Election 2010: Media Marching Orders on Afghanistan
How to protect the media's election narrative on, or in spite of, the war in Afghanistan.
"A republic, if you can keep it." Vegas, taxes.
"A republic, if you can keep it." Vegas, taxes.
How to protect the media's election narrative on, or in spite of, the war in Afghanistan.
Counterinsurgency doctrine is the symptom of an idea more primeval and dangerous: violence is the solution.
The government is broken, in Afghanistan and the United States, and if we don't use government the way it's supposed to function, if we continue to play media games with our politics, the death toll will only get worse.
Today's elections have nothing to do with throwing out incumbents and everything to do with affirming the status quo. Not a single candidate who opposes the war in Afghanistan is expected to win. It will take a lot more than partisan primaries to end the war.
McChrystal and Eikenberry's plan for measuring progress is absolutely required if we care at all about the truth in Afghanistan. However, the variable in this plan is not necessarily the ability to produce these assessments, but access to the reliable, accurate information sources which provide the backbone of these assessments.