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Benwa
11-08-2003, 11:42 AM
Interesting article. Seems in the admin's furvor to capitalise off PFC. Lynch ordeal, some facts may have been fudged. This Lynch thing stinks to high heaven, I've heard even she is coming out saying it is being misrepresented. And that stupid show that is made, hows about you all join me in a boycott of it?

http://www.ajc.com/news/content/news/1103/07rapedenied.html

PS. just found this link about her denying the BS story we were fed. (Link: http://www.nytimes.com/2003/11/07/national/07LYNC.html)
It requires password, so heres the cut and paste.



Jessica Lynch Criticizes U.S. Accounts of Her Ordeal
By DAVID D. KIRKPATRICK

Published: November 7, 2003


In her first public statements since her rescue in Iraq, Jessica Lynch criticized the military for exaggerating accounts of her rescue and re-casting her ordeal as a patriotic fable.

Asked by the ABC News anchor Diane Sawyer if the military's portrayal of the rescue bothered her, Ms. Lynch said: "Yeah, it does. It does that they used me as a way to symbolize all this stuff. Yeah, it's wrong," according to a partial transcript of the interview to be broadcast on Tuesday.

After months of retreating from the news media, Ms. Lynch will be a ubiquitous presence next week. In addition to her appearance on ABC, she will be on the cover of Time magazine, and NBC will broadcast a movie based on an Iraqi's account of her ordeal. On Tuesday, the book publisher Knopf will release an account of her experience, "I Am a Soldier, Too," written with her cooperation by a former reporter for The New York Times, Rick Bragg.

The book and the movie are unrelated and tell different versions of Ms. Lynch's story, but the publisher has timed the book to capitalize on publicity from the television movie.

The book has already added another, lurid indignity to the public accounts of her capture. It reports that Ms. Lynch's military doctors found injuries consistent with sexual assault and unlikely to have resulted from the Humvee crash that caused her other wounds, suggesting that she was raped after her capture. Ms. Lynch, who was unconscious immediately after the crash, does not remember any such assault, according to people who have talked to her and read the book. Those details of the book's contents were reported yesterday in The New York Daily News.

In the book and in the interviews, Ms. Lynch says others' accounts of her heroism often left her feeling hurt and ashamed because of what she says was overstatement.

At first, a military spokesman in Iraq told journalists that American soldiers had exchanged fire with Iraqis during the rescue, without adding that resistance was minimal. Then the military released a dramatic, green-tinted, night-vision video of the mission. Soon news organizations were repeating reports, attributed to anonymous American officials, that Ms. Lynch had heroically resisted her capture, emptying her weapon at her attackers.

But subsequent investigations determined that Ms. Lynch was injured by the crash of her vehicle, her weapon jammed before she could fire, the Iraqi doctors treated her kindly, and the hospital was already in friendly hands when her rescuers arrived.

Asked how she felt about the reports of her heroism, Ms. Lynch told Ms. Sawyer, "It hurt in a way that people would make up stories that they had no truth about. Only I would have been able to know that, because the other four people on my vehicle aren't here to tell the story. So I would have been the only one able to say, yeah, I went down shooting. But I didn't."

And asked about reports that the military exaggerated the danger of the rescue mission, Ms. Lynch said, "Yeah, I don't think it happened quite like that," although she added that in that context anybody would have approached the hospital well-armed. She continued: "I don't know why they filmed it, or why they say the things they, you know, all I know was that I was in that hospital hurting. I needed help."

Lt. Col. Rivers Johnson, a spokesman for the Department of Defense, declined to comment on Ms. Lynch's views. But he said, "Essentially, the mission to rescue Jessica Lynch demonstrated America's resolve to account for all of its missing service members." He added that the rescue had been conducted under the appropriate procedures for a fluid situation like the war in Iraq. "You always plan for the worst."

Ms. Lynch also disputed statements by Mohammed Odeh al-Rehaief, the Iraqi lawyer, that he saw her captors slap her.

"From the time I woke up in that hospital, no one beat me, no one slapped me, no one, nothing," Ms. Lynch told Diane Sawyer, adding, "I'm so thankful for those people, because that's why I'm alive today."

