The New Republic meets Dan Rather (and finds that they have a surprising amount in common) [Updated repeatedly]
The other shoe is starting to drop, and there's nobody there to catch it.
By Jeff Emanuel Posted in Anti-war liberals | Scott Thomas | War — Comments (11) / Email this page » / Leave a comment »
Update 3: TNR's last paragraph just doesn't hold water (much like the rest of the editorial). The claim that their attempt to "re-report" the case was stopped in-progress by the Army's opening of an investigation is belied by this statement made by the editors last week:
According to Major Kirk Luedeke, a public affairs officer at Forward Operating Base Falcon, a formal military investigation has also been launched into the incidents described in the piece.
Although the article was rigorously edited and fact-checked before it was published, we have decided to go back and, to the extent possible, re-report every detail
So last week, the Army investigation began before TNR's "re-reporting" did, and this week the Army's beginning its investigation halted TNR's already-in-progress "re-reporting"?
Update 2: Mike Goldfarb has posted his email exchange with TNR's Franklin Foer at the beginning of the controversy.
Update: Greyhawk points out via email:
Beuhring is a waypoint - a stop-off on the way into Iraq. As such, people come and go all the time, the population is extremely transitory but always large. Because of this, Beauchamp's current version of the story is one that will be impossible to prove or disprove - it's almost akin to claiming "actually I saw her at McDonalds in the Atlanta Airport one Saturday afternoon".
But ... the key point - this is a "pre-war" story, not a tale of the effects of war on American soft tissue.
This is a very important point; given TNR's claim that the entire purpose behind the series was to describe "the morally and emotionally distorting effects of war" (calling "Beauchamp's latest...a piece [that] was a startling confession of shame about some disturbing conduct, both his own and that of his fellow soldiers"), the fact that he carried out one of the most revolting acts he describes before he ever went to Iraq and experienced "the morally and emotionally distorting effects of war says far more about his breeding and his parents' poor job of raising him to be anything other than a horrible human being than it does about the horrible President Bush and his horrible war.
As Ace of Spades puts it:
he just happened to make an "error" that blamed his vicious cruelty on Bush's war in Iraq, when the actual fact (he did this before going to Iraq) suggests his vicious cruelty is due to his genetics and upbringing.
But not quite as good an opening graf that way, eh?
So he makes "a mistake," forgetting that Kuwait is not in Iraq.
The New Republic today published an editorial on the Scott Thomas Beauchamp situation and on their attempts to "re-report" his anecdotes with further investigation (always a great idea for a "journalistic" outlet that wishes to be respected).
What did they have to say? In a nutshell: Beauchamp was discovered by "Elspeth Reeve, a TNR reporter-researcher, whom he later married." What he had to say was believable because he was a soldier in Iraq and because "conservatives and liberals alike praised" his first essay. Further:
All of Beauchamp's essays were fact-checked before publication. We checked the plausibility of details with experts, contacted a corroborating witness, and pressed the author for further details. But publishing a first-person essay from a war zone requires a measure of faith in the writer. Given what we knew of Beauchamp, personally and professionally, we credited his report. After questions were raised about the veracity of his essay, TNR extensively re-reported Beauchamp's account
Read on.
As to the "Shock Troops" incident? In a nutshell: the story about the disfigured woman was (reportedly) true, but the location was wrong; rather than taking place at FOB Falcon in Baghdad, it now supposedly "occurred at Camp Buehring, in Kuwait, prior to the unit's arrival in Iraq." But this error (if it is the only one) is okay, because "Beauchamp acknowledged his error" and "we (TNR) sincerely regret this mistake."
TNR claims to have corroborated the other two incidents; however, if their editorial is to be taken at face value, then they again settled lazily for something that cast the shadow of truth on Beauchamp's far more detailed narrative, rather than actually (a) investigating further, or (b) owing up to having published a gross exaggeration.
Take, for example, the child's skull incident. Said Beauchamp in his essay:
One private, infamous as a joker and troublemaker, found the top part of a human skull, which was almost perfectly preserved. It even had chunks of hair, which were stiff and matted down with dirt. He squealed as he placed it on his head like a crown. It was a perfect fit. As he marched around with the skull on his head, people dropped shovels and sandbags, folding in half with laughter. No one thought to tell him to stop. No one was disgusted. Me included.The private wore the skull for the rest of the day and night. Even on a mission, he put his helmet over the skull. He observed that he was grateful his hair had just been cut--since it would make it easier to pick out the pieces of rotting flesh that were digging into his head.
