Posted on 03/24/2008 10:50:57 AM PDT by MaestroLC
If you dont want to read this entire review, or watch all four and a half hours of Frontlines big fifth anniversary Iraq extravaganza, Bushs War, heres the short version:
Bush lied, people died.
Its hard to know where to start with everything that is wrong with this two-part series, airing at 9 p.m. March 24 and 25 on PBS. So Ill start with whats right with it.
As television goes, it is a relatively comprehensive review of the major decisions and controversies of the Iraq war, with a little 9/11, Afghanistan precede. It makes some, though not many, attempts to be fair and thorough in presenting the perspectives of both sides. When you watch it, you might learn a few things. Youll remember a lot. It wont change your mind about anything.
Weve got that out of the way.
On to whats wrong. Im not sure in the space I can reasonably fill here, short of exceeding Frontlines own 4:30-hour limit, that Ill be able to enumerate them all. Its daunting.
Lets start with the title. This documentary is not actually about George Bush, or his war. It is about his Cabinets infighting. In fact, they probably should have called it The Cabinets Infighting, though that might not be a big viewer draw. Maybe The Cabinet Infighting of Bushs War. Too clunky. How about: Cheney-Rumsfeld Lied, People Died. Thats catchier, and would not only get the viewers but lots of press.
Because this entire documentary, from beginning to end, is not even a Bush-bash, its all Cheney-Rumsfeld bash. Bush, in the documentary named after him, gets some cameos, a walk-on here and there. He does have some speaking parts, hes not entirely a spearholder. But Frontline makes it clear in what disregard they hold the president of the United States. He is a chump who gets pushed around and manipulated by Vice President Dick Cheney and Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld, despite the best, but tragically flawed efforts of Secretary of State Colin Powell and CIA Director George Tenet. While the influence of those parties cannot be denied by any fair observer, it is not until he finally decides to get rid of Rumsfeld that the president of the United States presented as having much in the way of independent thought at all.
The Frontline documentarians, of course, avoid expressing any opinions. They rely on the liberal use pun intended of a series of scribblers from the New York Times, the Washington Post and other publications to do that for them. In fact, when Frontline cant find actual participants to do so, Frontline relies on ink-stained wretches to ascribe motives to people and in one astonishing case, to fantasize what a particular meeting must have been like, along with presenting as fact the conjecture that results from the newsmans usual second-, third- or fourth-in-line position in the game of information telegraph.
Of the actual participants in events, there is a heavy reliance on well-known Rumsfeld-Cheney adversaries such Richard Clarke, Richard Armitage, with no mention of the fact that they, and virtually everyone in this depiction of recent history, have axes to grind and their own sullied legacies to patch up. Few people actually close or aligned with Rumsfeld or Cheney appear to have been interviewed. Possibly because they knew how this was going to end up.
Frontline very much carries the water of the State Department and the Central Intelligence Agency, the advocates of which apparently couldnt be prevailed on to shut up, hence all the airtime. Though Tenet ultimately is thrown under the bus by Frontline as much as it describes Bush having done so, the CIAs view of both Afghanistan and Iraq gets a friendly airing. One of the more remarkable, unchallenged and unelaborated gripes is that after Sept. 11, 2001, the eager, action-ready CIA was forced to twiddle its thumbs in Afghanistan for almost an entire month before the U.S. military finally showed up on Oct. 7. This is stated without apparent irony, even though weve been informed that George Bush intended a sober, measured approach. There is no discussion of the fact that 26 days might in fact be lightning speed when it comes to planning and moving forces into place for the takedown of a foreign regime on its own turf.
Frontline takes a diversion into Guantanamo, where you will learn that the Cheney-Rumsfeld junta threw out the Geneva Conventions and authorized military tribunals, the turning on of lights, removal of religious materials, and other atrocities. I must have missed the part where they discussed the fact that the hated Crusader Gulag at Guantanamo does not actually violate the Geneva Conventions and that the people held there are unlawful combatants. Horror is expressed at what Gitmo might inspire our adversaries to do to our own soldiers. I must have missed the part where Frontline discusses what al Qaeda, Saddam Hussein, the Iranian regime and others actually have done to the civilians and soldiers they have seized. The videotaped pleas for mercy, the forced confessions, the use of hostages to blackmail governments, the beatings, the beheadings, the bodies dumped by the road, etc.
Were now done with Afghanistan, which apparently is not part of Bushs war except to the extent it enabled the Cheney-Rumsfeld regimes Iraq agenda.
