Posted on 05/27/2004 9:26:51 PM PDT by Rennes Templar
May 27, 2004 | Filmmaker Michael Moore filmed an interview with American Nicholas Berg in the course of producing his documentary film "Fahrenheit 9/11" before Berg left for Iraq, where he was taken hostage and killed, Moore confirmed to Salon in a statement Thursday. The 20 minutes of footage does not appear in the final version of "Fahrenheit 911," according to the statement.
Word of the footage reached Salon through a source unaffiliated with Moore or his film "Fahrenheit 9/11," which is reported to feature stark images of U.S. civilians and soldiers grappling with conditions in war-torn Iraq, as well as examining the relationship between President George W. Bush and the bin Laden family. It received the Palme d'Or, the Cannes Film Festival's highest honor, on Saturday.
In a statement widely circulated by Moore's people after an initial request for comment by Salon, Moore said, "We have an interview with Nick Berg. It was approximately 20 minutes long. We are not releasing it to the media. It is not in the film. We are dealing privately with the family." Moore's camp declined to comment further on any aspect of the interview. Because the footage is not in the film, a spokeswoman for Miramax Films, the production company behind "Fahrenheit 9/11," said the company had no comment.
It was not clear from Moore's statement whether footage from the interview with Berg had ever been included in early cuts of "Fahrenheit 9/11." Reports about a film industry controversy surrounding distribution of the film first hit the news on May 5, a week before Berg's death. The film officially screened for the public and the press for the first time during the Cannes festival on May 17.
The news that Moore spoke to Berg while he was still in the United States only adds to the mystery surrounding the young man's presence in Iraq and tragic death. The interview was shot before the 26-year-old Berg left for Iraq late last year as a private contractor in the hopes of helping to rebuild the ravaged country. Though it was unclear what Berg spoke about in his interview with Moore, or how the two men met, unrelated reports following his death indicate that he headed for the Middle East with plans to work to improve the country's technological infrastructure and communication abilities. He ran his own company, Prometheus Methods Tower Service, in a suburb of Philadelphia.
Berg did not find employment in Iraq, and when he attempted to return to the United States he was detained by Iraqi police and questioned by American forces. He was released after his family complained. But shortly after, he is believed to have been kidnapped by Islamic terrorists. Video of his beheading was released on an Islamist Web site on May 11. Salon was unable to reach the Berg family for comment before publication.
Moore's film chronicles the United States' military, political and business involvement in the Middle East in the years before and after the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001. His previous politically charged films, including "Roger & Me" and "Bowling for Columbine," have created controversy and won him praise (including an Oscar, for "Columbine"). "Fahrenheit 9/11" has already sparked a media storm; in early May, Miramax's parent company, Disney, announced that it would not allow Miramax to distribute the film, which is highly critical of Bush and his administration.
Miramax has yet to make a deal with a distributor, though the film's warm reception at Cannes and the publicity surrounding the film have made it a hot property that is generating a lot of interest in Hollywood. "Bowling for Columbine" grossed $21 million, making it the highest-grossing non-IMAX documentary of all time.
A source close to "Fahrenheit 9/11" said that a new distributor will be announced shortly, and that the film is expected to be released in theaters during the first week of July, as originally planned.
...and remember, his dad said Berg was the best friend the terrorists had. (Paraphrased)
It'll be a dark day indeed when this piece of crap opens in America. Moron Moore is one malicious screwball! I want the Feds to see whatever he has on Berg.
interestinger and interestinger.
Consider me onboard the conspiracy train a few weeks ago, although a few level headed freepers started to convince me I was wrong.
Don't I sound just like Senator flip flop.
Don't know if any of you have heard anything yet. Our local abc station mentioned the 20 minute interview this morning.. (Gasp!)
I'd be willing to bet money that if Nick Berg's yearbook had a thing in where kids say a few memories/nicknames/catch phrases, they won't be in the genre of "I love the USA". I don't know how far back the cover story of Nick being a "Pro-War" guy goes, but could his family have been so twisted as to have begun grooming him as a deep cover operative when he was still a high school kid? I don't think so (although it's possible).
This whole thing is getting very ugly. It's beyond political dissent. Moore/Berg and their ilk are actively surveilling / disrupting our ongoing military operations in a WAR. Insane and illegal.
Well, well, well.
Looks like all our suspicions a few weeks ago weren't for naught after all.
Moore could just be blowing smoke, but I doubt it.
Perhaps they already have and decided not to reveal facts which would contradict Nick's father.
Consider also Berg's demeanor in the video. He seemed strangely unafraid of his caports, quite at ease while reading the statement, etc. I've been wondering for awhile now if he thought he was just doing a video to help with "the cause"--and the beheading came as a complete surprise. Sometimes "sleeping with the enemy" can have unpleasant consequences.
Well, at the risk of piling on too much tinfoil this morning, I'm starting to wonder if the leaker might be trying to blackmail Moore, and this was the first revelation--more to come if he doesn't pay up.
Or it doesn't really exist... (just something else to try to hype the film, like the lie about Disney not wanting to distribute it.)
"Hmm...
Well one can se fairly sure that the interview with Nick Berg isn't something Moore thinks he can use to push his agenda or it would be in the film."
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BINGO..!!
Philadelphia, hmmm. Yesterday there was a raid on a mosque in NE Philly, computers seized and the imam arrested on immigration violations. Seems IRS, local police and FBI were involved, maybe more.
I wish you were right but I think there are so many totally ignorant citizens out there, they won't even notice.
I think he also had a copy of the Koran. Odd assortment of items...
