This week, itโs the View from Over There, in the words of those whoโve recently lost their jobs via Shock and Awe.
Letโs begin with a letter of resignation to Secretary of State Colin Powell written by Mary Wright, former deputy chief at the U.S. Embassy in Mongolia.
โThis is the only time in my many years serving America that I have felt I cannot represent the policies of an administration of the United States,โ Wright said. โI believe the administrationโs policies are making the world a more dangerous, not a safer, place.โ
Wright was one of three ambassadors whoโve resigned in the past two months. The first to quit was John Brady Kiesling, former political counselor at the U.S. Embassy in Athens: โThe policies we are now asked to advance are incompatible not only with American values but also with American interests. Our fervent pursuit of war with Iraq is driving us to squander the international legitimacy that has been Americaโs most potent weapon.โ
Then came John H. Brown, former cultural attachรฉ at the U.S. Embassy in Moscow: โThe presidentโs disregard for views in other nations, borne out by his neglect of public diplomacy, is giving birth to an anti-American century.โ
You canโt dismiss the above as the blathering nonsense of leftist mules. These are patriotic U.S. leaders who, until a few weeks ago, faithfully served our county abroad.
Not voluntarily resigning last week was Pulitzer-prize winning reporter Peter Arnett.
MSNBC gave Arnett the boot Monday after Arnett gave a short, impromptu interview to Iraqi TV. Arnett awed Iraqis with the news that that the U.S. war plan hadnโt gone as planned and that U.S.-led forces were regrouping. No big surprise, right? Wrong.
This isnโt a first for Arnett. In 1998, as a CNN reporter, Arnett exposed the militaryโs use of nerve gas on American defectors during the Vietnam War. CNN retracted the story without letting Arnett or producers Jack Smith and April Oliver defend their work. Smith and Oliver were fired; Arnettโs contract was not renewed.
Arnettโs testicular fortitude is legendary. Besides sitting through the bombing of Baghdad during Desert Storm, he reported on stuff like the U.S. bombing of an Iraqi factory that produced infant milk formula. The Pentagon was pissedโthough Arnett could produce samples of powdered milk and teams from the international community corroborated the report.
Arnett also got in trouble for interviewing Hussein.
โIt has been suggested that by allowing this leader of an enemy country to actually appear on international television, he was getting a message across that could be detrimental,โ Arnett said during a 1991 lecture at Stanford University. โI mean, the world had decided to dump on him, so why let him have his say?โ
Last week, I quoted Paul Steiger, managing editor of the Wall Street Journal, who spoke at UNR.
โThe role of journalists in our society is to find the truth and communicate it,โ he said. โEven if the truth is relatively unpleasant, itโs still the truth, and people need to know it so they can make better decisions.โ
I was momentarily refreshed by Steigerโs lack of cynicism.
Now Iโm just wondering what kind of jobs are out there for unemployed ambassadors and Pulitzer-winning journalists.
