kinch post=18.70264.688585 said:
What about the flip side of the coin? Say a reporter gets an interview with a terrorist leader or insurgent members in a training camp, and the military then uses that information (or follows the reporter, or tracks them using satellite, or whatever) and launches an air strike on the training camp?
Just because spies are caught and killed by the other side doesn't mean you can dispense with military intelligence. I'm not opposed to reporters in war zones, I'm just saying that it's a Report At Your Own Risk situation. The military is (or should be) too busy fighting to spend time escorting privileged nosy civilians around.
That, and the Iraq war has, in general, been prosecuted extremely badly. If you're going to have a war, it should be because your country or your allies have been attacked or threatened by an aggressor, you should go in, smash the place up sufficiently to prevent them from launching another attack, and get the hell out.
In extreme cases of ideologically-motivated war (such as the Axis countries after WWII) I could see some arguments that it may be necessary to install a constitutional (not a democratic, a CONSTITUTIONAL free government) and garrison the place until the militant old guard die out. It worked fairly well with Germany and Japan, but they were SMASHED beforehand.
Since America seems to be the Big Stick of choice nowadays, it'd really help if we had some sort of rational foreign policy, but we haven't had one of those for fifty years at least.