I am in agreement with this.
http://www.iht.com/articles/2007/11/11/opinion/edcohen.phpRoger Cohen: Let's face the new 'core facts'
By Roger Cohen Published: November 11, 2007
NEW YORK: In the gym at the NATO base in Kabul, U.S. soldiers hit the treadmills every morning and gaze at TV screens broadcasting Al Jazeera's English news channel. When Osama bin Laden makes news, as he did recently with a statement about Iraq, America's finest work out beneath the solemn gaze of their most wanted enemy.
This sounds like a scene from Donald Rumsfeld's private hell. The former Secretary of Defense dismissed Al Jazeera as a "mouthpiece of Al Qaeda." He once called the Qatar-owned and based network "vicious, inaccurate and inexcusable."
In an indication of what the Bush administration thinks of Al Jazeera journalism (and habeas corpus), it has locked up one of the network's cameramen, Sami al-Hajj, in Guantánamo for five years without charging him.
The choice of viewing at the NATO gym is a lot wiser than Rumsfeld's choice of words or the unconscionable treatment of al-Hajj. America, and not just its front-line soldiers, needs to watch Al Jazeera to understand how the world has changed. Any other course amounts to self-destructive blindness.
The first change that must be grasped is America's diminished ability to influence people. Global access to information now amounts to an immense à la carte menu. Networks escape control. To hundreds of millions of people accessing information for the first time, from central China to Kenya's Rift Valley, the United States can easily look exclusive, discriminatory and less relevant to their future. if ((!document.images && navigator.userAgent.indexOf('Mozilla/2.') >= 0)|| navigator.userAgent.indexOf("WebTV") >= 0){ document.write(''); }
The second essential change is the erosion of American power. Samantha Power, the author and Harvard professor, calls this "the core fact of recent years."