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Home » Info War » Yon vs. Military Flacks

Yon vs. Military Flacks

In a coun­terin­sur­gency, the media bat­tle­space is crit­i­cal. When it comes to mus­ter­ing pub­lic opin­ion, ral­ly­ing sup­port, and forc­ing oppo­nents to shift tac­tics and timeta­bles to bet­ter suit the home team, our ter­ror­ist ene­mies are destroy­ing us. Al Qaeda’s media arm is called al Sahab: the cloud. It feels more like a hur­ri­cane. While our ene­mies have “jour­nal­ists” crawl­ing all over bat­tle­fields to chron­i­cle their suc­cesses and our fail­ures, we have an “embed” media sys­tem that is so ineptly man­aged that ear­lier this fall there were only 9 reporters embed­ded with 150,000 American troops in Iraq. There were about 770 dur­ing the ini­tial inva­sion.
Many blame the media for the estrange­ment, but part of the blame rests squarely on the chip-​​laden shoul­ders of key mil­i­tary offi­cers and on the often clue­less Combined Press Information Center in Baghdad, which doesn’t man­age the media so much as man­han­dle them.

David_Contractor.jpgSo writes super-​​blogger Michael Yon in an essay in The Weekly Standard. Yon, a for­mer soldier-​​turned– jour­nal­ist who spent nine months embed­ded with infantry units in Iraq and Afghanistan last year, has fear­lessly reported the facts from some of the worst places in the world, includ­ing Baqubah in north-​​central Iraq, where in January 2005 I was on the receiv­ing end of a spec­tac­u­lar sui­cide bomb­ing. Now Yon writes about a foe nearly as harm­ful to the U.S. war effort: Lieutenant Colonel Barry Johnson, depart­ing head of the Baghdad Press Information Center. Continues Yon:

Johnson has repeat­edly gone on record decry­ing the lack of press cov­er­age in Iraq, all while alien­at­ing the last ves­tiges of any press will­ing to spend month after month in com­bat with American sol­diers. Meanwhile, “the most quoted man in Iraq” has become a major media source in his own right. Too bad there is no one else to tell the story of our troops. Too bad the sol­diers’ fam­i­lies have lit­tle idea what they are up to from day to day.

I’ve had my own run-​​ins with Johnson. He was instru­men­tal in the abrupt and vio­lent end to my February 2006 embed with the 4th Infantry Division in Balad, which effec­tively spelled the end of my career as a U.S. mil­i­tary embed. I have since embed­ded suc­cess­fully with British forces in Iraq — a move on my part that, accord­ing to British press offi­cers, elicited protests from Johnson’s office.
Johnson’s out of Iraq now, report­edly on his way to the Pentagon where he will surely make trou­ble for the Washington defense press, includ­ing yours truly, as I’m about to go on staff at Defense Technology International. In Johnson’s place is a Colonel Christopher Garver, who you can con­tact directly here. Let’s hope Garver under­stands the value of the press in fourth-​​generation war­fare.
But even if he does, he’ll be in a minor­ity, as the Army has recently taken steps to crack down on our most unfil­tered source of infor­ma­tion from the front: sol­dier blog­gers. As mil­blogs get shut down, embeds become even more impor­tant. Tragically, recent reports have pinned the num­ber of embeds in Iraq at around ten. That’s too few. There would be eleven if Garver would let Yon back in, twelve if he’d let me back too, and many more if he demon­strated a will­ing­ness to work with alter­na­tive media. There is no short­age of inde­pen­dent jour­nal­ists eager to risk their lives to report on U.S. troops; there is only a lack of will on the part of the mil­i­tary to grant us access.
– David Axe
UPDATE 10/​24/​06 9:28 AM: Jules Crittenden pre­dicts “the death of mil­blog­ging.”

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October 23rd, 2006 | Info War | 21772 Comments »http://defensetech.org/2006/10/23/yon-vs-military-flacks/Yon+vs.+Military+Flacks2006-10-23+05%3A42%3A24wonk You can skip to the end and leave a response. Pinging is currently not allowed.

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