top
|
1. NBC: Iraq "Rhetoric Beginning to Sound Much the Same" as Vietnam NBC on Tuesday night devoted a story to comparing Iraq to Vietnam. Reporter Jim Miklaszewski concluded that "while there are marked differences between the wars in Iraq and Vietnam, the rhetoric, at least, is beginning to sound much the same." Miklaszewski used as an excuse for bringing up the subject how "Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld himself raised the Vietnam issue at his Pentagon briefing today" and rejected the equivalence. Miklaszewski went on to highlight how Senator Chuck Hagel, "the prominent Republican and decorated Vietnam veteran, said this week the U.S. is now bogged down in Iraq, similar to Vietnam." Miklaszewski reported that "there's increasing concern in the Pentagon that a growing anti-war drumbeat here at home" -- a drumbeat being pounded by NBC -- "could eventually take a toll on troop morale in Iraq, not at all unlike Vietnam." He also chided Rumsfeld for how he "ignored the latest polls which indicate a majority of Americans now think it was a mistake to go to war in Iraq." 2. Newspaper Mag Editor Urges Papers to Urge Withdrawal from Iraq In a Monday posting, Greg Mitchell, the Editor of the leading newspaper industry magazine, Editor & Publisher, urged newspapers to editorialize about getting the U.S. out of Iraq. The up top summary below the "Tipping Point on Iraq" headline over his August 22 piece: "At this critical moment, it's time for newspapers -- many of which helped get us into this war -- to use their editorial pages as platforms to help get us out of it. So far, few have done much more than wring their hands. Now, it's literally do-or-die time." 3. Network Firestorm Tuesday Night Over Pat Robertson Despite Pat Robertson's waning role in national politics, the broadcast and cable networks on Tuesday evening jumped on his Monday suggestion that Venezuela's leftist President Hugo Chavez should be assassinated now in order to avoid a costly war later. All three broadcast network evening newscasts featured full stories, with ABC's World News Tonight making it the lead story. Anchor Charles Gibson snidely forwarded: "A popular Christian broadcaster says assassination is the way to deal with one world leader who criticizes the U.S. Some ask, 'is this Pat Robertson's definition of Christian love?'" CBS played a clip of Donald Rumsfeld dismissing Robertson as just another example of how "private citizens say all kinds of things all the time," and Gloria Borger then countered by touting Robertson's prominence: "But Robertson is not just any private citizen. He's a former Republican presidential candidate with a large evangelical following." NBC Nightly News anchor Brian Williams declared that Robertson "has created something of an international firestorm." FNC's Brit Hume noted CNN's all-day obsession which continued into prime time. NBC: Iraq "Rhetoric Beginning to Sound Much the Same" as Vietnam NBC on Tuesday night devoted a story to comparing Iraq to Vietnam. Reporter Jim Miklaszewski concluded that "while there are marked differences between the wars in Iraq and Vietnam, the rhetoric, at least, is beginning to sound much the same." Miklaszewski used as an excuse for raising the subject how "Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld himself bringing up the Vietnam issue at his Pentagon briefing today" and rejected the equivalence. Miklaszewski went on to highlight how Senator Chuck Hagel, "the prominent Republican and decorated Vietnam veteran, said this week the U.S. is now bogged down in Iraq, similar to Vietnam." Miklaszewski reported that "there's increasing concern in the Pentagon that a growing anti-war drumbeat here at home" -- a drumbeat being pounded by NBC -- "could eventually take a toll on troop morale in Iraq, not at all unlike Vietnam." He also chided Rumsfeld for how he "ignored the latest polls which indicate a majority of Americans now think it was a mistake to go to war in Iraq."
