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Austin Bay Blog » Ralph Peters On Iraq

Austin Bay Blog

3/14/2006

Ralph Peters On Iraq

Filed under: General — site admin @ 9:10 am

More kudos to Ralph for his latest reporting from Iraq.

His lede:

During a recent visit to Baghdad, I saw an enormous failure. On the part of our media. The reality in the streets, day after day, bore little resemblance to the sensational claims of civil war and disaster in the headlines.

No one with first-hand experience of Iraq would claim the country’s in rosy condition, but the situation on the ground is considerably more promising than the American public has been led to believe. Lurid exaggerations and instant myths obscure real, if difficult, progress.

I left Baghdad more optimistic than I was before this visit. While cynicism, political bias and the pressure of a 24/7 news cycle accelerate a race to the bottom in reporting, there are good reasons to be soberly hopeful about Iraq’s future.

I saw significant progress last year, and Ralph sees more this year. The problem for the MSM seems to be that progress is slow and incremental– and TV news does not do “incremental.” That’s one reason the networks miss the story — bang makes for hot imagery, a brick building does not.

Ralph smashes several myths about Iraq. Here are two:

Reconstruction efforts have failed. Just not true. The American goal was never to rebuild Iraq’s infrastructure in its entirety. Iraqis have to do that. Meanwhile, slum-dwellers utterly neglected by Saddam Hussein’s regime are getting running water and sewage systems for the first time. The Baathist regime left the country in a desolate state while Saddam built palaces. The squalor has to be seen to be believed. But the hopeless now have hope.

The electricity system is worse than before the war. Untrue again. The condition of the electric grid under the old regime was appalling. Yet, despite insurgent attacks, the newly revamped system produced 5,300 megawatts last summer–a full thousand megawatts more than the peak under Saddam Hussein. Shortages continue because demand soared–newly free Iraqis went on a buying spree, filling their homes with air conditioners, appliances and the new national symbol, the satellite dish. Nonetheless, satellite photos taken during the hours of darkness show Baghdad as bright as Damascus…

3 Comments »

  1. Bush: Iraq Insurgency Wants Civil War President Bush said Monday insurgents in Iraq were trying to ignite a civil war by escalating violen

    Trackback by Unpartisan.com Political News and Blog Aggregator — 3/14/2006 @ 10:47 am

  2. The AP says otherwise:http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20060314/ap_on_re_mi_ea/iraq_powerless According to today’s blurb, electricity is at a three year low.

    Comment by Barnabus — 3/14/2006 @ 1:05 pm

  3. Mr Peters, how dare you try to confuse us with the facts!

    Comment by scott — 3/14/2006 @ 1:52 pm

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