What if the Democrats behaved better?

When U.S. politicians and those in the media throw out lines that get repeated by terrorists in their recruiting material, it is time to consider the consequences of those words and actions. Terrorists have quoted from Michael Moore’s Fahrenheit 9/11 movie and Osama bin Laden even used one of the left’s favorite criticisms, President Bush’s reading of My Pet Goat to schoolchildren on September 11, in one of his 2004 pre-election statements. A recent statement by al Quaeda leader, Dr. Ayman al-Zawahiri, was in many respects amazingly similar to statements regularly made by prominent Democrats.

If anyone took the time to study it, I wonder if it might even be determined that some actions of Democrats and the media resulted in more jihadists being recruited than otherwise would have. In portions of the recently declassified NIE, the line quoted most frequently in news reports was that the war in Iraq had become a “cause celebre” for jihadists. I can’t help but wonder if the rallying cry was a result of the war itself or if it was the result of the media interpretation of the war presented through anti-American media outlets like BBC, al Jazeera and CNN International as a losing effort in which Christian American troops were torturing and murdering innocent Muslims?

Iraq war reporting has not been traditional, because the war has not been. That is no excuse, however, for one-sided reporting. When there have been months of decreased violence in Iraq or handovers of large areas of control to Iraqi troops it is hard to find it reported prominently, but when there is one month of increased violence it leads the news. When the war is going well, it is simply not considered news. When there are setbacks in the war, they make page one headlines. If you think about it, that approach runs counter to the very definition of “news.”

“Dog bites man” is not news, but “man bites dog” is. We have been told by Democrats and the media that we are losing the war in Iraq, miserably. Since that has become the conventional wisdom, shouldn’t it be bigger news when things do go right there, such as when violence decreases or when we round up leaders of a significant terrorist group? I am not saying that U.S. casualties should not be reported prominently, or that increases in violence should not be reported, but only that the successes we experience in Iraq should receive more coverage than they have.

When the public (including the terrorists) are given the impression that U.S. politicians have lost the will to fight in Iraq, and when they are led to the conclusion that terrorists in Iraq (and Afghanistan for that matter) have won the war on terror, there must be an impact on their behavior, including their ability to recruit. Hopefully one day that debate will take place.