Frontline moves on to offer some detail on the stock versions of the pre-war intelligence failures and supposed distortions. It is largely an unquestioning review of conventional wisdom, and youll learn nothing here. The belief that Saddam Hussein had weapons of mass destruction is presented largely as a fact pushed by Cheney rather than as something believed by every major intelligence agency in the world, including those of nations that vehemently opposed this war. French Foreign Minister Dominique de Villepin is once again allowed to oppose the war on humanitarian grounds with no mention of Frances keen interest in doing business with Saddam. The 16 words controversy is presented by none other than Joe Wilson, with no mention of the view that yellowcake deal or no yellowcake deal Saddam Hussein in fact had been in the market for uranium in Africa. You can also remain innocent of the fact that Joe Wilson is himself a controversial figure whose qualifications for his task are highly questionable and were in fact a bizarre case of nepotism.
To Frontlines credit, however, the utter failure of the CIA to have a clue what was going on in Iraq, to the point of lacking an intelligence estimate on Iraqs WMD, is noted.
This is probably a good place to mention one of the (other) fundamental shortcomings of this documentary. It takes place in a fishbowl. A Washington D.C. fishbowl, in which history largely doesnt exist. The Sept. 11 attacks are presented only as a horrific event that prompted Cheney and Rumsfeld to start rabidly pushing for the invasion of Iraq. The history of Saddam Hussein, and the many reasons why his removal made sense and still makes sense get lip service at best. The fact that the UN sanctions regime was on the verge of collapse, the danger that posed, and what was subsequently learned about Saddams plans to resume his weapons programs in that event get no airing. The questions that remain about what Saddam might have done with the dormant elements of his WMD programs and whether they were shipped to Syria, not mentioned. The positive geopolitical ramifications of the removal of Saddam Hussein Libyas capitulation and last summers revelation that Iran stopped its nuclear weapons program after the invasion of Iraq, if only briefly not part of the scope of this project. Presumably the recently released Pentagon study that found extensive contacts between Saddam Husseins intelligence agents and al Qaeda came out after this Frontline series was put to bed. But there is no reason to think Frontline, like most of the American media, wouldnt just have reported the no direct operational links part.
All of that history is in the rearview mirror and academic at this point except perhaps the Iran part. All of that is arguably irrelevant to our nations current concerns except perhaps the Iran part. And thats why Frontlines most egregious omission is in the second part of its series, on the conduct of the war.
There is little to argue with Frontlines presentation of the post-invasion period at first. Rumsfeld horribly and aggressively bollixed Iraq, from going in too light, to refusing to consider and prepare for the aftermath of the invasion, to refusing to recognize the problems as they mounted over a period of three years. The insider view of the top may provide you some new insight here. The daily bomb roundup and intensive atrocity fixation that has marked the American medias generally abysmal coverage of this war has tended to avoid any serious examination of larger trends and generalship, or distort it through a lens of Bush-induced disaster. Frontline does give in to some of that shocking headline-oriented coverage in the war period, lingering wistfully on Abu Ghraib. The bomb reportage focuses on significant trends, watershed events and their effects in a more meaningful way, but suffers from a repetition of footage that hardly seems necessary.
More significantly, Frontline offers a concise review of the leadership struggles, culminating with the ouster of Donald Rumsfeld. Here Frontline misses a great ironic snark opportunity, though it is not hard to see why. In portraying Rumsfelds last year or so as an effort to just get the troops out of Iraq, marked by the light footprint pullback to bases, heavily armored patrols and an effort to build up Iraqi forces, Frontline fails to observe how closely that approach resembles the abandonment-at-all-costs desires of the Democratic-led Congress that came in screaming for Rumsfelds head.
Removal of said head is a triumphant moment for Frontline, but sadly, it is also the end of the program. In what is Frontlines greatest omission and failure, the counter-insurgency strategy is, charitably, only marginally part of this presentation. The development of the surge strategy gets short shrift. To the extent it is discussed at all, it is presented as something Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and State Department Counselor Philip Zelikow dreamed up, based on Col. H.R. McMasters experience in Tal Afar, apparently highlighted to further stress what a bonehead Rumsfeld is. The more complex gestation of that strategy is not even alluded to. Its implementation is presented as something only intended to prevent Bush from exiting office with a defeat. The entire year of 2007 is relegated to a single narrated paragraph at the end.
Let me repeat that. The entire year of 2007 is relegated to a single, intoned paragraph, which basically suggests disaster is imminent. Here, read it yourself. Its only a few lines:
NARRATOR:
Violence is down in Iraq. They are cautiously calling clear, hold and build a success. But at a cost. The troops and reserves are stretched dangerously thin. The military worries how long the surge can be sustained. In his last State of the Union address, George W. Bush made a final plea to history
PRESIDENT BUSH:
The mission in Iraq has been difficult and trying for our nation. But it is in the vital interest of the United States that we succeed. We must do the difficult work today so that years form now, people will look back and say that this generation rose to the moment, prevailed in a tough fght, and left behind a more hopeful region and a safer America.
NARRATOR:
Soon Bushs war will be handed to someone new.
Well, Frontline calls it a plea. Given the great political pressure out there to abandon Iraq to a wretched fate that would likely dwarf anything weve seen to date, while ceding domination of that troubled region to the terrorism-supporting Islamic radicals of Iran, Id describe it more as an admonishment for the United States to remain engaged in the world, to recognize its obligations and see to its own interests. But thats a minor issue.