Jeff Coplon, who helped Mr. Rehaief write his book, "Because Each Life is Precious," said it was possible that both he and Ms. Lynch were telling the truth in their divergent accounts.

"One of the questions that could arise in the wake of this kind of trauma is that someone could believe they remember everything and their memory could still be incomplete," Mr. Coplon said.

jku
11-08-2003, 07:01 PM
If you guys go back on these threads - we had a HUGE debate when the BBC originally broke the story months ago that the LYNCH story was used to promote this Bush-it War.
The Administration supporters here kept saying that the BBC has a liberal bias and can't be trusted with journalistic integrity, blah, blah, blah....

Well I guess we resolved that one - and straight from the mouth of the principle victim in this ordeal, the other victims being our military, as well as the American people.

Good for you Jessica - thank you for speaking the truth. You're helping to rehabilitate faith in my country. Now just support Dean or Kerry or ANYONE who can defeat Bush and we'll be home free.

Read what Robert Scheer wrote back in May:
http://www.alternet.org/story.html?StoryID=15958

Read the Bush/Pentagon/War Profiteering Propaganda that fought against him...
http://www.google.com/search?q=SCHEER+JESSICA+LYNCH&hl=en&lr=&ie=UTF-8&oe=UTF-8&start=0&sa=N

jku
11-08-2003, 07:34 PM
Especially that ex-Madison Avenue executive who became the Pentagon Spokesperson - Victoria Clarke - she was behind this whole plan to market machine guns and tanks using the good name of a righteous Southern woman.

Check this out - a few weeks after the BBC broke that the whole Jessica Lynch thing was propaganda, Victoria Clarke unceremoniously resigned, no one discussed it:
http://www.dod.gov/releases/2003/nr20030616-0102.html

Clark Bio:
http://www.disinfopedia.org/wiki.phtml?title=Victoria_Clarke

Is the C-word too strong for someone like Victoria Clarke? :confused:

jku
11-09-2003, 03:25 PM
Just one thing about the media - we as a nation are in worse shape if we don't start being more discriminating in the media we use to get our information.

Unfortunately, the average American reads at the fifth grade level - or they would get more information from credible newspapers and magazines vs. TV and comedy monologues. News from television, for the most part, is HIGHLY misleading.

The primary goal of TV is to get you to watch at all costs - whether that be cute little kids, gigantic fires, "scary" minorities commiting crime, or two people yelling at each other.

I think this LYNCH story can hopefully create a new national dialogue about propaganda and corruption in the television media (BTW, in regards to TV news, I think CNN does the best job) - I remember when hosts on TV would yell at Newspaper writers and defame the good name of the BBC (which is an ideal system for a media organization in a TRUE democracy) when this story on the veracity of the Lunch rescue broke? Do you think these people will admit they were wrong after her interview airs on Tuesday? Let's see....

tarawvu
11-10-2003, 11:43 AM
Speaking as a member of the media in West Virginia, I feel sorry for her. At first I was disgusted with all the coverage we gave her story and the lack of attention anyone gave the others from her unit. I'm glad to see she's refuting the heroics of her rescue. She's a quiet, reserved girl, as is her family. I'm impressed with the way they have all handled it.

jku
11-12-2003, 02:58 PM
"Wag The Dog" discussed how a war was staged to get pressure off a Presidential scandal. In that regard, it's an apt analogy.

But in this case, soldiers have died, been captured, familes destroyed, innocent civiians have been slaughtered - it's a total mess.

And if we recall, the Lynch story broke right at the moment when people were starting to ask why we went to War - and what this was about.

http://www.militaryink.com/books/2003/june/0801441145.htm

The greatest trick the Military Industry ever played on the American people was to slowly increase our tolerance for the mass murder that is War after Vietnam; we as a nation made a stand against this horror - but the first taste was when Reagan started with Granada, then Panama. Bush1 got us back in with the first Gulf War.
Through the 90s Clinton cut some of the waste on the military budget (and was persecuted for it), we had smaller scale wars in Bosnia and Somalia - but a mere 28 years later, it's back again - like a KC and the Sunshine Band Reunion. They're selling us this mindless war with the same lies and rhetoric they used to sell Vietnam.