August 07, 2007
Winter Soldier Syndrome
By
Michelle Malkin
The tale of Army Private Scott Thomas Beauchamp, the
discredited "Baghdad Diarist" for the discredited
New Republic magazine, is an old tale:
Self-aggrandizing soldier
recounts war atrocities. Media outlets disseminate
soldier's tales uncritically. Military folks smell a rat
and poke holes in tales too good (or rather, bad) to be
true. Soldier's ideological sponsors blame the
messengers for exposing anti-war fraud.
Beauchamp belongs in the same ward as
John F. Kerry, the original infectious agent of the
toxic American disease known as Winter Soldier Syndrome.
The ward is filling up.
U.S. military investigators concluded this week that
Beauchamp concocted allegations of troop misconduct in a
series of essays for The New Republic. "The
investigation is complete and the allegations from PVT
Beauchamp are false," Major Steven Lamb, a spokesman
for Multi National Division-Baghdad,
told USA Today. The New Republic is standing
by Beauchamp's work. But Michael Goldfarb, online editor
and blogger at The Weekly Standard who first challenged
Beauchamp's writing,
reported Monday that Beauchamp had "signed a
sworn statement admitting that all three articles he
published in The New Republic were exaggerations
and falsehoods—fabrications containing only 'a smidgen
of truth,' in the words of our source."
To illustrate the soul-deadening impact of war,
Beauchamp had described sitting in a mess hall in Iraq
mocking a female civilian contractor whose face had
"melted" after an IED explosion. "I love chicks
that have been intimate—with IEDs," Pvt. Beauchamp
claimed he said out loud in her earshot. "It really
turns me on—melted skin, missing limbs, plastic noses."
Beauchamp recounted vividly: "My friend was
practically falling out of his chair laughing. The
disfigured woman slammed her cup down and ran out of the
chow hall." [Shock
Troops, TNR, July 13, 2007]
It wasn't true. After active-duty troops, veterans,
embedded journalists and bloggers raised pointed
questions about the veracity of the anecdote, Beauchamp
confessed to The New Republic's meticulous
fact-checkers that the mocking had taken place in
Kuwait—before he had set foot in Iraq to experience the
soul-deadening impact of war.
Military officials in Kuwait tried to verify the
incident and called it an
"urban legend or myth." Beauchamp's essays are
filled with similarly spun tales. How much of a
bull-slinger was Beauchamp, an aspiring creative writer
who crowed on his personal blog that he would
"return to America an author" after serving
(which he told friends and family would
"add a legitimacy to EVERYTHING I do afterwards")?
The very first line of his essay "Shock Troops,"
which opened with the melted-face mockery, was this:
"I saw her nearly every time I went to dinner in the
chow hall at my base in Iraq."
"Nearly every time." At "my base in Iraq."
Complete and utter bull.
Defenders of The New Republic, a left-leaning
magazine infamously duped by another young and ambitious
fabulist,
Stephen Glass, say the Beauchamp saga has been 1)
blown out of proportion; 2) perpetuated by sloppy,
rumor-mongering bloggers; 3) used as a distraction from
the troubles in Iraq; and 4) exploited by "chickenhawks"
who deny that war atrocities happen.
But the truth is, you won't find a single Bush
Kool-Aid drinker among the military bloggers, embedded
independent journalists and active-duty troops who
prominently questioned the Beauchamp sham. They know it
ain't all going swimmingly overseas. But unlike Pvt.
Beauchamp, they're committed to telling the whole truth
about the war, not just approximations and
embellishments that will score easy magazine gigs and
future book deals with elite New York City publishers.
The doubters of Scott Thomas know atrocities when they
see them. But, unlike the TNR editors, they know
steaming bull dung when they smell it.
Ever since John Kerry sat in front of the Senate
Foreign Relations Committee and accused American
soldiers of wantonly razing villages
"in fashion reminiscent of Genghis Khan,"
the Left has embraced a small cadre of
self-loathing soldiers and soldier wannabes willing to
sell their deadened souls for the anti-war cause. Think
Jimmy Massey, the
unhinged Marine who falsely accused his unit of
engaging in mass genocide against Iraqis. Think
Jesse MacBeth and
Micah Wright, anti-war Army Rangers who
weren't Army Rangers.
Winter Soldier Syndrome will only be cured when the
costs of slandering the troops outweigh the benefits.
Exposing Scott Thomas Beauchamp and his brethren matters
because the truth matters. The honor of the military
matters. The credibility of the media matters. Think it
doesn't make a difference? Imagine where Sen. John Kerry
would be now if the Internet had been around in 1971.
Michelle Malkin [email
her] is author of
Invasion: How America Still Welcomes Terrorists,
Criminals, and Other Foreign Menaces to Our Shores.
Click
here for Peter Brimelow’s review. Click
here for Michelle Malkin's website.
Michelle Malkin's latest book is "Unhinged:
Exposing Liberals Gone Wild."
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