Tuesday, September 13, 2005
Apparently, the Pentagon didn't get the memo. SF Chronicle:Recovery team members wearing white protective suits and black boots stopped at houses with spray painted markings on the doors designating there were dead bodies inside.
Outside one house on Kentucky Street, a member of the Army 82nd Airborne Division summoned a reporter and photographer standing nearby and told them that if they took pictures or wrote a story about the body recovery process, he would take away their press credentials and kick them out of the state.
"No photos. No stories," said the man, wearing camouflage fatigues and a red beret.
On Saturday, after being challenged in court by CNN, the Bush administration agreed not to prevent the news media from following the effort to recover the bodies of Hurricane Katrina victims.
But on Monday, in the Bywater district, that assurance wasn't being followed. The 82nd Airborne soldier told reporters the Army had a policy that requires media to be 300 meters -- more than three football fields in length -- away from the scene of body recoveries in New Orleans. If reporters wrote stories or took pictures of body recoveries, they would be reported and face consequences, he said, including a loss of access for up-close coverage of certain military operations.
Meanwhile, Bush has taken responsibility "to the extent that the federal government didn't fully do its job right." (Um, sure seems to be an awful lot of wiggle room in that phrase.) Steve Soto:I'd like to think that once he stepped out of his cocoon and now that he has seen first hand how his administration has failed here, Bush is simply acknowledging the obvious. But this probably has more to do with his GOP sycophants in Congress telling him to eat it and move on because they are all reading the same polls regarding 2006.
The latest Survey USA poll still has Bush at 55% disapproval with regard to his response to Hurricane Katrina. The "don't play the blame game" rhetoric out of the White House was ringing hollow, and likewise the disapproval numbers weren't budging. Time to "cut bait." As Steve Soto points out, the Congressional Republicans are getting very worried they'll pay the price for Bush's tone deafness.

Posted at 11:40 pm by matty_fred