Winning Isn't News?? Since When??

The London Times reports...

What would happen if the U.S. won a war but the media didn't tell the
American public?  Apparently, we have to rely on a British newspaper for the
news that we've defeated the last remnants of al-Qaida in Iraq.

London's Sunday Times called it 'the culmination of one of the most
spectacular victories of the war on terror.' A terrorist force that once
numbered more than 12,000, with strongholds in the west and central regions
of Iraq, has in over two years been reduced to a mere 1,200 fighters, backed
against the wall in the northern city of Mosul. The destruction of al-Qaida
in Iraq (AQI) is one of the most unlikely and unforeseen events in the long
history of American warfare.

We can thank President Bush's surge strategy, in which he bucked both
Republican and Democratic leaders in Washington by increasing our forces
there instead of surrendering.  We can also thank the leadership of the new
general he placed in charge there, David Petraeus, who may be the foremost
expert in the world on counter-insurgency warfare.  And we can thank those
serving in our military in Iraq who engaged local Iraqi tribal leaders and
convinced them America was their friend and AQI their enemy.

Al-Qaida's loss of the hearts and minds of ordinary Iraqis began in Anbar
Province, which had been written off as a basket case, and spread out from
there.  Now, in Operation Lion's Roar the Iraqi army and the U.S. 3rd
Armored Cavalry Regiment is destroying the fraction of terrorists who are
left.  More than 1,000 AQI operatives have already been apprehended.  London
Sunday Times
reporter Marie Colvin, traveling with Iraqi forces in Mosul, found little
AQI presence even in bullet-ridden residential areas that were once
insurgency strongholds, and reported that the terrorists have lost control
of its Mosul urban base, with what is left of the organization having fled
south into the countryside.

Meanwhile, the State Department reports that Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri
al-Maliki's government has achieved 'satisfactory' progress on 15 of the 18
political benchmarks 'a big change for the better from a year ago.' Things
are going so well that Maliki has even for the first time floated the idea
of a timetable for withdrawal of American forces.  He did so while visiting
the United Arab Emirates, which over the weekend announced that it was
forgiving almost $7 billion of debt owed by Baghdad, an impressive vote of
confidence from a fellow Arab state in the future of a free Iraq .

But where are the headlines and the front-page stories about all this good
news?  As the MediaResearch Center pointed out last week, 'the CBS Evening
News, NBC Nightly News and CNN'sAnderson Cooper 360 were silent Tuesday
night about the benchmarks 'that signaled political progress.' The war in
Iraq has been turned around 180 degrees both militarily and politically
because President Bush stuck to his guns.  Yet apart from IBD, Fox News
Channel and parts of the foreign press, the media don't seem to consider
this historic event a big story.

Addendum: The reason you haven't seen this on American television or read
about it in the American press is simple--journalism is 'dead' in this
country.  They are controlled by Liberal Democrats who would rather see our
troops defeated than recognize a successful Republican initiated response to
9/11.

Investor's Business Daily

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