Deathtrap Iraq

14 January 2006

Website attacks critic of War

Rep. John P. Murtha (D-Pa.), the former Marine who is an outspoken critic of the war in Iraq, has become the latest Democrat to have his Vietnam War decorations questioned. In a tactic reminiscent of the Swift Boat Veterans for Truth assault on Sen. John F. Kerry (D-Mass.) during the 2004 presidential campaign, a conservative Web site yesterday quoted Murtha opponents as questioning the...

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14 January 2006

British journalist kidnapped in Iraq reports lucky escape

A Dubai newspaper is reporting that one of its journalists in Iraq was held captive for five days in December before being freed by US troops during a chance raid on an insurgent hideout. English-language UAE daily Emirates Today said its correspondent Phil Sands, a 28-year-old Briton, was kidnapped by unknown gunmen on December 26 from a Baghdad neighbourhood as he travelled with a local driver...

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13 January 2006

Civil war looms; media yawns

Will yesterday's in-your-face decision by Abdul Aziz al-Hakim, Iraq's most influential Shiite leader, to renege on his pledge to amend the new Constitution in a manner acceptable to Sunnis be the shove in the back that sends Iraq over the brink into all-out civil war? It certainly has that potential. Before the constitution was put to a vote in October, Sunnis were threatening to boycott the...

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11 January 2006

The night the Americans came: Iraqi report's first-hand account

Last weekend an American special task force unit raided my house. It was precisely the kind of terrifying experience I have had described to me over and over again by Iraqis I have interviewed in the past two-and-a-half years. My wife, Zina, described it as like something out of a Hollywood action movie. It began at half past midnight on Saturday when explosives blew apart the three entrances to...

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10 January 2006

Iraq abduction: Press freedom organisations alarmed

International press freedom organisations have expressed alarm at the abduction of American journalist Jill Carroll in Baghdad, and the murder of her interpreter. Carroll, a freelancer on assignment in Iraq for the Christian Science Monitor, was kidnapped on January 7 by unidentified gunmen in the Adil neighborhood of western Baghdad with her interpreter, Allan Enwiyah. KIDNAPPED AND KILLED...

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10 January 2006

CSM journalist's abduction in Iraq: A statement from the Christian Science Monitor

Jill Carroll, a freelance writer currently on assignment for The Christian Science Monitor, was abducted in western Baghdad on Saturday morning, local time. Her Iraqi interpreter was fatally wounded in the kidnapping. Her Iraqi driver escaped unharmed. At this point, no one has claimed responsibility. Jill, 28, is an established journalist who has been reporting from the Middle East for Jordanian...

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9 January 2006

Female journalist kidnapped in Iraq

Gunmen kidnapped a female American journalist and killed her Iraqi translator Saturday in western Baghdad, according to agencies. An Interior Ministry spokesman said the translator told police before he died that the abduction took place when he and the journalist were heading to meet Adnan al-Dulaimi, head of the Sunni Arab Iraqi Accordance Front, in the Adel neighborhood of the city. The gunmen...

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9 January 2006

US forces arrest Guardian reporter in Iraq

US forces arrested an award-winning Iraqi journalist after raiding his Baghdad home and opening fire in the bedroom where he was sleeping with his wife and children, the Guardian reported on Monday. Dr Ali Fadhil works for the Guardian and Britain’s Channel 4. SUSPECT IN U.S. EYES: Ali Fadhil, who two months ago won the Foreign Press Association young journalist of the year award, was hooded and...

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25 December 2005

US image problem rooted in history, not media

US President George W. Bush yet once again blamed Arab media for his country’s image problem. "I recognize we got an image issue, particularly when you have television stations, Arabic television stations that are constantly just pounding America - saying America is fighting Islam, Americans can't stand Muslims, this is a war against a religion," Bush commented following a speech in Philadelphia...

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22 December 2005

Poll: Most think propaganda campaign in Iraq wrong

Almost three-quarters of Americans think it was wrong for the Pentagon to pay Iraqi newspapers to publish news about U.S. efforts in Iraq, a new USA TODAY/CNN/Gallup Poll shows. USA TODAY reported earlier this month that the Pentagon plans to expand beyond Iraq an anti-terrorism public relations campaign that has included secret payments to Iraqi journalists and publications who printed stories...

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