CNN Journalist Speaks Openly for First Time | Page 2 | Golden Skate

CNN Journalist Speaks Openly for First Time

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mike79

Guest
Re: ONE MORE THING

I just wanted to say that no matter what side any of us stand on I think we can all be glad that the war is slowly coming to a close.:D :D :D
 
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heyang

Guest
Re: ONE MORE THING

I'm one of the people who was against rushing into war. I believe that Saddam has weapons and has been cruel, but concerns were the long term ramifications of our actions. I doubt a diplomatic route would've worked with Iraq, but I still don't understand the rush to go it with only one major ally.

The link is a commentary that better explains my reasons for caution.

<a href="http://slate.msn.com/id/2081376/" target="_new">Slate commentary</a>

The key questions as quoted from the commentary:
<blockquote style="padding-left:0.5em; margin-left:0; margin-right:0; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:0; border-left:solid 2">Factual questions: Is there a connection between Iraq and the perpetrators of 9/11? Is that connection really bigger than that of all the countries we're not invading? Does Iraq really have or almost have weapons of mass destruction that threaten the United States? Predictive questions: What will toppling Saddam ultimately cost in dollars and in lives (American, Iraqi, others)? Will the result be a stable Iraq and a blossoming of democracy in the Middle East or something less attractive? How many young Muslims and others will be turned against the United States, and what will they do about it? </blockquote>

One question not included is 'Will this same reasoning (he's a dictator with weapons of mass destruction) lead us into war with other nations? Or 'will we ignore the same scenarios in other areas because we have no interests in these other countries?' When will a consistent policy be established?

Only time will give us the answers. The 'war' was only the initial phase in the scheme of things...there's still a long way to go.
 
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sk8cynic

Guest
Re: ONE MORE THING

Good post, Heyang.

I have asked these very questions myself. Unfortunately, no one has the answers.
 
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sk8cynic

Guest
Follow-Up to Jordan's Article

The following was circulated internally today at CNN:

Written by Eason Jordan
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Since my op-ed piece in the New York Times Friday stirred a controversy, I thought I would share my thoughts with you about it._ In the op-ed, I described how the Iraqi regime intimidated, tortured, and killed people who helped CNN over the years._ It was a tough piece to write._ But I felt strongly the stories needed to be told as soon as telling them would not automatically result in the killing of innocent colleagues, friends, and acquaintances -- most of them Iraqis.

Some critics complain that the op-ed piece proves CNN withheld vital information from the public and kowtowed to the Saddam Hussein regime to maintain a CNN reporting presence in Iraq._ That is nonsense._ No news organization in the world had a more contentious relationship with the Iraqi regime than CNN._ The
Iraqi leadership was so displeased with CNN's Iraq reporting, CNN was expelled from Iraq six times -- five times in previous years and one more time on day three of this Iraq war._ Those expulsions lasted as long as six months at a time._ CNN's Baghdad bureau chief, Jane Arraf, was banned from the country in
response to her reporting on an unprecedented public protest demanding to know what happened to Iraqis who vanished years earlier after being abducted by Iraqi secret police._ Christiane Amanpour, Wolf Blitzer, Aaron Brown, Brent Sadler, Nic Robertson, Rym Brahimi, Sheila MacVicar, Ben Wedeman, and Richard Roth were among the other CNN correspondents and anchors banned from Iraq._ If CNN were trying to kowtow and maintain its Baghdad presence at any cost, would CNN's reporting have produced a contentious relationship, expulsions, and bannings? No._ CNN kept pushing for access in Iraq, while never compromising its journalistic standards in doing so._ Withholding information that would get innocent people killed was the right thing to do, not a journalistic sin.

Did CNN report on the brutality of the regime?_ Yes, as best we could, mostly from outside Iraq, where people in the know could speak more freely than people inside Iraq. In Saddam's Iraq, no one was foolish enough to speak on camera or on the record about the brutality of the regime because anyone doing so would be effectively signing his or her death warrant._ So we reported on Iraq's human rights record from outside Iraq and featured many interviews with Iraqi defectors who described the regime's brutality in graphic detail._ When an Iraqi official, Abbas al-Janabi, defected after his teeth were yanked out with pliers by Uday Saddam Hussein's henchmen, I worked to ensure the defector gave his first TV interview to CNN._ He did._ I also personally asked Tariq Aziz in a live TV interview during one of our World Report Conferences to defend his country's dreadful human rights record._ Other CNNers over the years also put tough questions to Iraqi officials.

Some critics say if I had told my Iraq horror stories sooner, I would have saved thousands of lives._ How they come to that conclusion, I don't know._ Iraq's human rights record and the brutality of the Saddam Hussein regime were well known before I wrote my op-ed piece._ The only sure thing that would have happened if I told those stories sooner is the regime would have tracked down
and killed the innocent people who told me those stories._ Critics say I could have told the stories without identifying Iraqis by name._ But the Iraqi secret police surely knew everyone I met in Iraq and would have had no trouble identifying who told me the stories. No doubt those people would be dead today if I spoke sooner.

A number of people have told me CNN should have closed its Baghdad bureau, helped everyone who told me the horror stories flee Iraq, with me thereafter telling those stories publicly long before now._ While that is a noble thought, doing so was not a viable option._ Iraqis (and their families) who told me those
stories in some cases could not, and in other cases would not, leave their country simply for the sake of CNN being able to share their stories with the world._ Incidentally, there are countless such horror stories in Iraq._ I knew just a few of them._ We will hear many more of them in the days, weeks, and months ahead.

Knowing the personal stories I knew about the brutality of the regime, I had three options:

1. Never repeat such horror stories.
2. Tell the stories sooner and, as a result, see innocent people killed.
3. Tell the stories after the downfall of the Saddam Hussein regime.

I chose option three and could never imagine doing anything else._

I chose to write the NY Times op-ed to provide a record of one person's experiences with the brutality of the Iraqi regime and to ensure we maintain CNN's long record of reporting on atrocities around the world, even if in these cases we could do so only years later to protect the lives of innocent people.

Eason

_______________

Since I started this thread with his article, I thought it important to post this.
 
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