



    > 3) Last week Ted Koppel insisted his 35-minute-long Friday
night Nightline reading of the names of all the U.S. servicemen
killed in Iraq, "The Fallen," had no political agenda and that he
is not against the war, but here's how he described the content of
Thursday's Nightline: "Tonight, Hanging in the Balance: Is Iraq an
unwinnable war?" He devoted his half hour to a genial interview of
retired General William Odom, a former chief of the National
Security Agency who, Koppel relayed, now says "it's time to get
out" of Iraq. But Odom opposed the war from the start, so why is
his opposition to it suddenly newsworthy?

    ABCNews.com on Thursday plugged the upcoming Nightline: "A
distinguished retired Army general says it's time to get out of
Iraq."

    Meanwhile, Fox News Sunday moderator Chris Wallace, a former
fill-in host for Nightline, conducting interviews to promote his
own Sunday tribute to what soldiers in Iraq have accomplished,
charged that "The Fallen" Nightline "came out" as a political
statement.

    After reading the names and showing the pictures of the 721
men and woman killed in Iraq, but not Afghanistan, Koppel insisted
on the April 30 Nightline: "The reading tonight of those 721 names
was neither intended to provoke opposition to the war, nor was it
meant as an endorsement. Some of you doubt that. You are convinced
that I am opposed to the war. I'm not." For a complete rundown on
the April 30 "The Fallen" Nightline:
http://www.mediaresearch.org/cyberalerts/2004/cyb20040501.asp

    Six days later, Koppel opened the May 6 Nightline, over video
of bomb-damaged trucks and Humvees and a wounded U.S. soldier: "No
one ever said it would be easy, but few predicted it would be like
this. Today, the most hawkish Democrat on the Hill said this:"
    John Murtha: "We can not prevail in this war at the policy
that's going today."
    Koppel: "Now, the former director of the nation's largest
intelligence agency says it's time to get out."
    Koppel to William Odom: "That looks like a prescription for
disaster."
    Lt. General William Odom (Ret.), former NSA Director: "We
predestined that when we initiated the war. In other words, to say
you can't fail at that now is to fail to realize that you've
already failed."
    Koppel: "Tonight, Hanging in the Balance: Is Iraq an
unwinnable war?"

    Koppel acknowledged at the start of the interview, which
consumed the entire program: "Retired General William Odom
expressed serious doubts about the war before it began and now
takes the position that we have already failed in Iraq, that in
fact it would be better to get out sooner rather than later."

    On the Wallace front, an excerpt from a Thursday story by New
York Daily News reporter David Hinckley:

Fox News host Chris Wallace plans a counterstrike Sunday against
his old ABC colleague Ted Koppel, claiming Koppel's controversial
roll call of slain U.S. troops on Friday's Nightline failed to
explain what they died for.

"I'll take Ted at his word that ABC did not intend it as a
political statement or a ratings stunt," says Wallace.

"But when you look at all the factors -- the one-year anniversary
of President Bush declaring major combat over, the fact the U.S.
has just had a rough stretch there, all the promotion he did for
it -- I think it came out that way."

So Wallace says this week's Fox News Sunday "will list the
accomplishments of U.S. troops, such as ousting Saddam Hussein and
rebuilding the infrastructure.

"We are in no way saying the U.S. mission in Iraq is an unalloyed
success, or that there aren't serious questions -- which we have
raised ourselves.

"But to just list the names of fallen soldiers without context is
like listing the names of those who died on D-Day without talking
about what the invasion accomplished."...

    END of Excerpt

    For the Daily News article in full:
http://www.nydailynews.com/entertainment/ent_radio/story/190535p-164798c.html

    Thursday's USA Today carried a similar, but shorter, story,
"Wallace: 'Nightline' tribute had an agenda." For the article by
Peter Johnson, see:
http://www.usatoday.com/life/television/news/2004-05-06-nightline-wallace_x.htm

    One more tidbit on the subject of Koppel's controversial
Nightline: It turns out that the Sinclair Broadcast Group was not
the only owner of ABC affiliates to not air the April 30
Nightline. A May 4 story in the Savannah Morning News, highlighted
by Romenesko ( http://www.poynter.org/column.asp?id=45 ), reported
that "Piedmont Television, based in Charlotte, N.C., ordered
WJCL-TV [in Savannah] and the two other ABC stations it owns in
Springfield, Mo., and Huntsville, Ala., to preempt Nightline, said
WJCL-TV General Manager Mitchell Maund."

    Instead, the Savannah affiliate, "ABC 22," at least, ran an
Andy Griffith Show re-run.

    For the Savannah Morning News article:
http://www.savannahnow.com/stories/050504/LOC_nightline.shtml

    For more on Sinclair's reasons for dropping the show and which
stations didn't carry Nightline, see the April 30 CyberAlert:
http://www.mediaresearch.org/cyberalerts/2004/cyb20040430.asp ####



    > 4) In an April 30 column posted on CBSNews.com, former CBS
Evening News political producer Dick Meyer, who is now the
Editorial Director for CBSNews.com, blasted George Bush and Dick
Cheney as "chickenhawks" and railed against the "cheek, chutzpah,
conceit, arrogance, condescension" of the Republicans for
supposedly "impugning John Kerry's Vietnam era guts and
patriotism."

    [Rich Noyes, Research Director for the MRC, filed this item
for CyberAlert.]

