Posted on 04/21/2003 6:40:15 PM PDT by Timesink
A fat, waxing American moon hung over Baghdad. The armoured wagons of the US Marine Corps surrounded our hotel, writes Sky's Baghdad correspondent, David Chater.
The pools of burning oil had been extinguished...but fresh flames were being set by the looters. My last night in the Iraqi capital after three weeks of war. Paranoia punctuated the dawn drive westwards to Jordan. In the outskirts of the city, we passed a checkpoint still manned by the Iraqi militia. Then through the Coalition's surrounding chokeholds where all questions were asked down the barrel of a gun. Sleep came easily but haunted. There was always a war within the war in Baghdad. The battleground was the Ministry of Information. The fight between the journalists and the minders. Many Goliaths of the broadcasting world left through fear. Many others were expelled by loathing. One image above all remains with me. Our Iraqi satellite engineer lying on a bed in the room that passed for our office. |
Anyone seen doing so would have their equipment confiscated and all company personnel booted out. This Orwellian nightmare was overseen by a man known to us as Haji Ali - the Sky News minder. I paid three hundred dollars a week for the pleasure of his company. I furnished him with a hotel room. I provided him with food and transport. He kept his Kalashnikov and semi-automatic pistol in the boot of our car. His father owned several thousand acres of orange groves near the Iranian border and a photograph of him being embraced by Saddam Hussein. Haji Ali was a two-edged sword. Many times, he cut through all bureaucracy to take us to the front-line-to the areas and stories no other broadcaster was reaching. But many times, his sword was turned against me. |
Passionate-volatile-a Ba'athist from his substantial belly to his considerable bottom - he cut my satellite phone transmissions, shut down our camera and threatened to smash it, time and again. He'd stand next to me like a shadow during my live crosses to the studio in London. If I mentioned Iraq fighting for its national dignity or the increasing toll of civilian casualties, he'd take off his sunglasses and wipe the tears from his eyes. Then his fist would punch the air in anger at what he called the grossly-biased propaganda in the line of questioning from the Sky studio. This, too, was my fault, my responsibility. He was the knife-edge on which Sky's presence in Baghdad hung. We never said goodbye. He sensibly ran as soon as the American tanks were seen on the banks of the Tigris. I hope he was watching my live report when the US Marine Corps checked into the Palestine Hotel. The technology we used to broadcast those pictures to the world was hidden in a cupboard only feet away from the table where we used to feed him breakfast every day. |
Last Updated: 12:41 UK, Thursday April 17, 2003
How anyone could report anti-coalition propaganda just to stay near the action is still not something I can understand. Not from CNN, or NY Times...or BBC, but Mr. Chater, he made up for his moments of "mindered" anti-Americanism on Apr. 9th in Baghdad, imho.
I actually thought David Chater was anti-coaliton when listening to his reports. Then the morning of the 9th came I think this is the guy I remembered from a weird interview on Fox News. The Fox anchor asked him some question, and his answer was total gibberish. But the whole time he was talking, he kept glancing over to the left, very obviously signaling that there was "someone there" and he was not in a position to speak freely. It was really a cool thing he did there. |
Same here. However, Chater's interviews with the US Marines on the morning of 9th - once he was "free" - were absolutely priceless!
Many of you may remember David Chater's reports from pre-liberated Baghdad on Fox News.
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