And here's what TNR managed to find out: there was indeed a children's burial site (no surprise there; the 1-18 -- his unit -- was known to have found one while building their combat outpost); beyond that, this is all that they could extract from the "witnesses" who "laughed" at the supposed stunt:
One (soldier) wrote in an e-mail: "I can wholeheartedly verify the finding of the bones; U.S. troops (in my unit) discovered human remains in the manner described in 'Shock Troopers.' [sic] ... [We] did not report it; there was no need to. The bodies weren't freshly killed and thus the crime hadn't been committed while we were in control of the sector of operations." On the phone, this soldier later told us that he had witnessed another soldier wearing the skull fragment just as Beauchamp recounted: "It fit like a yarmulke," he said. A forensic anthropologist confirmed to us that it is possible for tufts of hair to be attached to a long-buried fragment of a human skull, as described in the piece.
Here is a classic case of moving the goal posts. The fact that a grave site was unearthed was never in dispute, no matter how much TNR wishes to use the fact that one was found (and that it could technically appear as Beauchamp described) -- much like they sought to use the fact that Beauchamp turned out to be a real soldier -- as proof positive that everything in the stories was true. The question here was the behavior of the soldier who supposedly "wore" the skull "for the rest of the day and night," including under his helmet -- something that "we all laughed" at, and that "nobody thought to tell him to stop" -- and the best they could do was to get one soldier to say that "he had witnessed another soldier wearing the skull fragment"?
The third story, that of the Bradley Fighting Vehicles being used to purposely run over dogs, still doesn't appear -- to me, who has very little experience in them, but who also has a decent amount of time on the roads around FOB Falcon and western Baghdad -- to pass the smell test. Part of the reason for this is the way that TNR went about "corroborating" the incident, reportedly speaking to the manufacturers of the Bradley about its driving specs, including its agility and acceleration. Further, they had a soldier, who had allegedly "seen it done more than once," tell them how a dog is run over ("when you approach the dog in question, suddenly lurch the Bradley on the opposite side of the road the dog is on. The rear-end of the vehicle will then swing TOWARD the animal, scaring it into running out into the road. If it works, the dog is running into the center of the road as the driver swings his yoke back around the other way, and the dog becomes a chalk outline"). However, to me -- again, as someone who has been there -- this rings very, very hollow. After all, these kids are not in the states, it's not the "Back 40" of a military base, and there is still an NCO or officer in every vehicle -- not to mention, as a soldier from FOB Falcon told the Weekly Standard's Mike Goldfarb:
When the U.S. Army takes to the streets on patrols we do it deliberately, with task and purpose. "Thomas" describes the Bradley slowing down and 'jerking' suddenly to hit dogs. This just isn't possible. If he is slowing down, then the vehicles behind him are slowing down, and there is a gap created between him and the vehicles in front of him. This would violate standard operating procedure (SOP) and make the convoy more susceptible to attack.While no one that has been to Baghdad can deny that there are large packs of wild dogs roaming the streets, to think that that is all a Bradley crew is worried about is absurd. [Ed. Note: Here's the most important part:] The streets are also filled with IED's and EFP's. They line every street and and every corner. They are the number one killer in Iraq. When we travel in convoys, dogs are not our concern. We watch the streets, we look at curbs, we look at rocks, we look at windows for snipers and trigger men, we don't look at wild dogs.
Also, if this guy is driving a Bradley, how is he marking his "dog kill count" in a green book. Again, any leader would have corrected this action immediately, not only because it is subject to UCMJ action, but mainly because it endangers the lives of every man in that convoy.
Like I said, it still just doesn't pass the smell test.
What is going on here is very, very typical: when called on a story that, like Haditha, was simply "too good to be [thoroughly] checked," TNR backed off a bit, made a few minor concessions, and then pulled the classic Dan Rather-esque "those who have criticized aspects of our story have never criticized the major thrust of our report" -- which, of course, is far from accurate. As my RedState colleague Dan McLaughlin mentioned upon reading TNR's editorial, they "have made concessions on the very things that people flagged as factually unlikely."
