http://www.theregister.co.uk/content/6/29750.html

Airstrike! The Pentagon simplifies media relations
By John Lettice
Posted: 13/03/2003 at 17:10 GMT


Should war in the Gulf commence, the Pentagon proposes to take radical
new steps in media relations - 'unauthorised' journalists will be shot
at. Speaking on The Sunday Show on Ireland's RTE1 last Sunday veteran war
reporter Kate Adie said she had been warned by a senior Pentagon official
that uplinks, i.e. TV broadcasts or satellite phones, that are detected
by US aircraft are likely to be fired on. 

Bush pere's Iraq war featured tight control of the media, but the current
administration intends to go rather further. According to Adie (who,
overseas readers should be aware, is effectively a saint in the UK), the
Pentagon is vetting journalists who propose to cover the war, and is
taking control of their comms equipment. This presumably will ease the
logistics of managing the hacks quite considerably, because if the US has
control of all the gear, then any gear it doesn't know about that starts
broadcasting is presumably a target. 

According to Adie the official told her: "There is a 'no' list... they
have been warned." We presume that US forces will not be specifically
trying to kill journalists - that escalation sounds more like the next
war to us. But by warning of the dangers, the US is providing further
discouragement for the few journalists who'll attempt to report from
behind Iraqi lines, or to 'freelance' outside the control of the US
authorities. And should they get one or two while taking out unidentified
communications systems, well, they've covered themselves. They should
however bear in mind that should Saint Adie be in the slightest bit
damaged, no force on earth will be strong enough to save Tony Blair from
the British public. 

Adie's remarks came as part of a discussion of war reporting and media
freedom which also involved author Phillip Knightley, New York Times war
correspondent Chris Hedges and former Irish Times editor Connor Brady.
The whole discussion is well worth listening to, and we particularly
liked Hedges' put-down of CNN: "CNN survives from war to war; as soon as
the war starts they become part of the problem." You can find a partial
transcript of Adie's remarks and you can get the whole show here.. �

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