Poynter Online
Go


Top Story

Paying for the News: Five Seeds for the Future of Journalism
Most Recent Articles
Most E-mailed
Recent Comments
Recent Tags
Community Activity

Poynter Training
Poynter Seminars
Small, in-person training experiences.
News University
Today's most popular courses on NewsU, Poynter's e-learning site for journalists.
Webinars
Our online classroom is just a click away. Learn more.
All Webinars
Home > Reporting, Writing & Editing
Tools: Text Sizeor, Print, e-mail, Permalink, Share
5:38 PM  Jan. 30, 2006
Why They Go: Three War Correspondents on the Work They Do
By Al Tompkins (More articles by this author)

More in this series

fter news broke Sunday about the attack that injured ABC's Bob Woodruff and Doug Vogt, I e-mailed three reporters with extensive experience covering war zones: Martin Fletcher of NBCByron Pitts of CBS and Susan Taylor Martin of Poynter's St. Petersburg Times.

I asked them each three questions:

1. Why do you do this work of going to dangerous places?

2. If journalists decided to just pull out of Iraq or not venture out of the "green zone," who would suffer?

3. How do you explain your journalistic duty to your family/loved ones who might urge you not to go?

Here are their responses.

Martin Fletcher
NBC News
Martin Fletcher
Martin Fletcher, NBC News Correspondent:

1. I love the adrenaline, I thrive on anarchy and if I believed at any moment that I could get wounded or killed, I wouldn't go. What story is worth that? None. However, it rarely occurs to me that I could get hurt. I feel impervious to danger, which of course is nonsense, but that's really the only way one can operate in a dangerous job. Firemen, soldiers, etc. -- few go into a situation really believing "I could get hurt." We go into the situation thinking, "I won't get hurt... somebody else may!" Otherwise you wouldn't do it. I began as a cameraman in Africa and the Middle East and have covered conflicts for three decades. Because of my work as a cameraman I believe in going as close to the action as possible, but carefully. My working philosophy is "Get in, get the story, get out" as quickly as possible. 
 
RELATED RESOURCES

When One of Your Own is Hurt

ABC News coverage of Woodruff & Vogt

ABC message boards

"Iraq War Reporters Face Unprecedented Danger"

"On the front lines" by Lee Woodruff

New York Times coverage of the attack

Romenesko latest

TVNewser links

Poynter Online Coverage of "World News Tonight"

I should add that I only go to these places because that is where NBC sends me. I would much prefer to cover the Paris fashion show -- but they won't send me!
 
2. Who would suffer? That's a very good question. The work we in TV do is so limited in Iraq by the danger, and we rely so much on our Iraqi colleagues to get the pictures and the information, that a good case can be made for saying we don't achieve much there, so why suffer the danger and the expense, why not leave it to the locals? I think it would be wrong to leave for those reasons. We need to do the best we can. Wherever people are suffering, we should do our best to be present. But frankly, if we left, our viewers would suffer little, nor would the Iraqis, but it would be a major blow to our credibility. We need to cover the news, wherever it is and at whatever risk. We just need to take all protective measures possible. But here's a question: If we knew there was about to be a nuclear holocaust, would we send staff to cover it? I don't think so! On the other hand, in '91, when we thought Iraq would attack Israel with chemical weapons, my crew and I were driving in Tel Aviv around the deserted streets during the attacks in protective gear, hoping to be the first to cover a chemical attack. How dumb is that? I certainly wouldn't do that today.
 
3. In 30 years my wife has only asked me once not to go somewhere and that is Iraq because I'm Jewish, married to an Israeli etc. She's never asked me before, so when NBC asked me to go to Iraq I said no, the first time ever. So I don't need to explain to my family. They understand that this is my job and I love it and they trust me. And when I told my mother not to worry because when I go to work I wear a flak jacket and a helmet, she answered, "Martin, if you have to wear a flak jacket and helmet to go to work, you should get a new job!"
 