The rest, they were simply lazy with -- or, as in the case of the "skullcap" (literally), they moved the goalposts (or obfuscated the point of that part of the essay), claiming that the factuality of a small part or underlying detail rendered the entire narrative accurate. The attitude displayed here (and the stages through which it has passed, from stolid defensiveness, to revealing details in hopes that the larger part will be accepted as factual without question, to minor concessions paired with defensiveness in hopes of the same) is is poor, defensive journalism at its near-worst, and reflects a publication (which revels in accusations that others are lying) that values its short-term pride over honesty, accuracy, and long-term respectability.
TNR said in the editorial:
Over the course of the war, we have tried to provide our readers with a sense of Iraq as it is seen by the troops. Usually, these stories have been written by journalists who have traveled to Iraq and interviewed soldiers there, but last January Beauchamp sent us a first-person vignette that seemed a powerful contribution to the genre.
This statement is fraught with problems. First of all, if accuracy was really important, then why not deal with soldiers themselves, or with journalists who -- beyond sitting in safe areas interviewing soldiers -- have actually done real journalistic work, and have covered the soldiers in action? It is simply not arguable that these would be far better suited to provide an accurate perspective of operations and of the soldiers themselves.
Second, regardless of their attitude or journalistic "integrity," this one fact (as put by John of the milblog Op-For) is inexorably true:
None of this detracts from the fact that, of the 160k troops in Iraq, TNR choose a real dirtball to serve as their correspondent. When other soldiers are out building schools, providing medical care, and running security operations for the Iraqi people, TNR decided to highlight a real slug of a mechanic who mocks the disfigured and disrespects the dead for kicks.
This situation is still far from over, and the next step in the aforementioned progression is, of course, casting blame on others, which TNR unflinchingly and unfailingly did, saying:
Although we place great weight on the corroborations we have received, we wished to know more. But, late last week, the Army began its own investigation, short-circuiting our efforts. Beauchamp had his cell-phone and computer taken away and is currently unable to speak to even his family. His fellow soldiers no longer feel comfortable communicating with reporters. If further substantive information comes to light, TNR will, of course, share it with you.
That's right: it's the Army's fault. The same army, according to TNR, which condones the abuse of the dead, which laughs at reckless and deadly behavior, and in whose ranks Scott Thomas Beauchamps are the rule, rather than the exception, has enforced its own rules and is conducting an investigation into the alleged incidents of wrongdoing that TNR so desperately wants to believe are both commonplace and accepted in its day to day operations -- and it is a bad thing.
It's also a bad thing that an admittedly terrible person like Scott Thomas Beauchamp might actually be facing punishment. You see, in the army that TNR would have representing America, not only is Beauchamp the rule rather than the exception, but his admittedly atrocious actions are condoned and accepted, not investigated or punished. To go against that would be to break the template, and that is a cardinal sin to the leftist niche media in this time of war.
Here's a thought, to build on the one expressed above: "If further substantive information comes to light," I, or JD Johannes, or Matt Sanchez, or David Beriain -- not TNR -- will share it with you.
We will be there in the next few weeks. Matt, in fact, is already there.
TNR had its chance -- more than once -- and they blew it. It may be time to leave it to the aforementioned professionals now, who have two major advantages on them: (1) We are all right with reporting honestly, regardless of what the effects are, and (2) we actually know what the heck it is that we are talking about.
How does that sound?
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The New Republic meets Dan Rather (and finds that they have a surprising amount in common) [Updated repeatedly] 11 Comments (0 topical, 11 editorial, 0 hidden) Post a comment »
and a soldier or sailor story is a fairy tale begins with "Once upon a time" and a soldier or sailor story begins with "Now this is no s**t." Soldiers tell stories; some of them are true, some of them actually happened somewhere to somebody, some didn't happen at all but "should have."
