NEW YORK, (Reuters) – U.S. President Barack Obama’s visit to Iraq yesterday returned the spotlight to a war that has all but dropped off the news radar screen in the United States, which is preoccupied by its economic crisis.
Television news, chat shows and other media are dominated by reports of massive job losses, home foreclosures, collapsed banks and automakers on the verge of bankruptcy.
Some veterans groups say that makes it harder for servicemen and women returning from Iraq and Afghanistan to get the help they need to return to civilian life.
Pete Hegseth, head of Vets for Freedom, said part of the reason for the reduced attention is that violence has fallen.
“Who would have thought Iraq would be one of the problems that President Obama has to deal with the least?” he said. But Alissa Rubin, New York Times bureau chief in Baghdad, said Iraq was in a dynamic and critical phase leading up to the drawdown of U.S. troops. “It’s only as they pull out you see just how bad the violence might be,” she said.
“If you’re sitting in New York or Washington or small-town Kansas, you look at Iraq and think ‘OK, well, that war is kind of over…,’ and you move on,” Rubin said.