I showed a friend who does tower maintenance some notes from the web-site that his friends setup in memory of Nick Berg, and my friend commented that, based on the e-mails he saw, Mr. Berg seemed to know his craft of towers and tower maintenance very, very well.
Remembering slain friend
By P.j. Reilly
Intelligencer Journal
Published: May 17, 2004 9:04 AM EST
LANCASTER COUNTY, PA - Scott Hollinger came across a tattered knit hat that belonged to his friend, Nick Berg, while rummaging through the barn on his New Providence farm Sunday afternoon.
"I had to look at him wearing that stupid thing all winter long," Hollinger said, "It's really beat. It's got paint all over it."
Finding the hat made Hollinger, 36, stop in his tracks and think about the West Chester man, whose beheaded body was found on a highway in Iraq last week.
"I was thinking about my good friend that I miss," Hollinger said. "I was thinking about the great conversations we had while we were 800 feet in the air."
Berg was beheaded by terrorists who videotaped the slaying and claimed his death was revenge for the recent abuses of detained Iraqis at the hands of United States soldiers.
Hollinger was the foreman for Berg's business, Prometheus Methods Tower Service Inc., which was headquartered at Hollinger's 11-acre farm, where he lives with his wife, Stacy, and two young sons. The business installed, repaired and maintained communications towers used by radio and television stations.
Hollinger worked for Berg for the past 14 months. During that time, he said, he came to know Berg as a "gung-ho" ambitious 26-year-old who "had a heart of gold and always had a big smile on his face."
"I was impressed with him at 26. I can only imagine what he would have been like when he turned 42," Hollinger said.
A 1986 Hempfield High School graduate and former climbing instructor with the U.S. Marines, Hollinger met Berg in January 2003 when Hollinger answered an ad Berg had placed in a newspaper looking for climbers to work on communications towers.
The day the two met, Hollinger said, was cold and windy.
"He wanted to see if I could do what I said I could do," Hollinger said. "It was a nasty day, and I don't think he would have climbed if he wasn't auditioning me."
The two men climbed the tower that day, and each earned the other's respect, according to Hollinger.
"He told me if I could climb on a day like that, I could do anything he needed," Hollinger said. "I thought he was a real gung-ho dude. I liked that about him."
Hollinger and Berg spent time together climbing towers all over the Eastern Seaboard during the following months, Hollinger said. They often talked politics.
"He was really into current events, just like I am," Hollinger said.
It was during that time that Hollinger learned his boss was an ardent supporter of President Bush and the United States efforts in Iraq. He also noticed Berg was always reading books pertaining to Jewish and Middle Eastern history.
Hollinger said he wasn't surprised when Berg went to North Carolina last November to attend a meeting with the Iraqi minister of labor, who was looking for U.S. companies to help rebuild Iraq's infrastructure.
"Nick wanted to be a part of what was going on over there," Hollinger said. "He wanted to be a part of it because he saw an opportunity for the business to grow and because he believed in what the United States was doing over there."
Some time around Christmas, Hollinger said, Berg traveled to Iraq to see if he could drum up some business for Prometheus.
Hollinger said Berg climbed 48 of the country's 110 communications towers to assess the condition of each one.
"He put all the information he gathered into a database, and he planned to use that information to get contracts for us to work on them," Hollinger said.
Berg and Hollinger discussed the possibility of Prometheus working in Iraq many times, according to Hollinger. And while he was interested in the money that could be made, Hollinger said he was concerned about the logistics of working in a country where American soldiers and civilians are still being killed every day.
"I needed to see more proof that we were going to follow the provincial rules for civilian contractors," Hollinger said. "It's the Wild West over there, and Nick was just winging it. He had no safety net."
Berg came home from Iraq in January and returned two months later to continue to try to get work for his company.
March 23 was the last time Hollinger talked to Berg. Hollinger said he planned to go to Iraq to work for 30 days, but he wanted Berg to come home so the two could hammer out all the details involved with working in the war-torn country.
But Hollinger never heard from his friend again.
Through e-mails Berg sent to his father, Michael Berg in West Chester, Hollinger learned his employer was imprisoned for 13 days by Iraqi police.
On April 6, Berg sent an e-mail to his father, claiming he was "free at last," Hollinger said. That was the last time his family heard from him.
Over the following weeks, Hollinger said he figured Berg was "holed up somewhere" and was unable to get to a telephone. He said he tried not to think that something bad had happened to his friend.
"You think a lot of things, but I guess somewhere in the back of your mind you know it's a possibility," Hollinger said.
On May 10, Hollinger received a call from Michael Berg, who told him his son's body had been found.
That news was devastating enough for Hollinger. When he heard Berg had been beheaded by terrorists making a political statement, he felt even worse.
"I just think he totally underestimated the whole situation," Berg said. "He understood the physical dangers of the situation, but he wasn't prepared for the human dangers.
"He was the type of guy who wouldn't think anyone would want to hurt him because he was just over there trying to do a job helping people out."
Hollinger said he's not sure what will become of Prometheus Methods. For now, he's climbing trees for local landscaping companies.
"I'll have to talk that over with (Nick's) father," he said.
While Michael Berg has lashed out at President Bush, Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld and the U.S. government in recent days for failing to protect his son, Hollinger said Nick Berg would have a different view of what happened to him.
"He wouldn't say George Bush or Donald Rumsfeld had anything to do with his death," Hollinger said. "He'd say it was all his fault. He would tell civilian contractors, 'Learn from my mistakes. I did it the wrong way.' "
Wow ! What a pic, Reg !!
8:30 central time and still nothing on the news that I've heard.
Hopefully SOMEONE is trying to get to the bottom of this story.
Praying this is a slow news day so this story gets some coverage and PRESSURE on Moore.
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