The Hamra’s Been Hit

BEIRUT — I’ve heard from friends that my hotel com­pound in Bagh­dad has been hit by two car bombs in an almost iden­ti­cal attack as the one that hit the “Pales­tine Hotel com­plex on Oct. 24″:http://www.back-to-iraq.com/archives/2005/10/three_car_bombs.php. The first car bomb “vapor­ized” the blast walls on the back cor­ner, but left so large a crater that the sec­ond bomb couldn’t get through. The dam­age was thus mod­er­ated.
That’s of lit­tle solace to the fam­i­lies of the six Iraqis who died. One of them may have been a guard for the com­pound, and the rest seem to be Iraqis who lived in an apart­ment build­ing on the out­side of the wall. Casu­alty reports are still a lit­tle fuzzy, how­ever. One of my friends told me that the foot of one of the bombers landed at the front steps of the hotel.
This will send shock­waves through the journo-tribe in Bagh­dad. I would not be sur­prised to see sev­eral orga­ni­za­tions decid­ing that Bagh­dad is no longer safe enough to work and pull out. Or they may move to the Green Zone, join­ing _Newsweek_ and the _Wall Street Journal_.
This is exactly “what I feared would happen”:http://www.back-to-iraq.com/archives/2005/10/a_thousand_deat.php, fol­low­ing the Pales­tine attacks.
*UPDATE 10:41 AM NOV 19:* Here are links to some of the sto­ries from my friends:
* “Blast Also Shat­tered Illusions”:http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/iraq/complete/la-fg-hamra19nov19,1,177409.story?coll=la-iraq-complete _The Los Ange­les Times_
* “Reporter Cried, Feared She’d Die”:http://www.kentucky.com/mld/kentucky/news/world/13209166.htm From my friend Leila, who speaks of the fear that Iraqis feel every day has come to our com­pound now.
* “Woken By Yet Another Blast”:http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2005/11/19/wirq119.xml&sSheet=/news/2005/11/19/ixnewstop.html
* “Noth­ing Can Pre­pare You”:http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/07374 – 1878427,00.html From friend Cather­ine Philip, who also men­tions the cost borne by inno­cent Iraqis.
There is already some move­ment among the reporters to raise money for the fam­i­lies who were affected.

Rory Carroll is free

BAGHDAD — Rory Car­roll, the Bagh­dad cor­re­spon­dent for the Guardian and a good friend of mine has appar­ently been freed by his kid­nap­pers as of about 10 min­utes ago. Accord­ing to secu­rity firms, he has spo­ken with his father and his on his way to the Green Zone after his release.
I can’t tell you how glad this makes me.

Election Analysis in TIME

BAGHDAD — My lat­est take on the ref­er­en­dum is “avail­able at Time.com”:http://www.time.com/time/world/article/0,8599,1119617,00.html now, and read­ers of B2I will notice that the blog informed a lot of the mag­a­zine copy. Plus, we got some more report­ing out of Mosul.

It wouldn’t sur­prise me if the elec­tion was rigged,” said a U.S. Army offi­cer in Mosul who requested anonymity and who worked on secu­rity arrange­ments for the poll with Iraqi secu­rity and elec­tion offi­cials. “I don’t even trust our elec­tion process.”

Sec­ondly, a primer by Elaine Shan­non and me on the Sad­dam trial “is also available”:http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,1118387,00.html, and that’s tak­ing up a lot of my time today. Alas, I’m not in the first day’s pool but I’m in the sec­ond day — which means I won’t get to see Sad­dam until Jan­u­ary, prob­a­bly. His lawyer, Khalil Dulaimi is widely expected to ask for and receive some kind of delay, so the first day of the trial will likely be anti-climatic. A lit­tle charge-reading, a lit­tle delay motions and we’re done.
The secu­rity was very tight going in to the trial, accord­ing to pool reports. As the journos were bussed in, every­thing was taken from them — every­thing. Watches, wal­lets, even pens and note­books. (One U.S. sol­dier told the reporters that the CIA and the KGB have low-calibre pen-guns. Doesn’t he know the KGB was renamed years ago?) The reporters were given pen­cils and yel­low legal pads with which to take notes, although there is allegedly a sup­ply of back-up pens if peo­ple get too aggres­sive with the pen­cil lead.
So, in the absence of any­thing actu­ally hap­pen­ing at the trial right now, we’re reduced to a) writ­ing about writ­ing with pen­cils and b) report­ing from pool reports. Eh. It’s a liv­ing.

