Posted on 05/29/2006 5:55:39 PM PDT by Flavius
Going to Iraq is like being flung into a pot of boiling water' Kimberley Dozier was seriously injured in a bombing in Iraq yesterday. Here, in an article from January, she describes how she faced the dangers of her beat YOU know how they say a frog will let itself be boiled alive, sitting placidly in a pot of bubbling water, if you turn the heat up slowly enough? That used to be what Iraq was like for journalists. Over the past 2½ years, the danger increased incrementally, with kidnappings, killings and bombings first hitting Iraqis, then soldiers, then contractors, missionaries and aid workers, before finally hitting us.
It took us a while to admit we were targets, and start to change the way we work adding bodyguards, armoured vehicles, blast walls outside our hotels, and so on. But now going into Iraq is like being flung into a pot of water you can see boiling from a great height from far away. Inwardly, youre screaming, Arghh, then you stifle it with a mental Ulp.
Every time before I fly in I sleep with one eyeball peeled, staring at the alarm clock, counting the minutes until the plane takes off. Then I half-hold my breath until our plane touches the tarmac. Then theres another slight breath-holding experience driving down the Airport Road, before finally arriving at our hotel.
My mood instantly changes. I see our Iraqi staff and some of the regular CBS inmates, the translators make fun of how much my Arabic has deteriorated, we knock back strong coffee, and I get to work. There are always a couple of startled moments, when a distant or nearby bomb makes me jump. But I quickly forget where I am (or rather, that it bothered me).
The waters toasty, verging on the scalding, but Im fine.
That is, until I get myself and a cameraman, soundman and perhaps a producer invited on a trip across town with the US military, just like our ABC colleagues Bob Woodruff and Doug Vogt did [they were severely injured in an attack].
Then it starts all over again the eyeball glued to the clock all night. Then theres the armoured car dash to our meeting point with the military (which often entails a round trip down the Airport Road, and you just know the insurgents know our cars by now,that they see us from their hiding places and say to themselves, Oh, there go the Western TV journalists. We could go for them, but lets see if we can get a Humvee instead.) Sometimes, the soldiers like to give journalists a hard time, saying things like, Maam, if were hit by a bomb and we all get taken out, heres how you operate the Humvee radio to call for help. Thanks, guys.
But if you want to tell their story, you have to take their risks. If we, the journalists, are sitting in hot water, the troops are hopping around on Hells coals. Its even worse for the Iraqi army and police. And then youve got the Iraqi people, who are not restricted to tours of duty and have no ticket out.
So yes, absolutely, journalists face awful, dangerous risks in Iraq. But its nothing compared to the people we cover.
This abridged article was first published on the CBS News website, www.cbsnews.com
"So yes, absolutely, journalists face awful, dangerous risks in Iraq. But its nothing compared to the people we cover."
maybe its time for all reporters to leave iraq
Because two get killed?
Then the miserable cretins should just stay home and report from there. It couldn't be any less accurate than their current tripe, or useful (this is, to anyone except the terrorists).
no because they aid the enemy
The liberal urban centers of Detroit and Washington DC are just as risky.
Yes some of them do, but the Democrats and their supporters here inside the USA are even worse
First of all ... and let's be clear about this ... no journalist is "flung" anywhere ... the merceneries are there because they want a 'money shot' and a prize ... That's what they do, that's what they dream and live for.
If you cant stand the heat--stay out of the kitchen
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