Last week, the media seized on the supposed "spate of good news"
purportedly infusing the White House with momentum, including the June 7 death
of terrorist leader Abu Musab al-Zarqawi in Iraq, the June 12 announcement that
White House senior adviser Karl Rove would not be indicted in the CIA leak
case, and President Bush's brief June 13 trip to Baghdad to meet with the
new Iraqi prime minister. Sometimes citing small upticks in Bush's poll
numbers, various media outlets highlighted Bush's "surge of
momentum" and described him as "on a roll."
A June 14 Wall Street Journal article
(subscription required) pondered, "Is he setting the stage for a
political recovery?" And a June 16 report by ABC News
senior national correspondent Claire Shipman featured on-screen
text reading, "Best week ever? Is Bush on a
comeback?"
But as Media Matters for
America noted, in
celebrating the White House's purported "momentum," these
outlets overlooked the Bush administration's numerous ongoing problems.
In recent days, there have been negative turns of events in many of the areas Media Matters previously identified,
including the violence in Iraq
and Afghanistan
and the trial of a former White House official. At the same time, several other
problems relating to the White House surfaced. In light of these events, will
the media devote the same attention to this apparent string of bad news and how
it might affect his purported "comeback" as they did to Bush's
"surge of momentum"?
Notable recent developments:
- Safavian is convicted. On June 20, former White House official
David Safavian was found guilty in
federal court on four charges of making false statements and obstruction of
justice relating to his dealings with disgraced former GOP lobbyist Jack
Abramoff. Safavian is the former chief federal procurement officer for the Bush
White House.
- North Korea moves closer to missile test. Recent
reports have indicated that North Korea is
planning to test a long-range ballistic missile for the first time in eight
years. This development has provoked extensive diplomatic efforts
from the United States
and other nations. On June 20, the United States even took the step of
activating its
missile defense system.
- Violence and instability continue in Iraq. On June 16 -- the
same day that Shipman touted Bush's purported comeback -- a suicide
bomber killed 11 in an
attack on a Baghdad
mosque and two American soldiers were captured by insurgents in an ambush near
Yusefiya. Four days later, the two soldiers were found dead after
apparently having been tortured. The news of the murders came a day after Vice
President Dick Cheney stood by his
assertion in May 2005 that the Iraqi insurgency was in its "last throes." On June 18, The Washington Post published a cable sent
recently from the U.S. Embassy in Iraq to the State Department detailing the
"the daily-worsening conditions"
in Baghdad and the increasing dangers faced by the embassy's Iraqi
employees and their families. The memo, which has received scant attention from the rest of the
media despite the very different picture it paints from Bush's optimistic
remarks, cited reports that ethnic cleansing "is taking place in almost
every Iraqi province." Also, Japan
announced on June
20 its intention to pull its 600 ground troops out of Iraq.
- Three soldiers charged with murder of Iraqi civilians. The
Army disclosed on June 19 that three U.S. soldiers had been charged with
the premeditated murder
of three Iraqi detainees, as well as obstruction of justice. Meanwhile, the
Naval Criminal Investigation Service is continuing to
investigate the possibility that "war crimes" were committed by a
company of Marines during an incident on November 19, 2005, in the Iraqi town
of Haditha in
which one Marine and 24 Iraqi civilians died, including several children.
- Taliban insurgency gains strength in Afghanistan. USA Today reported on June
20 that the Taliban insurgency in southern Afghanistan is intensifying, as insurgents are "ambushing military patrols, assassinating opponents and even
enforcing the law in remote villages where they operate with near
impunity." According to Pakistani journalist Ahmed Rashid, "We are faced
with a full-blown insurgency." The increased violence and instability has
led the U.S.
military to mount a substantial counteroffensive
involving more than 300 airstrikes in the past three months. Nearly four and a
half years ago, Bush announced that the United States
had "routed the Taliban in Afghanistan."
- New book details failures of war on terror. Released on June
20, Ron Suskind's new book, The One Percent
Doctrine: Deep Inside America's Pursuit of Its Enemies Since 9/11
(Simon & Schuster), includes numerous startling revelations
regarding the Bush administration's handling of the war on terror. As Washington Post staff writer Barton
Gellman wrote in his June 20 review: "The
book's opening anecdote tells of an unnamed CIA briefer who flew to Bush's
Texas ranch during the scary summer of 2001, amid a flurry of reports of a
pending al-Qaeda attack, to call the president's attention personally to the
now-famous Aug. 6, 2001, memo titled 'Bin Ladin Determined to Strike in
US.' Bush reportedly heard the briefer out and replied: 'All right.
You've covered your ass, now.'" According to Gellman, Suskind also
reports that Bush was specifically warned by the CIA in late 2001 that the
Pakistani army and local Afghan militias that had cornered Osama bin Laden in
the mountains in Afghanistan were "definitely not" equipped to
handle the mission and that "we're going to lose our prey if
we're not careful." As Gellman writes, "White House accounts
have long insisted that Bush had every reason to believe that Pakistan's army and pro-U.S. Afghan militias had
bin Laden cornered and that there was no reason to commit large numbers of U.S. troops to
get him."
- Rumsfeld does not recall facts of "largest defense procurement
scandal in decades." A June 20 Washington Post article
highlighted "how little of [Defense Secretary Donald H.] Rumsfeld's
attention has been focused on weapons-buying -- a function that consumes nearly
a fifth of the $410 billion defense budget." The Pentagon's weapons
procurement system became a source of controversy after it came to light in
2004 that the department had spent $30 billion leasing tanker aircraft for
which that it had no need, which the Post
called the "largest defense procurement scandal in decades." A
subsequent investigation by David M. Walker, the comptroller general of the United States,
determined that the Defense Department "is simply not positioned to
deliver high-quality products in a timely and cost-effective fashion" --
a problem for which he partly blamed Rumsfeld's office.
&mdash J.K.
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