The August 23 CyberAlert recounted: Like feeding raw meat to a lion, Republican Senator Chuck Hagel on Sunday gave television journalists what they wanted and couldn't resist: A soundbite comparing Iraq to Vietnam when he said on ABC's This Week that "we are locked into a bogged-down problem, not dissimilar to where we were in Vietnam." CNN's Aaron Brown trumpeted at the top of Monday's NewsNight how "the anti-war voices are not just liberal groups camped out with Cindy Sheehan in Texas, but at least one senior Republican Senator, who has always had questions about the war, but now compares it to a war he fought a generation ago." On the CBS Evening News, anchor John Roberts played up Hagel's influence: "What's the White House making of what would seem to be some pretty harsh criticism from a guy who's supposed to be on the President's team?" NBC Nightly News anchor Brian Williams listed a litany of setbacks for Bush on Iraq, ending with how "it doesn't help that a prominent Senator, in his own party, is comparing it to Vietnam." In the morning on Today, Ann Curry stressed how "a prominent Republican Senator compared the war in Iraq to Vietnam" and Don Teague touted how Bush is "even facing fire from within his own party." See: www.mediaresearch.org
Miklaszewski began: "Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld himself raised the Vietnam issue at his Pentagon briefing today, claiming the enemy in Iraq, unlike that in Vietnam, does not have strong popular support." [on screen: CNN/USA Today/Gallup poll "Iraq war a mistake?" Yes: 54%]
Rumsfeld: "I think it will have the support of the American people, and it will be sustained and we will be successful."
Newspaper Mag Editor Urges Papers to Urge Withdrawal from Iraq
In a Monday posting, Greg Mitchell, the Editor of the leading newspaper industry magazine, Editor & Publisher, urged newspapers to editorialize about getting the U.S. out of Iraq. The up top summary below the "Tipping Point on Iraq" headline over his August 22 piece: "At this critical moment, it's time for newspapers -- many of which helped get us into this war -- to use their editorial pages as platforms to help get us out of it. So far, few have done much more than wring their hands. Now, it's literally do-or-die time." An excerpt from Mitchell's harangue: As the dog days of August wind down, the editorial pages of American newspapers face a moment of truth on the Iraq war. Over the next few weeks, with vacationers heading home, the president's popularity sinking, hearings planned in Congress, and major protests set, the case for a U.S. withdrawal from Iraq -- sooner rather than later, as Al Neuharth has repeatedly put it -- will finally become a center of public and political debate. Or, as Republican Senator Chuck Hagel of Nebraska (who once favored the war) said on Sunday, "We should start figuring out how we get out of there. I think our involvement there has destabilized the Middle East. And the longer we stay there, I think the further destabilization will occur." It's time for newspapers, many of which helped get us into this war, to consider using their editorial pages as platforms to help get us out of it. So far, few have done much more than wring their hands, or simply criticize the conduct of the war, or the lack of body armor for our troops. Not many months ago, in fact, some papers, including The New York Times, were calling for more U.S. troops for Iraq. Now it's literally do-or-die time. President Bush clearly recognizes this. This week, in a desperate attempt to counter the sensible idea of a phased withdrawal, he has lashed out at those who advocate something quite different -- an immediate pullout -- as if that is the only option. As some of you no doubt know (and may be sick of reading), I have challenged major U.S. newspapers for more than two years to be first to clearly call for a phased withdrawal. Once a few do so, they will show that it is safe for others to stick their toes in the water. The argument I've made is akin to Hagel's: While many claim that exiting will only make matters worse, the United States' presence is more of a long-term problem than a long-term solution, for both that country, and our own. Now, with Iraq moving toward a decentralized, pro-Iranian state, even some of my friends at conservative blogs and Web sites are shifting course, declaring that no American GIs should die for an Islamic nation.... Since I have taken a lot of grief since 2003, from Jonah Goldberg and others, for even mentioning "Iraq" and "Vietnam" in the same paragraph, I will note a further Hagel comment: "We're past that stage now because now we are locked into a bogged-down problem not unsimilar, dissimilar to where we were in Vietnam. The longer we stay, the more problems we're going to have. "What I think the White House does not yet understand, and some of my colleagues, the dam has broke on this policy. The longer we stay there, the more similarities [to Vietnam] are going to come together." The time for the press to act, if it ever does, is now. Not for the first time, the newspapers are lagging behind the public, as major polls show that most Americans favor starting a pullout now, and feel the war was a mistake from the start.... When he wrote the following this month, [Knight-Ridder's Joe] Galloway was addressing the White House and the Pentagon, but he could have aimed it just as easily at the media: "Don't tell me we are going to stay the course. We are on the wrong course, and it only leads deeper into the quicksand. Tell me how we are going to change course." END of Excerpt
