linkinpark
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The invisible war
Tuesday, May 12, 2009
Every TV news-channel in the country has it as the lead story. Every newspaper has it as the headline. It is discussed ad-nauseum on TV, the radio and in countless blogs on the internet. Yet we know surprisingly little – in fact beyond official daily briefings almost nothing - about the war with the Taliban. The TV channels show stock footage of Cobra helicopters and armour being moved on flatbed trucks and the very-capable army spokesperson gives a daily update in measured tones that tell us next to nothing of substance - and is not backed up by any battlefield reports or even still-pictures of our army in action. Whilst there is not an overt news blackout regarding the fighting in Swat and elsewhere, there is clearly tightly-managed access to and information-flow outwards about, the situation on the ground. There are good reasons why this might be – the Taliban are a sophisticated enemy, well-armed and equipped, capable of using electronic intelligence and skilled at news-management themselves. We do not want to offer them information on a plate in the name of 'press freedom' and at the same time give them an opportunity to make strategic and tactical decisions on the basis of what is in the public domain. It would be foolhardy in the extreme to reveal precisely where our troops are moving from and to and tantamount to issuing some of them with a death sentence – as the Taliban are now deploying sophisticated IED's and mines to complement their already-advanced ambush techniques.
Operational considerations notwithstanding; it may be in the interests of both the military and the politicians who issue their orders to be a little more forthcoming than they currently are.A key factor in winning this war is winning the hearts and minds of the general public. Of convincing the common man that the war now being fought is a just war, is our war and we are fighting it for the greater good. Today, there is guarded support from the common man, but questions are beginning to be asked – where are all these dead Taliban for one? Why is artillery being used to attack the Taliban rather than infantry who can then hold the position they have just taken? What is the physical state of the centre of towns like Mingora and why can't we have a couple of 'embedded' correspondents who can write a pooled dispatch for the English and Urdu press every day? We do not need to compromise our forces nor our military planners, but we do need to persuade an ever-sceptical public a little better than is currently the case.
The invisible war
Tuesday, May 12, 2009
Every TV news-channel in the country has it as the lead story. Every newspaper has it as the headline. It is discussed ad-nauseum on TV, the radio and in countless blogs on the internet. Yet we know surprisingly little – in fact beyond official daily briefings almost nothing - about the war with the Taliban. The TV channels show stock footage of Cobra helicopters and armour being moved on flatbed trucks and the very-capable army spokesperson gives a daily update in measured tones that tell us next to nothing of substance - and is not backed up by any battlefield reports or even still-pictures of our army in action. Whilst there is not an overt news blackout regarding the fighting in Swat and elsewhere, there is clearly tightly-managed access to and information-flow outwards about, the situation on the ground. There are good reasons why this might be – the Taliban are a sophisticated enemy, well-armed and equipped, capable of using electronic intelligence and skilled at news-management themselves. We do not want to offer them information on a plate in the name of 'press freedom' and at the same time give them an opportunity to make strategic and tactical decisions on the basis of what is in the public domain. It would be foolhardy in the extreme to reveal precisely where our troops are moving from and to and tantamount to issuing some of them with a death sentence – as the Taliban are now deploying sophisticated IED's and mines to complement their already-advanced ambush techniques.
Operational considerations notwithstanding; it may be in the interests of both the military and the politicians who issue their orders to be a little more forthcoming than they currently are.A key factor in winning this war is winning the hearts and minds of the general public. Of convincing the common man that the war now being fought is a just war, is our war and we are fighting it for the greater good. Today, there is guarded support from the common man, but questions are beginning to be asked – where are all these dead Taliban for one? Why is artillery being used to attack the Taliban rather than infantry who can then hold the position they have just taken? What is the physical state of the centre of towns like Mingora and why can't we have a couple of 'embedded' correspondents who can write a pooled dispatch for the English and Urdu press every day? We do not need to compromise our forces nor our military planners, but we do need to persuade an ever-sceptical public a little better than is currently the case.
The invisible war