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Why, President Trump, you need the media
http://www.defensenews.com/articles/why-president-trump-you-need-the-mediaWhy, President Trump, you need the media
By: Jill Aitoro, March 17, 2017
Contrary to what some might believe, journalists are not in the business of drawing conclusions based upon partial information. Were also not fans of one-sided stories, of anonymous sources, or phrases like could not be reached for comment in our copy. So yes, when theres a clear and articulated effort to not cooperate with the media, its difficult to do our jobs. And I suppose thats the point. But what I have often said to sources, and what Id offer to the president, is that closing the door on the press makes it awfully difficult to do your job as well.
What we know in media right now, for example, is that the Trump administration is advocating for a defense buildup. We know President Trump wants more Navy ships vowing to expand the number of carriers the United States fields and decrease the cost of building them. We know he submitted a $30 billion supplemental funding request for the military, including $24.9 billion in Defense Department base-budget programs.
What we dont know is the strategy behind the defense buildup the grander plan. We dont know how more ships would be deployed as part of the larger fleet, what that could mean to personnel and development costs, whether that means modernization efforts will get sidelined. We also dont know how the added program funds for 2017 could possibly get the green light, when they would bust budget caps.
Im not saying that there arent explanations. Im just saying we havent heard them. Good explanations would probably go a long way in selling such a bold proposition to the Hill and to the American people, big factions of which are skeptics of big increases in defense spending. President Ronald Reagan advocated for his own defense buildup with specifics because he needed the endorsement. And he was successful.
Trump views the media not just with skepticism but with a degree of disdain. And Im not naïve enough to think no other leadership in past administrations felt similarly. Watergate ushered in a new more adversarial dynamic between media and government. That's a good thing, I'd argue.
But any government that wants backing for policies needs the media to make sense of them. Make your case so we can filter that into our reporting. Because the reality is this: Any president faces a self-fulfilling prophecy if his reaction to perceived unfair or one-sided reporting is refusing to offer his perspective or that of his administration. We as journalists quite simply can only report what we're told.
(snip)
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Why, President Trump, you need the media (Original Post)
nitpicker
Mar 2017
OP
nitpicker
(7,153 posts)1. One of the comments at the site
Tony Fox · Professor at US Naval War College
Well said, Jill.
This budget increase seems problematic because it seems we're putting the cart before the horse - let's buy a bunch of sh*t then figure out what to do with it. That's what a lot of less-developed countries do, and it's generally not a recipe for success.
Yesterday I was talking with a USAID guy about some of this over a green beer at the Newport O Club. This Administration's approach is accelerating the Rosa Brooks thesis, with the military perforce replacing State, USAID & a lot of the other components of a country team. Do we want people in uniform to always be the public face of the US abroad?