    Unfortunately for Meyer's premise, top Republicans have
actually praised, not impugned, Kerry's military service. On CBS's
own airwaves, on Face the Nation February 22, Republican National
Committee Chairman Ed Gillespie declared that "Senator Kerry's
service in our military is honorable, and he should be proud of it
and obviously he is."

    What Republicans have "impugned" is Kerry's post-war career as
a medal-tossing anti-war protester and a record of anti-defense
votes as a liberal U.S. Senator from Massachusetts. But Meyer saw
any questioning of Kerry's "national security identity," i.e., his
record over the past several decades, as a sinister attempt to
paint him as "an unpatriotic chicken."

    And Meyer rejected the idea that Kerry could be criticized on
national security by anyone who themselves had not served in the
military, echoing liberal Senator Frank Lautenberg's smear of Bush
and Cheney as "chickenhawks."

    "What is the word that has more gall than gall?" Meyers wrote.
"Nerve? Cheek, chutzpah conceit, arrogance, condescension? You
name it -- the squadron of chickenhawks that steers both the
campaign and government of President Bush's have pots of it. Where
do these people come off impugning John Kerry's Vietnam era guts
and patriotism? John McCain, Colin Powell, Tom Ridge or Chuck
Hagel might have some moral standing, but not these chickenhawks."

    Meyer was a producer at CBS during the 1992 presidential
campaign, but I don't recall any hint on the CBS Evening News (or
in the rest of the media) that because Bill Clinton evaded service
in the Vietnam war he was unfit to question the policies of then-
President George H. W. Bush, a decorated World War II veteran.

    An excerpt from Meyer's anti-Bush harangue:

What kind of absurd political twilight zone is it where George
Bush and Dick Cheney can make John Kerry look like an unpatriotic
chicken by focusing attention on his combat duty in Vietnam?

It's a doublethink world of issues-ephemera, spin, and manipulated
perceptions that Bush's technicians have mastered and that we the
media and we the people aid and abet: Campaign 2004, a truth
odyssey.

What is the word that has more gall than gall? Nerve? Cheek,
chutzpah conceit, arrogance, condescension? You name it -- the
squadron of chickenhawks that steers both the campaign and
government of President Bush's have pots of it. Where do these
people come off impugning John Kerry's Vietnam era guts and
patriotism? John McCain, Colin Powell, Tom Ridge or Chuck Hagel
might have some moral standing, but not these chickenhawks.

This whole chickenhawk issue has become sort of politically
incorrect, in a Republican sort of way. It's considered a rude
charge. I don't buy that.

John Kerry's "national security identity" (I use this phrase
because that is how campaign operators think, they are trying to
forge perceptions of his character, record and patriotism) has
been sliced bloody by the orchestrated switchblades of Bush's
surrogates this past week. So it is hardly irrelevant that John
Kerry fought in Vietnam and George Bush didn't.

The list of Bush supporter's in government, in the campaign and in
the ideas industry who also had no military service at all, not
just no combat, is also relevant: Karen Hughes, Karl Rove,
Condoleezza Rice, Richard Perle, Douglas Feith, Lewis Libby,
William Kristol, Paul Wolfowitz, and Tom Delay. Oh yeah, and Dick
Cheney....

For the record, I don't think the biographical questions about
Kerry -- or Bush -- are irrelevant sideshows that obscure the
great debates of the day. I think they're important to voters.
They're important to me. I want to know if Kerry lied a little
about throwing away his medals, or why he wouldn't 'fess up to a
youthful exaggeration if he did. I want know if Bush really did
blow off months of his National Guard stint.

I don't think John Kerry should be exempted from scrutiny or
explanation because he got shot in war. I don't think Kerry did a
particularly good job of meeting the attack, but his tactics and
even his character are not my current concern.

I am just -- forgive me -- galled at the gall of the chickenhawks.
President Bush should not have sanctioned it.

...These people are, to my bewilderment, skilled at tearing down
people who have made that sacrifice. They did it to Max Cleland,
an ousted senator from Georgia who suffered awful wounds in
Vietnam. They did it to John McCain in 2000. They're trying to do
it to Kerry.

What gall.

    END of excerpt.

    To read Meyer's "The Gall of the Chickenhawks" column in full:
http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2004/04/30/opinion/meyer/main614915.shtml

    Meyer has since posted some of the e-mail he received since
that column was posted last Friday, and apparently most of his
readers agree with him. "Tons of e-mail on this one -- about 75-25
in agreement, a reverse of the usual percentages. Many of the
'nays' pointed out that no one in Bush-Cheney officialdom
explicitly used the word 'unpatriotic' about Kerry. Maybe so, but
not only is that suggestion implicit -- perhaps subliminal? -- but
the unofficial surrogates said it plenty."

    Actually, I think very few have called Kerry "unpatriotic,"
but I have noticed a special eagerness on the part of Democrats in
the last few years to claim to have had their patriotism impugned
so they can portray any criticism of their policies as somehow out
of bounds.

    To read the e-mail reaction, some of which is quite negative:
http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2003/11/20/opinion/meyer/main584753.shtml

    For the archive of Meyer's columns, which run under an
"Against the Grain" heading:
http://www.cbsnews.com/sections/opinion/meyer/main500159.shtml

    On Thursday afternoon he posted a new one blasting Rush
Limbaugh's take on the treatment of Iraqi prisoners.


    # Reminder, tonight's (Friday) JAG on CBS has a plot in which
the media harass the widow of a Marine killed in Iraq.


-- Brent Baker


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