ANOTHER REPORT FROM IRAQ sounding a common theme:
Both men said they are glad to be home visiting their families – and feel honored and grateful for all the support they received from the community while they were in the Middle East. Both of them also said things are going well for the U.S. troops in Iraq.
“Ninety-nine percent of what is going on over there is a good story,” said Callanan.
“There were a lot of reporters over there who overlooked the good stories, which may have been the only frustrating part of being there,” he said. “From media reports, it may not seem as though things are going well there but they are. There are a lot of changes taking place which will eventually pay big dividends.”
Cheung agreed that the media reports he read while in Iraq seemed so much different from what he was seeing for himself. One of the things he read that goaded him the most was that the Iraqis did not want the troops over there.
“I talked to so many Iraqis – adults and children – and they thanked me, invited me to their house, asked if they can cook a meal for me and offered me everything they have,” he said. “Because we were there, they have the freedom we enjoy in this country every day. They waved to us and a lot of times they worked with us.”
The discrepancy between what the media reports say, and what reports like this say, is starting to look like a scandal.
UPDATE: Chief Wiggles is unhappy with media bias too. And a reader notes that it’s funny how once the embedded reporters left, and we once again got our news through the usual media filters, the reports turned negative.