USA Today: U.S. reporters in
Iraq face a new realm of difficulty
Sunday, December 17, 2006
By
Peter Johnson
Reporting from Iraq is always dicey. Dozens of
journalists have been kidnapped, injured or killed
since the U.S. invasion almost four years ago.
But network and cable news reporters say the escalation
in sectarian violence, coupled with uncertainty about
the future U.S. role in Iraq, have prompted Iraqis to
be more wary of them and have made an already dangerous
assignment even more perilous.
Reporters say their ability to paint a full picture of
Iraq is increasingly difficult because of safety
restrictions that they or their news organizations have
imposed.
"We now have the 15-minute rule: We never stay anywhere
longer than 15 minutes," to reduce the chance of
kidnapping or attack, CBS' Elizabeth Palmer says.
"If I go to somebody's house, I do so invisibly,"
Palmer says. "And I have to be conscious of the people
I show in my stories, because just putting them on the
screen might effectively be exposing them to death."
Says ABC's Dan Harris: "I can't casually make a
decision locally with my producers, like 'Oh, let's
embed for the day' or 'Let's go on this raid.' We have
to run it up the flagpole internally, and it's a
subject of real discussion about what type of vehicle
we're in, what protection we'll have and is it worth
the risk.
"Every time we're driving around in one of their
vehicles, all I can think about is roadside bombs."
Those bombs, which severely injured ABC's Bob Woodruff
and CBS' Kimberly Dozier and killed CBS cameraman Paul
Douglas and soundman James Brolan, have made media
outlets and reporters much more cautious.
Fox News' David Mac Dougall says he'll no longer ride
in military Humvees, in favor of heavier armored
carriers.
"Before, we were more inclined to go on patrols," says
Mac Dougall, who is spending his fourth straight
Christmas in Baghdad. "Now, we are actively thinking,
'Is this patrol worth it? What do we gain from this?
Could we get the story without going out?' "
Simply being seen with a foreigner is now enough to get
an Iraqi killed by insurgents, reporters say. As such,
normally talkative Iraqis are now more reserved. Many
want nothing to do with the media.
"Where
once you could rely on the general population to at
least watch your back, to alert you to what danger may
be around you, you can no longer, be it out of fear and
intimidation or a dwindling in sympathy or empathy for
us and our position," CNN correspondent Michael Ware
says. "In terms of the insurgency, we are seen as
legitimate targets: part of the problem, not the
solution."
Harris, who finished his sixth visit to Baghdad Friday,
says the biggest change is how profoundly "pessimism is
taking hold." In a story for ABC's World News Tonight
recently, Harris reported on how his once "gung-ho"
Iraqi translator now plans to flee the country.
Harris says most Iraqis remain friendly and gracious.
"In the course of an interview, they may speak with
real venom about the action of my government, but
they'll still invite you in for tea."
That said, there are "plenty of bad guys who would
gladly and quickly kidnap or kill you," Harris says. "I
said to my driver casually the other day, 'If I get out
of this car, take off my flak jacket or get rid of all
my security and walk down the street, how long would I
last?' He said, 'Four or five seconds.' "
Three years ago, Mac Dougall says, he and his producers
would routinely hop in a car and drive to downtown
Baghdad for dinner.
"Sure, we'd go with armed guards, but we'd head to an
Italian restaurant with red-and-white-checked
tablecloths, have a bottle of red wine, there'd be
Italian music playing, and apart from the Iraqi
waiters, you could have been anywhere in the world,"
Mac Dougall says.
"I'm not eating Italian food these days."
Knowing the dangers, why do reporters continue to go
back? It's the biggest story on the planet, they say.
"When you are watching American soldiers, guys from
Kansas, and Iraqis, doing enormous acts of heroism, to
not cover it, to go somewhere more comfortable — safer
— it just feels you wouldn't be doing those people
justice," says NBC's Jane Arraf, who has reported from
Iraq since the days when Saddam Hussein ran the
country.