Tech­no­rati Tags: , , , ,

Here be Dragons…

BAGHDAD — Lately, I’ve been get­ting a lot of email from aspir­ing for­eign cor­re­spon­dents who want to cut their teeth in Bagh­dad. I under­stand the sen­ti­ment, I really do. But at this time, I think it’s an unwise course of action and I’d like to take a lit­tle space to out­line why.
First off, about my sit­u­a­tion for the new­com­ers here: I started this blog in August 2002 after a dash into Iraqi Kur­dis­tan the pre­vi­ous sum­mer. I had a hunch that war was com­ing and I wanted to get some time in, at least where I wouldn’t be hanged if caught in Iraq ille­gally. It was a thrilling time, run­ning around Erbil and Suleimaniya, always wor­ried if those shifty guys in the lobby of the Suleimaniya Palace were Iraqi _mukhabarat_ or Kur­dish _pesh merga_ or both, war­ily eye­ing each other over cheap cof­fee tables and fake flow­ers. I jour­neyed to Hal­abja and found myself enor­mously moved by the plight of the vic­tims of the 1988 chem­i­cal attacks there. I met senior mem­bers of the Barzani and Tal­a­bani clans, all major play­ers on the Iraqi polit­i­cal scene now, and by my ques­tions annoyed the hell out of the cur­rent president’s wife, Hiro Tal­a­bani. (No hard feel­ings, ma’am!)
Next, I did the whole blog-raising thing, chang­ing the par­a­digm for DIY report­ing in a war zone in the process. Who knew? Back-to-Iraq became a phe­nom­e­non and dona­tions even­tu­ally topped more than $11,000 that all went to cover the war in April 2003. It was thrilling and dan­ger­ous — and sur­pris­ingly easy report­ing. I really just wan­dered around, fol­low­ing explo­sions and writ­ing about my day. In the process, I cap­tured a bit of the heart of Iraqi Kur­dis­tan in its strug­gle against Saddam’s regime. I was there when “Kirkuk”:http://www.back-to-iraq.com/archives/2003/04/heading_south.php was taken back by the Kurds. I was in Tikrit when the last hold­outs melted into the land­scape, leav­ing the field to the Marines and “Arab fighters”:http://www.back-to-iraq.com/archives/2003/04/inside_saddams.php more inter­ested in defend­ing their homes from Kur­dish loot­ers than shoot­ing wan­der­ing jour­nal­ists. (Some of the great­est hos­pi­tal­ity I’ve been shown in Iraq was at the hands of the Tikri­tis as they stood around two dead _pesh merga_ and offered me pro­tec­tion against the Marines, know­ing full well I was an Amer­i­can jour­nal­ist. All they cared about was that I wasn’t Kur­dish.)
Ah, those were the days. Even “Baghdad”:http://www.back-to-iraq.com/archives/2003/04/clutching_for_a.php imme­di­ately after its fall felt open and watch­ful instead of boarded up and scared as it does today. The Marines and the 3rd ID walked the streets with­out hel­mets or body armor. They stood in queues wait­ing to buy food, amus­ing Iraqis to no end, for whom queues are a bit of an alien social arrange­ment. They’re more par­tial to crowds.
When I returned for the third time in May 2004, how­ever, things were dif­fer­ent. I had raised money again, this time as seed money for a more tra­di­tional free­lanc­ing career. I fig­ured the dona­tions and my sav­ings would see me through a cou­ple of months. How­ever, TIME Mag­a­zine snapped me up imme­di­ately and I’ve been work­ing with them ever since. So much for the two months I thought it would take to find a steady gig. And it’s a good thing, too, as by May 2004, the sit­u­a­tion had become very bad, with an insur­gency we all thought would not get worse but most assuredly did (and still is.) But even in those days, I remem­ber just hir­ing a cou­ple of guys to drive and trans­late and run around the city at all hours of the day and night. One of my best mem­o­ries was a drunken evening at Dragon Bay, the Chi­nese restau­rant out­side the Green Zone that had a karaoke machine. My col­leagues and I war­bled away until 1 a.m. or so and then made my poor dri­ver — who didn’t much like Chi­nese food — take us home. Along the way, we saw John Simp­son, of the BBC, doing a standup report in the dark­ness of the city. Drunken with cheap red wine and the thrill of the for­bid­den, one of my friends yelled out “John Simp­son sucks!” Sorry, John. Pro­fes­sion­al­ism did not rule the night. Hope the standup went OK.