My son is an infantryman in Afghanistan. He can peddle wilda**ed rumors with the best of them. I went to college with lots of 'Nam vets and spent most of my working life with some of them around. Get a few beers in those guys, the stories started, and before long it sounds like every soldier in Vietnam was a door gunner who thought it was just great fun to clean out his Ma Duece on a line of civilians walking down the road. None of it was true or if it was at all true, it happened somewhere to somebody, that somebody knew, and who told somebody that somebody else knew.
In earlier times that stuff just circulated around in groups of friends or in bars and VFW/AL halls, though not so much in those since somebody would call BS. With today's communications, if you change the intro to something other than "Now this is no s**t," leave out some of the F-words, and say something outrageous enough, you're a worldwide media star.
In Vino Veritas
"How in the world can you machine gun kids?"
"Easy, you just lead them a little less."
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CongressCritter™: Never have so few felt like they were owed so much by so many for so little.
one like this: It was late in 1969, shortly before I arrived
in-country. It was the middle of the rainy season.
Our unit was in a place called Happy Valley. There was more than one Happy Valley - ours being south and lesser known than the one further north in I Corps. It was a violent place, nonetheless.
Our guys kept hearing a crying baby. They soon came upon a very small hamlet of a couple of hooches.
The Vietnamese dug cellars and slept in them at night in order to be protected from artillery and bombs, etc. In one of the cellars lay a dead woman, who had been shot in the head. In her lap was the crying baby. In one of the other hooches a young Vietnamese man was also found dead with a gunshot wound to the back of his head.
Our guys were concerned about the baby, but also were aware it could be booby trapped. One of the men, suspended over the hole by a couple of others soldiers fastened a pistol belt around the baby's ankle and pulled it to safety. It was a little girl.
The choppers were not running because of bad weather, so the baby girl spent the night in the field with a company of infantrymen. Our Conscientious Objector medic drew the assignment of taking care of the baby. Someone thought of mixing up the powdered creamer that came in C-Rations, but it did nothing to stop the kid from crying all night.
It was a miserably wet and cold night, but the baby survived and was choppered out the next morning.
This probably qualifies as a "threadjack", so I will add that one seldom hears stories of good by American soldiers. Yes, I did see the best and some of the worst. There simply is not much humane that goes on in a war zone.
While the stories Beauchamp tells sound bogus, I hope that Jeff and the others, in trying to determine the truth, don't happen upon bad sh*t that other soldiers might be willing to tell.
What causes the greatest consternation to me is how Beauchamp's stories - EVEN IF THEY WERE TRUE- could gain enough notoriety to compete with the blatant atrocities committed by our enemy. Where is the outrage about that?
In closing, the little baby, who never knew her mother and father, and probably does not know the circumstances that made her an orphan, would be approaching 38 years of age.
would we have seen a photo of the baby dangling upside down from a belt under a headline like US GIs TORTURE VIET INFANT?
Me, cynical? Naaaah!
and the poor SOB who risked his life to get that baby out that way would have been facing a court martial with the media already having convicted him of war crimes.
In Vino Veritas
This guy's been taking writing lessons from James Frey.
Reminds me of the Tom Clancy quote: “The difference between fiction and reality? Fiction has to make sense.”
The thought of an American soldier wearing a child's skull fragment all day and having his unit laugh and celebrate it is about as believable as American pilots using chemical weapons on POWs. Oh yeah, CNN already tried that.
Consensus doesn't prove anything, in science or anywhere else, except in democracy, maybe. - Reid Bryson, speaking on Global Warming
I do have a few questions for TNR:
The other soldier they contacted... does he go to school at Stanford? Is he the brother of Scott Thomas Beauchamp? Does he have an AOL account and did he create the Jukt Micronics website?
___________________________________
The CIA has better politicians than it has spies - Fred Thompson
the pelt from them that he will nail to his wall?
It's never too early to think of these things, you know.
1. The facts in the article tell a larger truth.
2. The larger truth is still true even though the facts telling it aren't.
3. The Army is covering up its tolerance of miscreants by punishing a miscreant.
"No compromise with the main purpose, no peace till victory, no pact with unrepentant wrong." - Winston Churchill
4. We're still trying to paint the entire military as psychopaths even though we've only found one (and he's writing for us).
___________________________________
The CIA has better politicians than it has spies - Fred Thompson

publisher, a field which recognizes artistic liberties.