A United States marine now faces possible conviction and punishment for
war crimes for finishing off a wounded enemy fighter in Fallujah. An act
not unique and perhaps understandable in the intense and bitter fighting
for the city, but one caught on film by freelance NBC news correspondent
Kevin Sites and released worldwide within hours. How this anti-war
activist became a pool reporter for a variety of news organizations and
embedded with the military forces he despises has not been explained but
casts a dark shadow of doubt on the practice of allowing reporters and
film crews on the front line during combat.
The reaction to the controversial footage shot by Sites predictably varied
from outrage to profound praise. Commentators and bloggers reacted with
their usual fierce opinions and an online petition of support for the
marine quickly surpassed a quarter of a million signatures. The petition
can be viewed here: http://www.petitiononline.com/mod_perl/signed.cgi?as123.
This story, though no longer in the top headlines, is far from over.
The question really becomes whether reporters and camera crews should be
allowed to be present where such controversial actions in battle will
inevitably occur.
The presence of reporters and camera crews sooner or later creates video
footage for the enemy’s recruitment and propaganda machine. A free
society shoots itself in the foot and emboldens and encourages the enemy
by allowing such scenes, taken out of context, to be broadcast. The
military censors failed horribly in this instance and the United States
has paid a high price in world opinion by its broadcast.
War is brutal and in a politically correct, hypersensitive society this
undermines the will to fight and undercuts support for the truth. The
presence of reporters on the front lines creates avenues for them to skirt
the rules regarding the review of footage shot in combat zones.
A 19 year old soldier should not have to worry that his every instinctive
action during combat could potentially be used against him simply because
it was caught on tape. Endless replaying of the images and the constant
commentary by the talking heads takes the focus off the end goal and
detracts from victory in the field. Such an act of combat carnage caught
on tape invariably fails to properly convey what is happening on the
ground and distorts the true account of an action or situation. There is
no sense of perspective or history to a simple snippet of a much larger
drama and story.
There is an amazing clash of culture, religion, and world views taking
place in Iraq and I have always supported recording the momentous events
of such a war for the sake of history. At the same time, the failure to
control the release of the footage of the marine killing an injured
insurgent in Fallujah forces us to reconsider the wisdom of embedding
reporters with the troops and allowing their unedited video to be released
to the world.
We must not forget that it is the enemy that is dictating the type of
battle being fought and breaking every rule of warfare. It is a fight
where the ‘dead’ pop up to shoot soldiers, bodies are booby trapped, and
terrorist thugs fake injury only long enough for US forces to hesitate and
themselves become casualties from such trickery. No tears should be shed
or hands wrung for a foe that beheads contractors, takes hostages,
disembowels women, executes aid workers, employs suicide bombers,
terrorizes the civilian population, fakes death and surrender to kill
soldiers and generally plays dirty in this war.
The fight for Fallujah is the blueprint that needs to be followed if
victory is too attained in this particular battle in the world wide war on
terror, terror regimes, nuclear proliferation and Islamic fascism. This
war must be won and crying crocodile tears for a terrorist thug that
received the battlefield justice he deserved will not help the free world
achieve victory.
For there ever to be true peace and stability in Iraq and the Middle East
there first must be the death, capture and defeat of those who are the
followers of despots, use terror as a political weapon, and seek the
elimination or submission of all infidels. At least 2500 killed or
captured in Fallujah is but a start, but it is a good start nonetheless.
The back of the insurgency must be broken and the establishment of a
moderate, representative modern government must be successfully
implemented. The age of the terror state in the post 9-11 world is coming
to an end and Iraq is a strategic and necessary part of that plan. Failure
is not an option and anything, including the idea of embedded reporters,
that impedes that lofty goal cannot be tolerated.
When it comes to blaming someone for what we saw in Fallujah, blame not
the marine but those who filmed and released such footage to the world.