For Mitchell's piece in full: www.editorandpublisher.com
Network Firestorm Tuesday Night Over Pat Robertson Despite Pat Robertson's waning role in national politics, the broadcast and cable networks on Tuesday evening jumped on his Monday suggestion that Venezuela's leftist President Hugo Chavez should be assassinated now in order to avoid a costly war later. All three broadcast network evening newscasts featured full stories, with ABC's World News Tonight making it the lead story. Anchor Charles Gibson snidely forwarded: "A popular Christian broadcaster says assassination is the way to deal with one world leader who criticizes the U.S. Some ask, 'is this Pat Robertson's definition of Christian love?'" CBS played a clip of Donald Rumsfeld dismissing Robertson as just another example of how "private citizens say all kinds of things all the time," and Gloria Borger then countered by touting Robertson's prominence: "But Robertson is not just any private citizen. He's a former Republican presidential candidate with a large evangelical following." NBC Nightly News anchor Brian Williams declared that Robertson "has created something of an international firestorm" before reporter Bob Far concluded that Robertson is "a man of God who doesn't calm waters, but roils them." Robertson "may have no clout with the Bush administration, but you wouldn't know that from watching CNN today," FNC's Brit Hume noted in reviewing the competing cable network's all-day obsession -- a focus which continued into the evening with Robertson leading the 7pm EDT Anderson Cooper 360 (hosted by Heidi Collins), the 8pm EDT Paula Zahn Now and the 10pm EDT NewsNight with Aaron Brown who tried to hold the whole religious right culpable as he asserted that "political leaders worried it makes the so-called Christian Right seem neither Christian nor right." Robertson was also the first topic covered by MSNBC's 7pm Hardball with Chris Matthews and 8pm Countdown with Keith Olbermann. [This article was posted Tuesday night on the MRC's NewsBusters blog. To comment, go to: newsbusters.org ] Unlike the broadcast network coverage, at least the cable shows reviewed some of Chavez's radical policies and alliances. Hume relayed in his "Grapevine" segment on his 6pm EDT FNC program: "Televangelist Pat Robertson's political influence may have been declining since he came in second in the Iowa Republican caucuses 17 years ago and he may have no clout with the Bush administration, but you would not know that from watching CNN today. CNN covered his call for Hugo Chavez's assassination at length, undeterred by the fact that during the 12 o'clock hour CNN's own analyst, Bill Schneider, said Robertson had little influence. At the top of the next hour, there it was again followed by a glowing report on the alliance between Chavez and Cuban President Fidel Castro. And it led CNN's three-hour Situation Room, followed minutes later by live coverage of reaction from the Venezuelan ambassador, and then nearly two hours after that an in-studio interview with the ambassador." A rundown of the ABC, CBS and NBC stories from Tuesday night, August 23: # ABC's World News Tonight. Charles Gibson's tease: "On World News Tonight: A popular Christian broadcaster says assassination is the way to deal with one world leader who criticizes the U.S. Some ask, 'is this Pat Robertson's definition of Christian love?" Gibson opened the newscast: "Good evening. It is not something you expect to hear from a Christian minister: A call for the assassination of a world leader. The Reverend Pat Robertson, a television fixture with his 700 Club and a former presidential candidate, suggested that U.S. operatives should take out the President of Venezuela, Hugo Chavez, to stop that country from becoming, in Robertson's words 'a launching pad for communism and Muslim extremism.' ABC's Dan Harris is here."
Harris began: "Good evening. Pat Robertson says Hugo Chavez is quote, 'a terrific danger to the United States.' But his spokesperson could not say whether Robertson's assassination suggestion is in keeping with his Christian faith. "
Borger began: "Pat Robertson's suggestion is unmistakable. Since the Venezuelan President claims that America is trying to kill him:"
Faw began: "It was not an extremist cleric issuing a death threat. This was Christian minister Pat Robertson discussing Venezuela's President Hugo Chavez."
-- Brent Baker
Home | News Division
| Bozell Columns | CyberAlerts |
|