While Frontline had thrown away significant air time marveling at the notion that so little could be known about an American wartime commander, Gen. George Casey, Frontline didnt manage to find any time at all to mention the name of the most significant Iraq commander of all, Gen. David Petraeus.
Of course set to be broadcast during a national election year. Probably will re run during the week before the Nov. election
Any learned projections on the potential costs of NOT taking the war to the terrorists’ home court?
Didn’t think so.
Bush's War: PBS/FRONTLINE. Note that the poster FilmCutter claims to be "the editor on the project" and projects himself as "your humble conservative editor.".
I'm going to post a link there to this thread...
This certainly does not agree with filmcutter’s take. When in doubt, go against the PBS employee.
That's what I took from this. And that's why I wanted to link the two threads.
And why I pinged filmcutter.
I was the editor (the cutter of pictures and sound) and proud to be a part of this program.
Here are some other reviews:
Salon.com TV Daily
http://www.salon.com/ent/tv/daily/2008/03/24/monday/index.html
“Frontline’s two-part series on the most deeply stupid, tedious war in the history of the world.”
Daily Kos (ranked #13)
(this was initially a diary entry, but it appeared on the homepage in a “Diary Rescue” post)
http://www.dailykos.com/storyonly/2008/3/22/224011/588
http://www.dailykos.com/storyonly/2008/3/22/85419/9463
Media Matters, Eric Boehlert (#49)
http://mediamatters.org/columns/200803180001
“Bush Bash’s PBS (again) and the New York Times Helps”
What a strange coincidence that the Bush administration recently submitted the largest funding cut ever proposed for public broadcasting, and next week, PBS’ distinguished Frontline series will mark the fifth anniversary of the Iraq invasion by airing Bush’s War, which PBS describes as television’s definitive documentary analysis of the war.
Gothamist (rank #141)
http://gothamist.com/2008/03/23/after_spending.php
“Noteworthy Television This Week: A Look Back at the War”
Also includes a nice plug for the web site: “And no worries if you miss it, since they will have the video on the show’s website along with oodles of extras.”
Pajamas Media (rank #202)
http://pajamasmedia.com/2008/03/bushs_war.php
via Jules Crittenden “Forward Movement”
“FRONTLINE ‘Bush’s War’: Not About Bush or His War”
Watching TV Online, Textuality (rank #2540)
http://www.textually.org/tv/archives/2008/03/019434.htm
Jules Crittenden (rank #6679)
http://www.julescrittenden.com/2008/03/24/bushs-war/
“Cheney-Rumsfeld Junta lied, people died. Surge? What surge?”
Cyberjournalist.net (rank #7875)
http://www.cyberjournalist.net/frontlines-bushs-war-promises-innovative-online-experience/
“FRONTLINE ‘Bush’s War’ promises innovative online experience”
I hope you all watch !
Yes, but if you will check Film Cutter's posting history as I did, you will find that they only post when one of their films comes out and therefore they are not a true Freeper by any means. Given those facts, I personally think that other thread should be treated as an advertisement by a troll and he/she should banished.
Another opinion:
http://www.wnbc.com/politics/15690826/detail.html?rss=ny&psp=nationalnews
“Richly told, “Bush’s War” is a political thriller, all the more so for unfolding in the no-nonsense “Frontline” fashion, with the series’ signature narrator (Will Lyman) lending his somber off-screen presence.
“Bush’s War” gives us heightened understanding of a situation whose anniversary we will almost certainly be marking again and again. Meanwhile, the film is a pointed reminder of what “Frontline” delivers every week: an in-depth, no-glitz examination of something significant and without commercial interruptions or pre-break teasers (”Coming up next...!”).”
Hmmm....
I figured someone would look into it. I just didn't have the time (or inclination, it being PBS).
ok, ok, I fold.
I just offer the program to share with you all instead of the usual set of liberal viewers the shows I cut get.
no doubt my last time.
watch or not, I will however continue to keep FR at the top of my morning read so I’m sure I’ll see all your posts again.
PBS = Publically-funded Bullsh!t System
Of course we only want to allow "true" Freepers to post. Obviously, only "true" Freeper have anything worthwhile to say and we can safely ignore all others.
Hey! All you Trolls out there who aren't true Freepers! Get off our board!
I just offer the program to share with you all instead of the usual set of liberal viewers the shows I cut get.
Are you saying here you usually share your output with liberals, but occasionally throw conservatives a 'bone'? At least that's the way your remark reads to me...
But, I doubt you'll find many on this forum who are happy with PBS, for a number of good reasons. However, do continue to read FreeRepublic. It's enlightening and educational.
The words ‘PBS’ and ‘Frontline’ are enough to cause me to avoid this waste of air time. If they told the truth, how would we know?
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