Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

Skip to comments.

Tortuous Apology [Mark Steyn on Abu Graib]
The Jerusalem Post ^ | May 11, 2004 | Mark Steyn

Posted on 05/11/2004 9:18:26 PM PDT by NovemberCharlie

'Just look at the way US army reservist Lynndie England holds the leash of the naked, bearded Iraqi," writes Robert Fisk, famed Middle East correspondent of the London Independent.

"Take a close look at the leather strap, the pain on the prisoner's face. No sadistic movie could outdo the damage of this image. In September 2001, the planes smashed into the buildings; today, Lynndie smashes to pieces our entire morality with just one tug on the leash."

Hmm. Sounds like Fiskie's the one straining at the leash here. You can practically hear him panting. Down, boy.

For a week now, readers have been e-mailing me crowing that I haven't got the guts to confront the truth about Abu Ghraib prison. As one correspondent put it, "I was looking forward to reading about how the moronic lefty press should instead be praising those heroic American soldiers bringing freedom, and saving us from those barbaric Arabs. I thought at least that you'd say that you'd have done the same thing in their position."

Well, no, actually. Making a homoerotic pyramid of fetching young Iraqi men naked with their bottoms in the air is not my idea of a good time, unless it's 48 hours from the Turner Prize deadline at London's Tate Gallery and I'm all out of ideas for this year's installation.

So I didn't write about it last week, because I didn't have anything much to say. I'm revolted by the abuse of prisoners, but evidently not as revolted as Fiskie and Co., so best to let 'em off the leash and go capering round the yard.

And now that they have, let me say this: As a political scandal, it's already over. Historians will disagree about the precise moment it turned into a damp squib. Perhaps it was when Democratic blowhard Joe Biden demanded of Don Rumsfeld: "What did he know and when did he know it?" Or perhaps it was when the Democrats' leader in the Senate, Tom Daschle, launched into a long, whiney complaint about why he and his colleagues hadn't been kept informed by the Pentagon. "Why were we not told in a classified briefing why this happened, and that it happened at all?" he huffed. "That is inexcusable; it's an outrage."

Got that? To Senator Daschle, the outrage isn't the Iraqi buttock mountain or the dog shots, but the fact that the Pentagon had had the appalling lese-majeste not to inform the Senate grandees about it before it turned up on TV. The Democrats have become so formulaic in their Bush-bashing they can't recognize a real scandal when it drops in their lap.

When you've got a bunch of shocking pictures, and darker rumours about rape, murder and corpse mutilation, how dumb do you have to be to start talking about breaches of Senate process (Daschle) and reciting tired old cliches from Watergate (Biden)?

Congratulations to the Senate Dems for making a very particular and graphic scandal sound like all the other dead horses they've been flogging for the last year. On Friday, when they pulled the defense secretary in for the full Senate grilling and demanded to know why he hadn't resigned, Rumsfeld seemed positively affable about entertaining the proposition.

As well he might. According to that day's polls, 69% of Americans want him to stay on as defense secretary. In other words, half the folks planning to vote for John Kerry don't want Rummy to quit.

They understand, even if Ted Kennedy and The New York Times don't, that the ritual sacrifice of one of Bush's key lieutenants is a concession to America's enemies for no good reason.

It's all very well for Robert Fisk to assert breezily that one West Virginia woman walking a naked Muslim man round like a dog "smashes to pieces our entire morality." He's an anti-American reporter for a left-wing British newspaper. But Democratic Senators tread that path at their peril. The recent spate of embittered memoirs by disaffected treasury secretaries, terrorism bureaucrats and foreign service diplomats is one thing: they're anti-Bush, anti-Rummy, anti-Condi.

But, when you start bandying around speculation on widespread systemic torture authorized all the way up the chain, that's not anti-Bush but anti-military. Senate Democrats may be high on Vietnam analogies, but when they start impugning the integrity of the US armed forces, the American people are never going to follow them.

Besides, in the broader sense, what's going on in those pictures is as problematic for Dems as it is for Bush. Fisk thinks it's your basic clash of cultures: "Could neo-conservative Christianity – Lynndie is also a churchgoer – have collided so violently, so revoltingly, so obscenely with Islam?"

"Neo-conservative Christianity"? What the heck is that? I thought all we sinister neocons were Jews.

The reality is that Lynndie's appetites owe less to her churchgoing than to her embarking in Iraq on an affair with her comrade (and accomplice) Spc Charles Graner. (Private England is four months pregnant with Graner's child.) Graner was formerly a Pennsylvania prison guard and has a history of domestic violence. Rather than concocting fictional demographics – West Virginia trailer-park neoconservative Christians – Bush-bashers might at least try to retain some tenuous grip on planet earth.

In contrast to hyperventilating Kennedys, the American people seem to be able to distinguish between the actual, specific abuse, which is wrong and should be punished, and the attempt to burden it with some highly selective generalized significance, which is rightly seen as a lot of baloney.

In that sense, I deeply regret President Bush's apology. I'm often dismissed as a Bush apologist, but I decline to be a Bush apologist for the Bush apology.

If he wanted to apologize, he should have apologized to Ahmed bin Jihad, or whoever the fellow in the dog collar is, and left it at that. But to be coerced into apologizing more generally is very foolish. What happened at Abu Ghraid is terrible because it's an offense to American values, not Arab ones.

It's ridiculous to insist that America has to apologize to Arab thugocracies in which what's merely simulated in those photographs is done for real every day of the week.

