HERE’S ANOTHER STORY THAT WE MISSED (at least, I did), which came to me via the multiply-forwarded email that makes up military samizdat. I don’t know the original source — if you do, please drop me a line.

Click for the full-sized image. The caption reads: “July 4, 2003, Saddam’s Mosul Palace 158 troopers from the 101st Airborne Division re-enlist for another tour in the army. Wonder why the media didn’t make a big deal of it? You suppose it’s because it didn’t fit the whining, bad morale profile they’ve been trying to portray. Naw, that can’t be the reason. Not Katie Collic, Dan Blather and crew.”

The media seem to have lost the battle for hearts and minds in Iraq. On a related theme, don’t miss this post on flypaper by Andrew Sullivan, and, in particular, this report from Iraq by Max Boot.

UPDATE: This piece by Jim Dunnigan on the media’s role in asymmetric warfare is worth reading, too. Excerpt:

In Somalia, the Somalis took over 30 casualties for every American killed or wounded. That was done through the use of superior American training, firepower (on the ground, and in helicopters overhead) and situational awareness (helicopters and more radios.) The battle in Mogadishu is only considered an American defeat because the American government considered 18 dead G.I.’s a defeat, even if over 500 Somali fighters died as well. At the time, the Somalis considered themselves defeated, and feared the return of the Army Rangers the next day to finish off the Somali militia that was terrorizing Mogadishu. The media declared the battle an American defeat, and that’s how it became known. Asymmetric warfare includes having the media in your corner, for that can easily turn a military defeat into a media victory.

The same thing almost happened in Iraq in 2003. During the first two weeks of the American advance into Iraq, any real, apparent or imagined delay of the coalition forces was instantly declared the beginning of a coalition defeat. Even as American troops moved within sight of Baghdad, the pundits were still gravely talking about bloody house to house fighting. There was much talk of asymmetric warfare by the Iraqis, and there was a lot of guerilla type attacks. But the American troops came up with new tactics faster than the Iraqis could think of ways to get around the American advantages.

Using the media as an asymmetric warfare weapon is pretty common, and sometimes it works. It worked in Somalia. It worked several times in the Balkans during the 1990s. Islamic fundamentalists use the media as one of their more potent weapons. The use of imbedded reporters during the Iraq war is seen by the Department of Defense as a use of asymmetric warfare against potentially dangerous media. Indeed, many media pundits have said as much, and darkly warn that the media cannot tolerate more such “defeats” in the future.

Worth reading in its entirety. You would think that media people would reexamine a general bias that makes them feel that they’re doing their job when they’re harming the forces of civilization, and being “used” when they’re not.

ANOTHER UPDATE: Col. Michael M. Smith of the Southern Command emails:

The reenlistment photo was at the entry site of the quasi-official US Army website, www.us.army.mil

It was certainly available for any/every one to use.

Curious that it got so little attention. I suspect that the “official” version didn’t contain the caption. . . .

ANOTHER UPDATE: Not really related, but here are more pictures.