Now That Bush Isn’t President, The Liberal Media Suddenly Doesn’t Care About Showing Soldier Coffins

Funny how that works, no?

Remember the controversy over the Pentagon policy of not allowing the press to take pictures of the flag-draped caskets of American war dead as they arrived in the United States? Critics accused President Bush of trying to hide the terrible human cost of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.
“These young men and women are heroes,” Vice President Biden said in 2004, when he was senator from Delaware. “The idea that they are essentially snuck back into the country under the cover of night so no one can see that their casket has arrived, I just think is wrong.”
In April of this year, the Obama administration lifted the press ban, which had been in place since the Persian Gulf War in 1991. Media outlets rushed to cover the first arrival of a fallen U.S. serviceman, and many photographers came back for the second arrival, and then the third.
But after that, the impassioned advocates of showing the true human cost of war grew tired of the story. Fewer and fewer photographers showed up. “It’s really fallen off,” says Lt. Joe Winter, spokesman for the Air Force Mortuary Affairs Operations Center at Dover Air Force Base in Delaware, where all war dead are received. “The flurry of interest has subsided.”

It’s almost like the only reason the media wanted pictures of the coffins was to run negative stories that were inconvenient for a President they hated, and now they don’t care because we have a President they love. But that couldn’t possibly be true, right? After all, our journalists always assure us that they’re objective and committed to reporting only the unvarnished, unslanted truth.
Actions speak louder than words.
In the heat of this debate I opposed allowing the media to take pictures of these coffins. I thought their motivations were ghoulish and unfair (and given their actions now, those thoughts are confirmed), but in retrospect I think that it was probably a mistake for the Bush administration to deny them access to these pictures. Opposing access was never political for me. The media was already committed to portraying the Iraq war in the worst possible light with an intent to shape public opinion rather than inform it, and I didn’t really see flag-draped coffins in the news as changing that much.
My concern was always for the families. Granted, the generic photos of coffins wouldn’t have singled out individuals and perhaps people like me were being oversensitive, but even so. It’s an issue where erring on the side of caution seems appropriate.
But in retrospect, barring access probably made this a bigger deal than it ever really needed to be.

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  • http://proof-proofpositive.blogspot.com/ proof_positive

    The media no longer seems to be concerned about the names of soldiers KIA either. You’d think if they were so impressed with how many had died while Bush was in office, they’d be even more impressed since the cumulative totals are all higher now!

    307 men and women have died since Obama was inaugurated. The list of their names can be found here.

  • http://insanereindeer.blogspot.com/ Kenny

    Again, it was never about soldiers, just a convenient way to bash the President. It’s the same reason no one cares about troop deaths anymore.

  • Neiman

    In my opinion the truth is that the MSM hates the military just as much as their fellow liberals and they do not really care about those deaths emotionally, those caskets are only worth anything when they could be used to attack Bush, now they don’t have the same value.

    The deaths in Iraq compared to any other U.S. War, while each is incredibly precious to most Americans, were very few and so getting huge numbers in a line like Vietnam was not possible and had less value to the media. Plus, whenever these caskets passed through America, most people showed them respect and it could not really hurt Bush. So, in retrospect he was probably wrong to deny access.

  • http://magyartruth.blogspot.com/ Chief RZ

    Neiman, it may remind them of their own cowardice and avoidance of serving a country they live in and enjoy freedoms of without having to pay their dues, so to speak.

  • Neiman

    That’s not fair Chief, most of them served in war as Arm Chair Generals, sitting in their air conditioned war rooms here in the U.S.A. telling the military and the President what they were doing wrong on a daily basis. How could we fight a war without them? Well, unless we actually wanted to win.

  • http://magyartruth.blogspot.com/ Chief RZ

    Neiman. Nice sarcasm. They are finally retiring from our Colleges and Universities where they hid from service and infected young people with their “Noam Chomsky” indoctrinations.

  • 2Hotel9

    And again, if you want to check, I said this would happen.

  • jimmypop

    307 men and women have died since Obama was inaugurated. The list of their names can be found here.

    he has been killing women and children as well.

    oh, did you see gitmo is still open? did you also see we are building gitmo like prisons in countries with even LESS ‘be nice to killer’ rules than we have to hold some of these guys? weird.

  • groetzinger

    They need the permission of the families.

  • Lioncourt

    Neiman, it may remind them of their own cowardice and avoidance of serving a country they live in and enjoy freedoms of without having to pay their dues, so to speak.

    Why do you talk about Rob like that?

  • Neiman

    Why do you talk about Rob like that?

    I cannot speak for Chief who that made that comment, but I have made it clear that on matters of the military and war I do not rate Rob’s opinions very highly because of his lack of military service.

  • Wayne

    Lyingcourt,

    The difference between liberals and conservatives that haven’t served is conservatives appreciate the military and the job they do for this country, liberals do not.

  • 2Hotel9

    groet? That never stopped them before.

  • 2Hotel9

    Oh, and it has been a couple of years, so I will say it again.

    Each time a plane lands with American dead aboard the press should be required to cover its landing and the ceremony which attends the removal of the caskets. Required to televise the ceremony, during prime time, at their expense, no ads run during the event, no matter how long it runs.

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