View Full Version : The Armies of Iraq (Al Jazeera)
Sarajevo071
09-03-2007, 11:42 PM
The Armies of Iraq
Four years ago the fighting in Iraq was just beginning. The armed group al-Qaeda in Iraq did not even exist and Sunni and Shia groups were working together against the US-led forces.
Three years ago, sectarian divisions escalated into a battle some believe has reached civil war proportions.
Now the fighters have turned against each other.
This year has seen Shia infighting on the streets of Iraqi cities such as Karbala and Sunni armed groups fighting to keep al-Qaeda out of their regions.
In a series of exclusive reports, Al Jazeera's Hoda Abdel Hamid reports on the new reality of Iraq's many armies.
...
Part One - Iraq's Sunni armies ( Click here to watch Part One - on YouTube (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1nKhOBG4WMY) )
Part Two - Iraq's Shia militias
Part Three - Iraq's security forces
Part Four - the US army
Part Five - al-Qaeda
Ken White
09-04-2007, 05:35 PM
filter the presentations and try to cut through that bias. Some people are willing to do that, others want to accept -- or violently reject -- that bias.
Been my observation that three sources, preferably opposing and competing, with logical filtering are the minimum required to get an approximate picture. It is virtually impossible to get an accurate picture unless one is actually at the point of the item or issue.
Anyone who bases a course of action solely on media accounts -- or an Intel estimate, they suffer from the same bias problem; it's a human foible -- will likely err.
goesh
09-04-2007, 05:37 PM
Please correct me if I'm wrong and I'm tracking down the references as we speak, but it is my understanding that al jazeera had tapped Mohammed Saed al-Shaf, the former Iraqi Information Minister, aka Baghdad Bob, for Intel and PR takes on US Military forces - they had some interviews with him on standby for future references and reporting. He was pretty credible on the Arab street for a while you know.
Steve Blair
09-04-2007, 05:40 PM
Just relax. Media spins (lies, whatever). It's what they do. NO media outlet is pure or innocent in this regard. I like looking at them just to see how events can be viewed through different perspectives. Ken's got a good point about remembering bias and seeing that of others.
Sarajevo071
09-04-2007, 06:06 PM
filter the presentations and try to cut through that bias. Some people are willing to do that, others want to accept -- or violently reject -- that bias.
Been my observation that three sources, preferably opposing and competing, with logical filtering are the minimum required to get an approximate picture. It is virtually impossible to get an accurate picture unless one is actually at the point of the item or issue.
Anyone who bases a course of action solely on media accounts -- or an Intel estimate, they suffer from the same bias problem; it's a human foible -- will likely err.
Just relax. Media spins (lies, whatever). It's what they do. NO media outlet is pure or innocent in this regard. I like looking at them just to see how events can be viewed through different perspectives. Ken's got a good point about remembering bias and seeing that of others.
I totally agree with both of you... That's what I did before and that's what I do now. Disinformations and media lies are well known to me.
ali_ababa
10-23-2007, 11:00 PM
Personally, I hate Al-Jazeera as i think it is the most bias channel i watch. When i watch discussions it makes me annoyed as they sympathise with terrorists.
Powered by vBulletin® Version 4.2.5 Copyright © 2024 vBulletin Solutions Inc. All rights reserved.