David Botti
|
Dec 4, 2007 02:48 PM
A five-month saga pitting the right-wing blogosphere against The New Republic ended yesterday when, in a nearly 7,000-word article,
editor Franklin Foer said he could no longer stand by narratives his
magazine had published written by a soldier serving in Iraq. The
soldier, Scott Thomas Beauchamp, wrote what many had considered
questionable pieces for the magazine regarding the behavior of his
comrades during their Iraq tour. In one controversial entry, Beauchamp describes an exchange between troops as they notice a disfigured woman in the chow hall:
Man, I can't eat like this," he said.
"Like what?" I said. "Chow hall food getting to you?"
"No--with that f*cking freak
behind us!" he exclaimed, loud enough for not only her to hear us, but
everyone at the surrounding tables. I looked over at the woman, and she
was intently staring into each forkful of food before it entered her
half-melted mouth.
"Are you kidding? I think she's *** hot!" I blurted out.
"What?" said my friend, half-smiling.
"Yeah
man," I continued. "I love chicks that have been intimate--with IEDs.
It really turns me on--melted skin, missing limbs, plastic noses ... ."
Soon after "Shock Troops,"
the piece that contained this anecdote, was published in July,
conservatives questioned the accuracy of the reporting--and lambasted
The New Republic for the unsubstantiated "anti-war" message of its
stories. Foer quotes Weekly Standard editor Bill Kristol as saying:
But what is revealing about this mistake is that the editors must have
wanted to suspend their disbelief in tales of gross misconduct by
American troops. How else could they have published such a farrago of
dubious tales? Having turned against a war that some of them supported,
the left is now turning against the troops they claim still to support."
While criticism for The New Republic has continued over
the past five months, almost equally vehement is criticism of Foer's
recent article. Bob Bateman of Media Matters highlights his belief Foer waited too long into his lengthy article to actually give his position on Beauchamp.
More