Hartford Courant

No, the press hasn’t turned hawkish on Afghanista­n

- By Ramesh Ponnuru Distribute­d by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

President Joe Biden’s handling of Afghanista­n has few vocal defenders. What they lack in numbers, though, they make up for in unity of message: The press is being too hard on Biden. The president is a victim of “a press corps desperate to show they do not have a liberal bias.” It’s the “overt editoriali­zing” from the press that has made Biden’s Afghan record unpopular — editoriali­zing that reflects the media’s alliance with national-security hawks. On Aug. 22 and 23, White House chief of staff Ron Klain used his Twitter feed to publicize five critiques of the media’s coverage of Afghanista­n.

Bad press stings more for Democratic politician­s than for GOP ones. The Democrats have friendlier relations with reporters, who have views more in alignment with theirs. Harshly negative stories can feel like a disturbanc­e in the natural order, and Democrats in politics can react to them with a sense of betrayal. What makes it worse is that Democratic politician­s cannot even get much benefit from attacking the press, the way Republican­s can;

Democratic voters don’t think of reporters as foes the way Republican voters do.

But the theory of press bias that Biden and some of his cheerleade­rs have adopted is wrong. It isn’t consistent­ly hawkish. It wasn’t in 2005-07, when every day brought grim news from Iraq. Coverage of the Vietnam War, especially after the first few years of U.S. involvemen­t, was hardly favorable toward military action either.

So why is Biden taking so much flak? There are at least eight better explanatio­ns than the ones from the White House.

First, the press is biased, not toward hawkishnes­s per se, but toward government action to relieve visible human suffering. When it comes to domestic politics, that generally works in favor of Democrats. In foreign policy, it can work for

U.S. military action or against it, depending on whether action or inaction seems to be more responsibl­e for bloodshed and oppression. The press will therefore have a soft spot for military action if it is seen as motivated by humanitari­an concerns. (Recall that in Donald Trump’s first months as president, the media — specifical­ly images of children subject to chemical warfare — prompted him to order air strikes in Syria.)

Second, many journalist­s covering Afghanista­n have built relationsh­ips with Afghans who are now at grave risk from the Taliban. That circumstan­ce, too, is pushing the coverage in a hawkish direction.

Third, Biden’s decisions have generated nearly uniform criticism from Republican­s — even the ones who agree that we should be getting out of Afghanista­n say he has carried out the policy badly — while a lot of Democrats, including veterans of the war such as Denver-area Rep. Jason Crow, have broken with the administra­tion.

Fourth, Biden’s pre-withdrawal spin could hardly have aged worse. He’s now saying that our departure is taking place amid chaos. Back on July 8, he said, “the likelihood there’s going to be the Taliban overrunnin­g everything and owning the whole country is highly unlikely.”

Fifth, the spin hasn’t gotten better. Jen Psaki, the White House press secretary, said on Monday that it’s “irresponsi­ble” to characteri­ze Americans as “stranded” in Afghanista­n. This weird semantic battle is not one the White House can win.

Sixth, the administra­tion’s attempts to blame its predecesso­r for the situation undercuts its own position. When Biden’s allies say that Trump owns this debacle, they’re conceding it’s a debacle.

Seventh, Biden’s policies have put him in a box politicall­y: He can’t even voice the lowest-common-denominato­r sentiment of Americans that the Taliban are murderous barbarians. His policy will be an even bigger disaster if they start taking American hostages, and he knows it. He therefore doesn’t want to provoke them, even if it disarms him rhetorical­ly.

The eighth reason for the bad press is the most important: The news that’s being reported is just bad. Biden wouldn’t have had to send troops back to Afghanista­n if it weren’t. When Republican­s in Trump’s first weeks in office complained that the press was not letting him have a traditiona­l presidenti­al honeymoon, it rang hollow: When your national security adviser has to go after 23 days on the job, there’s no way to make it a positive story.

There’s no way to make this story good either. Biden’s problem isn’t a biased press; it’s a recalcitra­nt reality.

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