Hope, resilience observed

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Last updated on August 8th, 2017 at 12:57 pm

Michelle Malkin returns from Iraq:

I came to Iraq a darkening pessimist about the war, due in large part to my doubts about the compatability of Islam and Western-style democracy, but also as a result of the steady, sensational diet of “grim milestone” and “daily IED count” media coverage that aids the insurgency.

I left Iraq with unexpected hope and resolve.

Hit Michelle’s site for further post-Iraq views. Another media returnee also sounds slightly hopeful, despite ongoing violence:

Back in the United States from Baghdad, NBC News correspondent Jane Arraf, who joined NBC last year after eight years with CNN, conceded that life in Iraq “isn’t entirely what it seems” from the constant media focus on bombings. In studio with Brian Williams on Friday’s NBC Nightly News, she acknowledged how journalists are “really good at getting across the relentless bombing and the violence, but it’s really a lot harder for us to portray those spaces in between. I mean, for us, we live in the city. It’s as secure as it can be, but we wake up to the sound of car bombs. We feel the mortars sometimes. And in a horrible, inevitable way, it becomes sort of like the weather, and it’s kind of the same for Iraqis. Unless they’re in the middle of it, life looks amazingly normal” …

Arraf conceded there’s “a piece of good news that’s out there every day that’s really hard for us to get at,” and that’s how “there are children walking to school, there are girls and boys, there are Iraqi girls who are walking to school, and it’s that wonderful sign of resilience that is the fabric, the background of life there.”

Posted by Tim B. on 01/20/2007 at 11:07 AM
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