You didn't ask this, but this is what I strongly believe. Staying safe in a war zone has nothing to do with experience, it's just dumb luck. Two friends of mine, the most experienced war correspondents imaginable, both died in silly incidents after a career of coverage (Neil Davis and Mohammed Amin). So these days I just try to narrow the odds by only doing what is really necessary. I feel that after taking risks for so long, the odds are against me. So I'm careful!

Susan Taylor Martin
St. Petersburg Times
Susan Taylor Martin
Susan Taylor Martin, Senior Correspondent covering foreign affairs:
I'm in Israel/Gaza/West Bank now (see bio) reporting on the Palestinian election but have seen the sad news about the ABC folks. Of course the obvious reason journalists go there and stay there is because that's where huge news is -- this war is costing American taxpayers billions of dollars, it is arguably destabilizing an entire region, it has divided the American public, and it has created utter misery for millions of Iraqis who thought the overthrow of Saddam Hussein would mean a better life for them.

I can't begin to express my admiration for the courage of journalists who remain there. The last time I was in Baghdad was in April 2004, when the insurgency really flared, and I'm not embarrassed to admit I'd be afraid to go back now (I have since been in safer northern Iraq). True, it's hard to report when you're pretty much confined to a hotel, but that's part of the story too. Despite all the progress that's purportedly being made, the very fact it's almost impossible for someone without enormous protection to venture safely more than few feet from a hotel lobby says volumes about what's really happening. You also get a palpable sense of the fears and tensions you could never get by reporting from a distance.

Aside from a genuine commitment to good coverage and cutting through all the fog, people drawn to war reporting almost certainly are adventuresome and even like living on the edge. You just hope you have families that understand that part of your nature!

Byron Pitts
Byron Pitts
Byron Pitts, CBS News Correspondent:

1. Dan Rather has a powerful saying: Fish gotta swim, birds gotta fly and reporters gotta go. Since the beginning of recorded history, men and women have gone to dangerous places simply to be a witness.  Like many of my colleagues, 9/11 changed me. Our world is at war on many fronts.  Each of us must play a role. I believe mine is to go places and seek truth. I don't want to die or get injured. I pray for my own safety and the safety of friends in harm's way. But at the end of the day, I know tomorrow is not promised and freedom has never been free.
   
2. If jourmalists pulled out, truth would suffer. History requires witnesses.

3. Fortunately for me, my family and most of my friends have a great faith. They know I don't take unreasonable risks. And they know I believe in God's grace. It's one reason why I say "I love you" to my wife and children and hug them every time we part.
            
And when I go to dangerous places we promise to pray more and worry less.

Correspondents
From left to right, top row: Martin Fletcher, Byron Pitts, Susan Taylor Martin, David Bloom; bottom row: Bob Woodruff, Doug Vogt, Michael Kelly, Ben Arnoldy
I hate war. I hate violence. I'd avoid it all the time if I could. But I was raised in church and raised to believe that to those whom much is given, much is required. The desire for freedom requires something of all of us. I go to dangerous places because it is sometimes necessary. Men and women have gone before me. And many will follow.

Tonight my family and I will go to our knees and pray for my friends at ABC and their families.

Other reflections
Why Ben Arnoldy, David Bloom, Michael Kelly and Chuck Murphy covered wars.


Read More In This Series:
Tools: Print, e-mail, Permalink, Comment On This Article, Share
Recent Comments:
Freelancers at particular risk- Adventures in dissolving SU
I was a reporter for virtually every English language paper in Moscow while the SU collapsed 1991-94, and got kidnapped at gunpoint just after the breakup, mugged several times and ambushed at my apartment (prefered assassination locale). I think the caste system of freelancers puts them at particular risk- once...
Michael Hammerschlag, 6:24 AM February 1, 2006
Read All Comments (4 comments)
Username
Password
New User? Signup Now
Poynter Careers