
James Bays of Al Jazeera English is probably the best television reporter working on any given day in Afghanistan, which is why I was disappointed to watch the public unspooling of his obsession with a dud rocket that landed 4 kilometers from Marjah during President Karzai's historic visit there today. You get some taste for it in the Al Jaz
print story, but on live TV it resembled a hymn to the intelligence and operational effectiveness of the Taliban.
Like the Western reporters I escorted on the visit, I can confirm there was never any danger. Beyond establishing the facts on the ground, though, the report is illustrative of the interpretive bias of too many reporters here.
Let's say the President attends a public meeting, and many people -- including his opponents -- know about it. If the President is Obama, then that's publicity. If the President is Karzai, then that's the sign of a sophisticated intelligence network. A large number of heavily armed men hate the President, want to kill him, and are able to express their rage impotently, miles away from their target. If we are talking gun-toting wingnuts and President Obama, then we assume the good guys did their job. If we are talking Taliban and President Karzai, then we attribute it to the prowess of the bad guys. People venting their frustrations to an American politician is a healthy exercise in civic responsibility. People venting their frustrations to an Afghan politician is an indication of hopelessness, corruption ... pick your malaise.
This is not to say that Marjah is completely secure and without deep social problems. It is neither of those things. And precisely because it is neither of those things, it's not necessary to peer at places like Marjah through shit-colored glasses to convince people you're being objective. Leave the rockets where they lie: far away from the real story.