Gen. Petraeus vs. the British Press

General David Petraeus refutes multiple claims of failures in Iraq reported by the Guardian, in an email written exclusively to Pajamas Media.

March 25, 2008 - by Bob Owens

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Multi-National Force-Iraq commanding General David Petraeus has little use for recent claims in the British press that the Surge is on the verge of collapse in parts of Iraq. In an e-mail to Pajamas Media, Petraeus wrote that the story, as reported in the Guardian were “based on dated info.”

In addition, he said that reports that the Iraqi government is refusing to employ Sunnis are incorrect.”The National Reconciliation Committee just approved a list of over 3,500 names of Diyala Sons of Iraq for the Iraqi Police,” wrote General Petraeus in his email, a sign that more jobs integrating the Sunnis within the government’s security forces were forthcoming.

Petraeus also responded to a GuardianFilms video report for Britain’s Channel 4 on March 20 charged that Sunni militias in Iraq were not being paid by U.S. forces and were on the verge of staging a national strike because they were not getting jobs within the Iraq government.

A Guardian print article also made that claim followed on March 21.Petraeus said in his correspondence that a threatened strike in Diyala was “resolved a week or two ago” when Sunni militiamen called “Sons of Iraq” (SoI) were told that if they didn’t work, they wouldn’t get paid.

Anti-war activists in the United States had been quick to cite the original Guardian video story, with Logan Murphy of Crook and Liars using the story as an reason to declare, “Our occupation of Iraq and the fragile surge has been all but blacked out in the U.S. media, but thankfully, the foreign press is still out there trying to bring the truth to the rest of the world.”

In his blog at The Atlantic, Andrew Sullivan sniffed in reaction to the Guardian print story that the report constitutes “Some troubling news from Iraq. It appears our bribes aren’t being paid on time.”It appears that Sullivan has difficulty distinguishing between bribes and wages, as the monies owed to the SoI are for security services, typically patrols and the guarding of checkpoints within communities to prevent al Qaeda infiltration.

Col .Steven Boylan, Public Affairs Officer for General Petraeus, told Pajamas Media that “the issues up in Diyala were fixed and [they] have been back to work for a while.” Boylan noted that “We have a release on that in fact on the web site [located here — ed.] and it also was put out to the media, and discussed in our press conference.” Col. Bill Buckner, MNC-I PAO at Al-Faw Palace, Camp Victory stated: “We have looked into the allegation of the recent Guardian story, and find that there are currently no significant reports of pay problems with Sons of Iraq groups in Iraq. Past reports of pay problems were resolved on a case by case basis. Additionally, we have not received any reports of an impending national strike. There was a strike in Baqubah from February 8th through March 8th, but that has been resolved, and the Sons of Iraq are now working again. I think the Guardian may be reporting old news.”

In addition to falsely reporting the death of the Surge, several factual details of the Guardian report were also apparently incorrect.The Guardian claimed 80,000 SoI participants, 16,000 less than actual figure of 96,000 provided by Multi-National Corps-Iraq. The newspaper also claimed that Sunnis have only been provided “only a handful” of jobs by the government of Iraq: 12,000 Sunni militiamen have already been transitioned to security or non-security positions within the Iraqi government.

The Guardian has been challenged over previous stories relating to the Sons of Iraq, including a November 2007 story in which the reporter compared a Sunni militia commander unfavorably to a mafia don. Repeatedly, the Guardian has portrayed Sunni militiamen in Iraq as one-dimensional caricatures, thuggish mobsters in Baghdad’s city streets, or rank mercenary rubes who would sacrifice security in their communities for dollars.

Neither characterization is accurate. Sunni tribesmen did not join the Sahwa councils for profit: they did so to protect their communities against the barbarism and raw brutality of al Qaeda against Sunni civilians. The rejection of al Qaeda’s torture and terrorism would continue whether or not Americans were paying Sunni militias to man checkpoints.

This mundane reality may not provide the drama and sensationalist copy: which is perhaps the reason that the Guardian isn’t particularly interested in reporting it accurately.

Bob Owens blogs at Confederate Yankee

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15 Comments

DD:

The Guardian used to be a good paper. But it has so degenerated in its reporting that it should be classified as Fiction. It has a long string of false reporting on Israel and the Palestinians. It has never apologized for its blatantly false reporting of the ‘Jenin Massacre’. The saddest part is that many people still rely on it for news.

Mar 25, 2008 - 6:43 am Susan Katz Keating:

If I missed this on the site, my apologies - but I’d love to see the text of the email from Petraeus. Many thanks for this insightful write-up.

Mar 25, 2008 - 7:30 am Rob:

The Guardian? Isn’t this the newspaper that used to employ KGB agents as reporters and incessantly told us all that the Soviet Union was the wave of the future?

Fool me once…

Mar 25, 2008 - 8:23 am William Teach:

I always enjoy an Excitable Andy quote. Shows how much he has drunk the liberal kool aid.

Mar 25, 2008 - 8:45 am Marcos:

Well, it looks like the Guardian has volunteered to be our vehicle of disinformation. I hope Mookie enjoys the suprises in store for him.

Mar 25, 2008 - 1:02 pm Mike:

The left-wing media are clutching at straws in their desperation to report bad news from Iraq. Once it became apparent that the surge was working we had Beauchamp and Blackwater, then waterboarding and now this. Not to say that some of these stories haven’t raised legitimate issues, but they’ve been blown out of all proportion as the media in the US and UK tries to rally increasingly irrelevant opponents of the war. Every time I see one of these stories, I’m reassured that the situation in Iraq must be continuing to improve.

Nice work Bob.

Mar 25, 2008 - 2:21 pm mariana:

Poor Brit Cousins:

They’re getting cabin fever from hiding out at the airport in Basra while Iraqi and American Forces fight insurgents.

Now that our Brit “Beard” is no longer needed, we probably ought to pull the pin and send them home. WE must be PAYING for THEM too, somehow, and I don’t see that they’ve accomplished anything for us for the past couple of years.

It’s really sad, but America is alone and always will be. The “others”, even allies, just don’t get us. We’re too “uppity” for them and are not bound by the limitations and overt socialism that have bound them to their wheel of subservience to their State. They convince themselves, Old World style, that things “can’t be done..” and that’s it. When Americans are told something “can’t be done”, we say:
“Oh yeah, sez who?!” and then go out and do it. mariana

Mar 26, 2008 - 11:57 am mariana:

What is the difference btw “submit” and “Post”? ma

Mar 26, 2008 - 12:38 pm John Blake:

A contemporary of Samuel Johnson’s once expressed himself to a hack scrivener: “Sir, I sit in the smallest room of my house with your review before me. In a moment, it will be behind me.”

As Howell Raines said to General Custer, “Where did all those Sitting Bulls come from?”

Mar 26, 2008 - 4:44 pm mariana:

Your quote from Dr. Samuel Johnson is delicious. Thank you. He’s not often taught in American schools, either. mariana

Mar 27, 2008 - 2:13 pm mariana:

Also To John Blake…

Oh.. I misread your post… yee gads! Which contemporary of Dr. Samuel Johnson’s were you quoting? mariana

Mar 27, 2008 - 2:15 pm

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