Guest
Contributor
Zell Miller
Zell Miller
is United States Senator from Georgia.
Iwo, CNN-style
The bloody battle for Iwo Jima, if covered by media today...
[Zell Miller] 10/19/04
What if today's reporters had covered the Marines landing on
Iwo Jima, a small island in the far away Pacific Ocean, in the
same way they're covering the war in Iraq? Here's how it might
have looked:
DAY 1
With the aid of satellite technology, Cutie Cudley interviews
Marine Pfc. John Doe, who earlier came ashore with 30,000 other
Marines.
Cutie: "John,
we have been told by the administration that this island has
great strategic importance because if you're
successful, it could become a fueling stop for our bombers on
the way to Japan. But, as you know, we can't be sure this is
the truth. What do you think?"
Pfc. Doe: "Well,
I've been pinned down by enemy fire almost ever since I got
here and have had a couple of buddies killed
right beside me. I'm a Marine and I go where they send me. One
thing's for sure, they are putting up a fight not to give up
this island."
Cutie: "Our
military analysts tell us that the Japanese are holed up in
caves and
miles of connecting tunnels they've
built over the years. How will you ever get them out?"
Pfc. Doe: "With
flame throwers, ma'am."
Cutie (incredulously): "Flame
throwers? You'll burn them alive?"
Pfc. Doe: "Yes
ma'am, we'll fry their asses. Excuse me, I shouldn't have said
that on TV."
Cutie (audible
gasp): "How
horrible!"
Pfc. Doe
(obviously wanting to move on): "We're at war
ma'am."
(A Marine
sergeant watching nearby yells, "Ask her what
does she want us to do — sing to them, 'Come out, come
out, wherever you are. Pretty please.' "
Cutie: "Pfc.
Doe, what's that mountain in the background? Is that the one
they say is impregnable?"
Pfc. Doe: "I
don't know what that word means, ma'am, but that's Mt. Suribachi,
and we're going to put a flag right up
on top of it just as soon as we can. I gotta go."
Cutie to
camera: "No one has yet really confirmed why this
particular battle in this particular place is even being waged.
Already, on the first day, at least 500 Marines have been killed
and a thousand wounded. For this? (Camera pans to a map with
a speck of an island in the Pacific. Then a close up of nothing
but black volcanic ash). For this? For this?" (Cutie's sweet
voice becomes more strident as it fades out.)
DAY 2
At 7 a.m., Cutie's morning show opens with a shot of hundreds
of dead bodies bobbing in the water's edge. Others are piled
on top of each other on shore. After a few seconds, one can see
Marines digging graves to bury the dead.
Cutie: "There
is no way the Marines could have expected this. Someone got
it all wrong. No one predicted this. This has
been a horrible 24 hours for our country. This is a slaughterhouse.
After all this fighting, Marines control only about a mile and
a half of beach and the casualties are now over 3,500 and rising
rapidly. We'd like to know what you think. Call the number on
the bottom of the screen. Give us your opinions on these three
questions:
1. Were the Marines properly trained?
2. Is this nothing of an island worth all these lives?
3. Has the president once again misled the American people?
"After
the break, we'll ask our own Democratic and Republican analysts,
both
shouting at the same time, of course, what they
have to yell about all this. It should make for a very shrill,
provocative morning.
"But before we leave this horrible — some will say
needless — scene, let us give you one more look at this
Godforsaken place where these young Americans are dying. Volcanic
ash, cold, wet miserable Marines just thankful to be alive. And
still no flag that we had been promised on that mountain. Things
have gone from bad to worse in this obviously misguided military
operation. One thing is certain, there should be and there will
be a high-partisan — make that bi-partisan — congressional
inquiry into this."
DAY 3
Cutie: "Marines
continue to be locked in a life-or-death struggle over this
worthless piece of real estate in the middle
of the Pacific. The word 'quagmire' is being used in the U.S.