As for the allegedly seething Arab street, my advice to it would be to lay off the interviews, or at least not to respond to the pictures by saying things like, "They wanted us to feel as though we were women, the way women feel, and this is the worst insult, to feel like a woman."

When you imply that being an Arab woman is analogous to perpetual degradation, you remind Americans that being "insensitive" to certain cultures is not necessarily a bad thing.


TOPICS: Editorial; Foreign Affairs; News/Current Events; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: abugraib; fisk; iraqipow; marksteyn; marksteynlist; steyn
Steyn on Abu Graib, and the media's reaction to it.
1 posted on 05/11/2004 9:18:27 PM PDT by NovemberCharlie
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | View Replies]

To: *Mark Steyn list; Pokey78
Ping to the Steyn List, and to your list.
2 posted on 05/11/2004 9:19:18 PM PDT by NovemberCharlie
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: NovemberCharlie
Mark Steyn nails it again.
3 posted on 05/11/2004 9:34:30 PM PDT by kesg
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: NovemberCharlie
Frisky Fiskie is surely longing for his own leash and master.

Lynndie might be able to make a few extra bucks on her way back to the US if the authorities will just give her a few hours in London and Fisk's phone number.
4 posted on 05/11/2004 9:41:39 PM PDT by John Valentine ("The difference between stupidity and genius is that genius has its limits." - Albert Einstein)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: kesg
What are the chances of this article ever making it into the American press?
5 posted on 05/11/2004 9:43:40 PM PDT by no dems (Does anyone from the Bush/Cheney camp monitor the Freep website?)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 3 | View Replies]

To: NovemberCharlie
As for the allegedly seething Arab street, my advice to it would be to lay off the interviews, or at least not to respond to the pictures by saying things like, "They wanted us to feel as though we were women, the way women feel, and this is the worst insult, to feel like a woman." When you imply that being an Arab woman is analogous to perpetual degradation, you remind Americans that being "insensitive" to certain cultures is not necessarily a bad thing.

Nice shot. The leash picture spoke volumes, but it didn't say the same thing to everyone. No one - and this is probably the point - no one knows what it said to Arab women.

6 posted on 05/11/2004 9:48:23 PM PDT by Billthedrill
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: no dems
What are the chances of this article ever making it into the American press?

Excellent, I would think.

7 posted on 05/11/2004 10:14:37 PM PDT by kesg
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 5 | View Replies]

To: kesg
In contrast to hyperventilating Kennedys, the American people seem to be able to distinguish between the actual, specific abuse, which is wrong and should be punished, and the attempt to burden it with some highly selective generalized significance, which is rightly seen as a lot of baloney. -Mark Steyn

Not at his sharpest here. I need a more concrete elucidation of what the media is trying to make out of this. Guess I'll have to wait for Ann Coulter.

8 posted on 05/11/2004 10:21:58 PM PDT by NutCrackerBoy
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 7 | View Replies]

To: NutCrackerBoy
Not at his sharpest here. I need a more concrete elucidation of what the media is trying to make out of this. Guess I'll have to wait for Ann Coulter.

What do you think? :)

9 posted on 05/11/2004 10:49:30 PM PDT by kesg
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 8 | View Replies]

To: NovemberCharlie
Styne bump.

Perhaps it was when Democratic blowhard Joe Biden demanded of Don Rumsfeld: "What did he know and when did he know it?"

Poor, poor Biden can't get out of his plagerism mode.

10 posted on 05/12/2004 12:56:58 AM PDT by Ruth A.
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: NovemberCharlie
When you imply that being an Arab woman is analogous to perpetual degradation, you remind Americans that being "insensitive" to certain cultures is not necessarily a bad thing.

I'll see this tomorrow on several femnist websites, right? </sarcasm>

11 posted on 05/12/2004 2:08:02 AM PDT by Watery Tart (Don’t make me come over there….)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: NovemberCharlie
Steyn - The world's best liberal bitch-slapper.
12 posted on 05/12/2004 8:17:17 AM PDT by GungaLaGunga
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: NovemberCharlie
It's all very well for Robert Fisk to assert breezily that one West Virginia woman walking a naked Muslim man round like a dog "smashes to pieces our entire morality." He's an anti-American reporter for a left-wing British newspaper. But Democratic Senators tread that path at their peril...

This is how the whole abuse is played out outside the United States. Non-US newspapers and activists go to a stage call this as a "natural progression" of American attitudes (note: not "conservative" to them). In other words, they claim the whole thing is the legacy right up to the American Founding itself and thinking that ALL Americans are evil and responsible for this (that includes everyone from Noam Chomsky to Pat Buchanan, and certainly Bill Clinton whom many American conservatives assume non-US anti-Americans love him).

Of course the US Democrats can't play that card. The pool of self-loathing left-wingers is extremely shallow in your country, and whoever American said this would have been in the advanced stages of planning to emigrate permanently.

13 posted on 05/13/2004 3:43:27 PM PDT by NZerFromHK
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: NZerFromHK
I should say that I don't like the abuse, and I think those that are found guilty must be punished. BUT it is dumb to say that all this is Bush's fault, and even dumber to blame all this on the whole nation of the United States and everyone associated with it from George Washington right up to Joe Average.
14 posted on 05/13/2004 3:52:28 PM PDT by NZerFromHK
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 13 | View Replies]

Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.

Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

FreeRepublic, LLC, PO BOX 9771, FRESNO, CA 93794
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson