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5 Years Ago: Many Top Newspapers Opposed War

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DeepModem Mom Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Mar-20-08 12:16 AM
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5 Years Ago: Many Top Newspapers Opposed War
Editor&Publisher: 5 Years Ago: Many Top Newspapers Opposed War
By Greg Mitchell
Published: March 18, 2008

NEW YORK You may be surprised to learn that, precisely five years ago, at least one-third of the top newspapers in this country came out against President Bush taking us to war at that time. Many of the papers may have fumbled the WMD coverage, and only timidly raised questions about the need for war, but when push came to shove five years ago they wanted to wait longer to move against Saddam, or not move at all. "For apparently the first time in modern history, the U.S. government seems poised to go to war not only lacking the support of many of its key allies abroad but also without the enthusiastic backing of the majority of major newspapers at home," Ari Berman and I wrote at Editor & Publisher on March 19, 2003. Berman had just completed his fifth and (presumably) final prewar survey of the top 50 newspapers' editorial positions.

Following Bush's 48-hour ultimatum to Saddam Hussein, newspapers took their last opportunity to sound off before the war started. Of the 44 papers publishing editorials about the war, roughly one-third reiterated strong support for the White House, one-third repeated their abiding opposition to it, and the rest -- with further debate now useless -- took a more philosophical approach....

Once equivocal editorial pages got straight to the point. "This war crowns a period of terrible diplomatic failure," The New York Times argued, "Washington's worst in at least a generation. The Bush administration now presides over unprecedented American might. What it risks squandering is not Americans' power, but an essential part of our glory." Other papers were even more blunt. The Sun of Baltimore, consistently one of the most passionate dissenters on the war, began their editorial with the sentence, "This war is wrong. It is wrong as a matter of principle, but, more importantly, it is wrong as a matter of practical policy."

USA Today asked Bush to finally disclose risks, costs, and democratic government estimates for Iraq while the St. Louis Post-Dispatch wondered "what 'the peaceful entry' of 280,000 troops would look like." The Arizona Republic in Phoenix said that Bush and his "coalition of the willing," with prodding by the French, "have left the United Nations in tatters." The Houston Chronicle said it remained "unconvinced" that attack was preferable to containment, and The Orange County Register of Santa Ana, Calif., declared it was "unpersuaded" that the threat posed by the "vile" Hussein justified military action now. The San Jose (Calif.) Mercury News wrote, "War might have been avoided, had the administration been sincere about averting it."...

Even a hawkish paper expressed criticism. "The war will be conducted with less support than the cause should have commanded," The Washington Post, in backing the attack, wrote. "The Bush administration has raised the risks through its insistence on an accelerated timetable, its exaggerated rhetoric and its insensitive diplomacy; it has alienated allies and multiplied the number of protestors in foreign capitals."...

The majority of papers, however, remained deeply troubled by the position the U.S. found itself in. Even large papers such as the Los Angeles Times, The Oregonian in Portland, and Newsday of Melville, N.Y., which have long advocated (or at least accepted) using force to disarm Hussein, criticized their President as he prepared to send young men and women into battle....Many papers expressed hopes that a better world could prevail. "So the United States apparently will go to war with few allies and in the face of great international opposition," the L.A. Times said. "This is an uncharted path ... to an uncertain destination. We desperately hope to be wrong in our trepidation about the consequences here and abroad."

http://www.editorandpublisher.com/eandp/news/article_display.jsp?vnu_content_id=1003727274
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babylonsister Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Mar-20-08 12:21 AM
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1. K&R-Greg Mitchell is worth reading, as is this article. Thanks, DM Mom! nt
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bleever Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Mar-20-08 12:50 AM
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2. Important to remember how many were dissenting when the war
was jammed forward, forcing even the UN inspectors to flee ahead of the bombs.
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Captain Hilts Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Mar-20-08 06:19 AM
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3. The Wash Post editorial board supported it, reporters did not. nt
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Alcibiades Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Mar-20-08 07:56 AM
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4. It could not have been foreseen!
Who knew that the occupation would go so badly? No one!

Except Colin Powell, who told Bush about the Pottery Barn rule as he was deciding to invade.

And except these many news outlets.

And except the many anti-war people who have opposed this war from before the beginning.

And except George Bush senior, whose decision not to occupy Iraq after the first Gulf War makes him look like a military genius compared to his caligulan son.

Other than that--who knew?
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