This is an oldie but a goodie from way back in 2006. It was published in the Buffalo News on Feb 16, 2006 under the headline: "British Troops handled rioting Iraqi youths just right." As the story indicates, the media were during everything they could discredit the war in Iraq, and they presented a privately made video without context as indicative of western brutality in Iraq. The purpose of this story was to put in the context and debunk the theory of cruelty by westerners in Iraq. Nowadays we have ISIS to compare this to.
I don't think I've posted it before, so here it is.
Vincent
J. Curtis 13
February 2006
A
new video making the television news programs appears to show British troops in
Basra savagely
beating on poor, innocent Iraqi youths.
With lips curled in contempt and wearing concerned looks on their faces,
media talking heads worry about the effect the images they show will have on
international perceptions of the Iraq war. To the informed observer, however, the
spectacle the media present shows what little understanding the writers,
editors, and presenters have of the war.
The
video, apparently taken early in 2004 – two years ago, opens with a brief scene
of Iraqi youths stoning British troops.
It then shows British troops dispersing the crowd and beating and kicking
a few people they managed to catch. The
video is accompanied by the commentary of a British soldier describing the
scene like a soccer game.
The
key element is that the British troops were confronted with a crowd that stoned
them. The British army has had lengthy
experience in Northern
Ireland in dealing with riots and with
crowds that attack and provoke British troops.
What the British troops did in the video is exactly what they are
trained to do, and have done already in Iraq . (In his book, Rules of Engagement: A Life in Conflict British Colonel Tim Collins
describes such an event. None of the
media tut-tutters seem to know about it.)
When
confronted with a crowd that tries to stone British troops, there are four
kinds of responses. The first is to
withdraw; the second, remain in place a take the beating; the third, to
disperse the crowd and teach a lesson to the rioters; and fourthly, to shoot
into the crowd.
If
the British troops withdrew while being stoned by Iraqi youths, the British army
would lose all the respect upon which law and order depends in that part of the
country. No one in Iraq will
respect a police or military force that runs away and grants a victory to
rioters, or simply allows itself to be stoned with impunity.
By
dispersing the crowd and beating up a few that they can catch, the British
troops demonstrate that there is a price to be paid for misbehavior and for
trifling with the British army. An
applicable saying is: ‘Don’t Mess with Texas .’
The fourth option, shooting into the crowd,
would amount to an excessive use of force if the rioters were unarmed, as they
apparently were. If some rioters were
armed and posed a lethal threat the troops, then the troops would be entirely
justified to fire into the crowd. The
British troops correctly measured the threat and dealt with it appropriately,
as they had been trained to do.
The
voice-over commentary is what offends the media talking heads the most as they
watch the video in the comfort and safety of their air-conditioned studios. Such, however, is the levity of soldiers who
risk their well-being far away from home for the Queen’s guinea.
The video was made about two years ago, and
the people of Basra ,
who were directly affected, have had more than enough time to learn of the
event and absorb its lessons. We didn’t
hear of the beatings from them. The hand
wringing that is going on in the media now, long after the event transpired, is
nothing but a display of moralistic narcissism.
Yes, war is ugly, brutal, and violent. But it is precisely because war is that way
that it can render a final decision. We
have not heard about Iraqi youths rioting in a long time.
British soldiers are tough, professional,
and well trained. We should be thankful
they are on our side.
-XXX-
Vincent J. Curtis is a free lance writer
who was imbedded with the British Forces in Iraq last year.
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