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To encourage restraint in war coverage, governments don’t need to
shoot journalists -- though sometimes that’s helpful.
Thirteen journalists were killed while covering the war and occupation
in Iraq last year, says a new report by the Committee to Protect
Journalists. The deaths were a subset of 36 on-the-job fatalities related
to journalistic work across the globe in 2003.
CPJ’s annual worldwide survey “Attacks on the Press,” released on
March 11, indicates that some of those deaths in Iraq were not just random
events in a hazardous war zone.
Journalists who were “embedded” with the American military tended to
be safer. But as a practical matter, the tradeoffs shortchanged news
readers, listeners and viewers. “The close quarters shared by journalists
and troops inevitably blunted reporters’ critical edge,” CPJ reports.
“There were also limits on what types of stories reporters could cover,
since the ground rules barred journalists from leaving their unit.”
Los Angeles Times reporter David Zucchino was embedded with the 101st
Airborne. While he remained near American soldiers, he recalls, that
“access could be suffocating and blinding.”
Zucchino offers a blunt assessment: “Often I was too close, or
confined, to comprehend the war’s broad sweep. I could not interview
survivors of Iraqi civilians killed by U.S. soldiers or speak to Iraqi
fighters trying to kill Americans. I was not present when Americans died at
the hands of fellow soldiers in what the military calls ‘frat,’ for
fratricide. I had no idea what ordinary Iraqis were experiencing. I was
ignorant of Iraqi government decisions and U.S. command strategy.”
Meanwhile, journalists who were not imbedded with the invading
military “faced a multitude of hazards and restrictions, limiting the
reporting from non-U.S. military perspectives,” the CPJ report says. In
some cases, those journalists “faced outright harassment from U.S.
forces.”
On April 8, during a pair of assaults, the U.S. military killed three
journalists and wounded several more. In mid-August, American forces killed
an award-winning cameraman. CPJ’s report includes summaries of those
events, and -- if you read between the lines -- they shed a lot of light on
the Pentagon’s lethally cavalier attitude.
* “In the first attack, a U.S. warplane struck an electricity
generator outside the Baghdad bureau of the Qatar-based satellite channel
Al-Jazeera, killing reporter Tareq Ayyoub. The attack occurred in an area
of heavy fighting, although Al-Jazeera noted that it had provided the
Pentagon with the coordinates of its offices weeks before the incident. The
nearby office of Abu Dhabi TV also came under U.S. fire at the time. In
October, a U.S. military spokesman acknowledged to CPJ that no
investigation into the incident was ever launched.”
* “In the second incident later that day, a U.S. tank fired a shell
at the Palestine Hotel, which housed most foreign correspondents in
Baghdad, killing cameramen Taras Protsyuk of Reuters and Jose Couso of
Spanish television channel Telecinco. U.S. troops claimed that they were
responding to hostile fire emanating from the hotel. A CPJ investigative
report published in May concluded that the shelling of the hotel, while not
deliberate, was avoidable since U.S. commanders knew that journalists were
in the hotel but failed to relay this information to soldiers on the
ground.”
* “On August 17, soldiers shot and killed veteran Reuters cameraman
and former CPJ International Press Freedom Award recipient Mazen Dana while
he filmed a U.S. tank convoy outside Abu Ghraib Prison near Baghdad. U.S.
soldiers said they mistook his camera for a rocket-propelled grenade (RPG)
launcher. Dana had secured permission from U.S. forces to film in the area,
and, according to eyewitnesses, there was no fighting in the area when the
journalist was shot.
“On September 22, the U.S. military announced that it had concluded
its investigation into Dana’s killing, and a Centcom spokesman told CPJ
that while the journalist’s death was ‘regrettable,’ the soldiers ‘acted
within the rules of engagement.’ No further details were provided, and the
results of the investigation have not been made public. Observers have
frequently pointed out that although a soldier might mistake a camera for
an RPG at a long distance, a camera would be clearly visible from the
estimated 55 yards at which Dana was hit.”
Overall, CPJ reports, “the conduct of U.S. troops has exacerbated the
tenuous security situation for journalists in Iraq.” The occupation has
brought a pattern of efforts by the U.S. command to interfere with
independent news-gathering.
Al-Jazeera correspondents have been arrested many times, but American
journalists have hardly been exempt from harassment. In Fallujah, when
guerrillas shot down a U.S. Army helicopter in early November, “U.S. troops
confiscated the camera of Knight Ridder photographer David Gilkey, of the
Detroit Free Press, and erased all of his photographs,” CPJ reports.
In November, a letter to Pentagon press officer Larry DiRita -- signed
by representatives of 30 news organizations from the United States and
other countries -- complained that they had “documented numerous examples
of U.S. troops physically harassing journalists and, in some cases,
confiscating or ruining equipment, digital camera discs, and videotapes.”
Commanders of occupying troops often see journalists as impediments to
effective military activities. In the case of U.S. forces in Iraq, it’s no
secret -- and it should be no surprise -- that the Pentagon has adopted
some of the Israeli military’s occupation techniques. The similarities go
beyond the deaths of two journalists in occupied Palestinian territories
last year.
Nazih Darwazeh, a cameraman with Associated Press Television News, was
shot in the back of his head on the morning of April 19 while filming a
stranded Israeli tank at the corner of an alley in Nablus. Two journalists
who were eyewitnesses said the shot came from an Israeli soldier under the
tank.
In early May, the British freelance film director and cameraman James
Miller, working on an HBO documentary in the Gaza Strip, was also shot and
killed. Relatives, friends and colleagues commissioned an in-depth
professional investigation, which found that Miller and his crew “were
consciously and deliberately targeted by the IDF soldiers.”
Darwazeh and Miller were shot while wearing jackets that clearly
identified them as “Press” or “TV.”
Israel Defense Forces are notorious for targeting journalists in the
occupied territories. There’s a pattern of shooting at journalists -- with
the IDF hierarchy refusing to hold anyone accountable for the results.
“Over the years,” the latest CPJ report explains, “the army has failed to
conduct thorough investigations into cases where journalists have been
wounded or killed by IDF gunfire, let alone punish those responsible for
the attacks. The same can be said for troops who physically attack or
otherwise mistreat journalists in the field.”
For the authorities in charge of an occupation, the positive deterrent
effects of such policies are self-evident when journalists know that their
lives will be in danger if they try to document instances of brutality on
the part of occupiers.
It’s not necessary to shoot too many journalists. If the goal is to
discourage overly intrepid coverage on the ground, some occasional killing
can be a real disincentive.
__________________________________
Norman Solomon is co-author, with foreign correspondent Reese Erlich, of
“Target Iraq: What the News Media Didn’t Tell You.”