Such stunts are unimag­in­able now. I don’t know any West­ern col­leagues who go out­side our com­pound at night. Our social life has been reduced to din­ner par­ties and pool par­ties. But the work is what’s even worse. Every day we ven­ture out with eyes peeled for kid­nap­pers (who like soft tar­gets such as jour­nal­ists), IEDs, Amer­i­can patrols and trigger-happy Iraqi troops. The ambi­ent threat has risen far past Con­di­tion Red. the Com­mit­tee to Pro­tect Jour­nal­ist has listed Iraq, for the sec­ond year in a row, as “the most dan­ger­ous place in the world to work as a journalist”:http://cpj.org/attacks04/mideast04/iraq.html. “Sixty–sevennine jour­nal­ists have been killed”:http://www.cnn.com/2005/WORLD/meast/08/28/iraq.journalists.reut/ here since March 2003, accord­ing to Reporters with­out Bor­ders. That’s more than the _20 years_ of the Viet­nam War (19551975). Some have been killed by Amer­i­can neg­li­gence and error. Oth­ers were “mur­dered by ter­ror­ist thugs”:http://www.back-to-iraq.com/archives/2005/08/steven_vincent.php. Five of my friends have been kid­napped, but thank­fully all were released. One kid­napped jour­nal­ist, Italy’s Enzo Bal­doni, was killed. I didn’t know him.
My point is that this is no longer a freelancer’s war. I’m lucky. I have the entire secu­rity appa­ra­tus of TIME Mag­a­zine to back me up. I am pro­tected by guards, have access to cars, the entire secure com­pound, you name it. I have an edi­tor who would miss me if I didn’t show up. (All of the kid­napped jour­nal­ists have been free­lancers who didn’t check in reg­u­larly and peo­ple often didn’t know there were miss­ing at first.)
All of these pro­tec­tions cost money, some­thing most free­lancers are short of. It is sim­ply no longer advis­able to hire a dri­ver and trans­la­tor and go run­ning around the city like I did last sum­mer. I’ve been get­ting a num­ber of emails from young jour­nal­ists ask­ing to do just this, and I tell them not to come and do this unless they have the back­ing of a major media organization’s secu­rity infra­struc­ture. Steve Vin­cent ended up dead because he cow­boyed around Basra — and that’s one of the safe cities, we’re told.
One option, how­ever, is to embed with the U.S., British or other Coali­tion forces. You will be safe, rel­a­tively, and you’ll get to see parts of the coun­try other than Bagh­dad — which is thick with jour­nal­ists any­way. It’s an inter­est­ing expe­ri­ence, and I’ve found, in my expe­ri­ences, the accu­sa­tions of cen­sor­ship — with one excep­tion — to be grossly exag­ger­ated. If you get a cool com­man­der, he prob­a­bly won’t give you any grief.
(Of course, there are some common-sense and rea­son­able restric­tions: don’t give away troop posi­tions, don’t show the faces of dead sol­diers before their fam­ily has been noti­fied or 48 hours, whichever comes first. Things like that.)
Oh, and for­get about embed­ding with the Iraqi forces. The Min­istries of Inte­rior and Defense don’t allow this and they don’t oper­ate inde­pen­dently of Coali­tion troops any­way. Also, they’re often so poorly trained and pos­si­bly infil­trated you would be in even more dan­ger from the Iraqi troops than from ran­dom, street-level vio­lence in Bagh­dad — which is why the Coali­tion and Iraqi min­istries don’t allow embed­ding solely with Iraqis. A jour­nal­ist killed or betrayed by the troops he’s sup­posed to be embed­ded with is very bad PR.
This is all very frus­trat­ing I’m sure. I can still remem­ber the hus­tle that got me out here, and it pains me to dis­cour­age new peo­ple, but “I’ve already seen one friend die”:http://www.back-to-iraq.com/archives/2005/04/our_heart_and_c.php because she was in the wrong place at the wrong time, and I’m in con­stant fear that it will hap­pen again. All the free­lancers I know, includ­ing me, now have long-term rela­tion­ships that pro­vide us the infra­struc­ture to “work.” And many orga­ni­za­tions seem to be cut­ting back on their cov­er­age and, thus, their hir­ing.
There are plenty of places that need ener­getic, young jour­nal­ists. Dar­fur, south­ern Thai­land, Indone­sia, even Syria (if you can swing the secu­rity appa­ra­tus.) For those with­out expe­ri­ence in extremely dan­ger­ous work con­di­tions, this is no place for on-the-job train­ing.

Tech­no­rati Tags: , ,

Iran’s role in Iraq

Finally! I’ve dropped numer­ous hints over the last few months of Iran­ian involve­ment in Iraq, but I never went into detail. Now, thank­fully, this is the story that has informed my Iran­ian com­ments. I didn’t want to spill too much of the beans because it’s not cool to scoop your own mag­a­zine on a blog, but this is an impor­tant story. I wish I could say I con­tributed to it, but Mick is a hell of a reporter and this is his baby.