Senate, a body very familiar with quagmires. Senator Blowhard
has called it 'a colossal military blunder.' And Senator Bombast
maintains it was a fraudulent scheme hatched while the president
was on his sixth vacation at the Little White House in Georgia.
"The
recently organized Senate Squeakers Group may ask for the president
to resign. They maintain that politics should
not stop at the waters edge in times of war, calling that tradition
an old-fashioned idea that has no place in the new century of
dysfunctional government. Over forty special interest groups
concurred and all issued identical news releases."
"We
now turn to our political analyst, James Crankville."
(James):"Cutie,the
overnight poll numbers have hit this president right between
the eyes. Nationwide, an overwhelming
98 percent said that if possible, they would like to see this
country fight a war without a single American casualty. That
is nearly the same percentage we saw three days ago when the
American public said they would be in favor of going to war if
we could win without firing a shot. So, you can see there is
a trend developing here that spells trouble for this administration."
"That
this president is going ahead with this war is just unbelievable.
The witty
New York Times columnist, Myscream Loud,
wrote in her inimitable fashion that 'The president's policy
is as crippled as his legs.' (giggle) Last week she said he had
reached the point where no one will 'Fala' him. F-A-L-A, his
dog, get it (more giggles)? Has that woman got a way with words!
Go girl."
DAY 4
Cutie (holds
up front page of the New York Times): "This
morning, the New York Times had this photo on the front page.
As you can see, the Marines have finally raised a flag on Mt.
Suribachi on Iwo Jima. The fighting is still going on but it
looks like this battle is over. We tried to find Pfc. Doe, the
young Marine I interviewed that terrible first day, but he was
unavailable. Here is Corporal Smith though. (With girlish enthusiasm). "Well,
we see that flag flying. It's pretty much over isn't it?"
Cpl. Smith: "Oh,
no ma'am, it's not over by any means. We've got weeks of fighting
and dying to go yet. This place is
a long ways from being secured. But we did get that flag up there
and it sure makes us all proud."
Cutie: "I
can't tell much from the photo. Their faces are not even visible,
making it impossible for us to descend upon
any of their families. Corporal Smith, do you know any of the
flag raisers? And do you know who ordered it put up there? Did
the order come directly from the president for political reasons?"
Cpl. Smith: "All
I know is that I heard some colonel put the word out that he
wanted 'a flag put up there where every
son of a bitch on this island could see it.' Excuse me, ma'am."
Cutie: "We
know you've been in the heat of battle so,..."
Cpl. Smith: "Still
am, ma'am."
Cutie: "Yes,
of course, but it's all over. (Nervous giggle). Except here
on Capitol Hill, of course. Corporal Smith, I wonder
if you know the gender, race and ethnicity of the group that
put the flag up. In other words, did that group 'look like America?' "
Corporal
Smith: "Look
like America? They are Americans, ma'am. United States Marines."
Cutie: "Any
females?"
Cpl. Smith: "No,
ma'am."
Cutie: "Any
African Americans?"
Cpl. Smith: "I
don't know, ma'am. But there is an Indian in Easy Company."
Cutie: "You
mean Native American?"
Cpl. Smith: "Whatever,
ma'am, I've got to cut out. My outfit is moving on and we've
got a lot to do."
Cutie: "And
we've got a lot to do here too. Spring training has started
and the
sun is shining brightly in Florida. But first
this word from our sponsors."
Historical
note: In one of the bloodiest battles of World War II, when
it was said "uncommon courage was a common virtue," 6,000
Marines were killed and 18,000 wounded. Some 21,000 Japanese
were killed. The island itself is still barren and only a handful
of people live on it. But after it was secured by the Marines,
B-29s made over 2,200 emergency landings on it, saving the lives
of more than 24,000 crewmen. AP photographer Joe Rosenthal won
a Pulitzer Prize for the flag-raising photo. Of the six men in
the photo, three were buried in that black volcanic ash, one
came out on a stretcher. Only two walked off the island. CRO
Zell Miller is a Democratic U.S. senator from Georgia. This
piece first appeard in the Washington
Times.
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