(The Best of the Bag Decade is our end of the year, end of the decade look at some of the best BAGnews posts and analysis.)
The Iraq War has been (and still is) a frequent subject on
BAGnews and, frankly, such a topic of government and media spin that I find it
impossible to highlight the best posts in a single entry. This is particularly true when I read through
the sharp analytic comments posted by our readership over the years. To encapsulate the coverage, I’ve restricted
myself to the year and a half following the 2004 election, a time when the Bag moved to consistent posting of photographs instead of political cartoons. It was also a time in which the war
propaganda machine played at full power to a usually compliant media.
We begin with the 2005 White House photo release of a 2003 image showing staged strategery
of the Bush Administration's “war planning” in Pizza II,
the
pro-war iconography of the Iraq “Marlboro
Man”, and propaganda aspects of Michael Yon’s
photo of a US soldier and a dying Iraqi child.
The
aftermath of the election saw further examples of the government and media spin
on Abu Ghraib, noted in BAG’s The Most
Obscene Pictures Taken at Abu Ghraib and the “framing” of low-level
soldiers in Lynndie Comes
Up Short.
The
post-US election time period also marked the first
photograph by Alan Chin posted on the site (which brought about a fascinating discussion of the embed process) and the posting of the equally
uncomfortable imagery of War As Child's
Play.
BAG posts covered the capture and trial of Saddam Hussein
and the media (read Murdoch's) need to denigrate and glamorize the Iraqi dictator in Bottom Drawer
Journalism and Portrait of
Evil vs. Evil Portrait.
BAG readers took a sharp look at the military industrial complex’s visual
stake with Unleashing
Hell, Ironically and Flare for the
Dramatic.
Of
course, BAG caught the unintentional tragicomedy of the Bush Administration’s ready
at the helm images in I know These
Guys Love Uniforms, But… and Bush's Rainbow.
Finally, we end this era of BAG Iraq War coverage with the
haunting and emotional World Press Photo contest award winner Above the Hold,
a photo taken in a time when the American public rarely saw coffins returning
from the war they supported.
–Karen Hull
For more BAG posts on
the Iraq war (before and after the 2004 election), click on the following
links:
series, Best Bag Posts of the Decade, click here.
(Photo
credits: 1. Eric Draper, White House/AP, 2. Luis Sinco/LA Times, 3. Michael
Yon/Time.com, 4. Unattributed. September 2003, 5. Paul Buck/European Pressphoto
Agency, 6. Alan
Chin/The New York Times, 7. Cris Bouroncle/AFP, 8. CNN.com, 9. AFP/IST/File,
10. The
Council on American-Islamic Relations, 11. Marine
Corps Combat Camera Management and Imagery Management Unit/United States
Department of Defense, 12. Pablo Martinez Monsivais/AP, 13. Gerald Herbert/AP,
14. Todd Heisler/The Rocky Mountain News/Polaris, worldpressphoto.com.)
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