Last week the FBI officially warned news organizations that
it has received "credible information" that a splinter group of the
Islamic State has been ordered to kidnap journalists in the Mideast and take
them to Syria.
I am not surprised by this news. It is, after all, a
well-known tactic of Islamist terrorists to kidnap and murder journalists.
Beyond the obvious political reasons for kidnapping and
murdering journalists is another less apparent motive.
Journalists, especially those from nations with a free press,
disseminate information and there is nothing Islamic fundamentalists and
terrorists hate more than free-flowing information. With information comes
knowledge and the last thing religious fanatics like the Islamic State want is
an informed and educated people who can actually think for themselves.
In its rare intelligence bulletin to news organizations the
FBI warned that the group will attempt to hide its affiliation with the Islamic
State in order to gain access to unsuspecting correspondents, cameramen and
photographers.
The bulletin also cited an online post by an Islamic State
supporter who wrote that media personnel such as "anchormen, field reporters
and talk show hosts" were "prioritized targets."
The Islamic State has already beheaded two American
journalists, James Foley and Steven Sotloff, and two British aid workers. The
group is believed to be holding a several other Western hostages.
The Committee to
Protect Journalists reports that more than 70 journalists already have
been killed covering the Syrian conflict since it began in March 2011.
The U.S.-based organization estimates 30 local and
international journalists are missing in Syria. One of them is Austin Tice, 33,
a former U.S. Marine working as a freelance reporter for The Washington Post
and McClatchy Newspapers who was kidnapped August 2012 while working in Syria. (You
can watch a video about Tice by clicking on the link at the end of this post.)
Kidnapped Journalist Austin Tice |
Instead their reporters file reports from Turkey and Lebanon
and rely on secondary sources inside Syria. They also interview refugees and
aid workers and monitor social media in the region.
As someone who once covered wars and revolutions from Asia
to Latin America I can't imagine trying to cover a conflict without actually
being on the ground where the fighting is taking place.
The closest I ever came to such a situation was the brief Falklands/Malvinas
war between Great Britain and Argentina in 1982. Several hundred journalists
(me included) were not allowed by Argentina to travel to the Falkland/Malvinas
Islands. Instead, we had to cover the war from Buenos Aires and the Sheraton
Hotel, where the Argentine authorities had set up a press room (AKA
"Rubber Room") on the third floor.
There, we received government handouts that provided highly
sanitized military reports on how the war was going. While it was the safest I
had ever been while covering a war, it was also the most frustrating experience
of my career as a war correspondent.
After an evening of consuming too much Argentine beer and
wine eight of us correspondents decided to charter a fishing boat to take us to
the islands. We actually found someone willing to do it for $5,000, but at the
last minute the boat's captain refused to go, saying he had been warned that if
he tried the Argentine Navy would sink his boat with all hands.
Looking back on it, I think I would rather have taken my
chances of surviving an attack by the Argentine Navy than reporting the story from
Syria today.
Covering war is dangerous work. As a noncombatant you risk
being shot, shredded by shrapnel, or blown up by a mine or improvised explosive
device. But covering war AND shielding yourself from fanatics like those in the
Islamic State is asking a lot of reporters and photographers.
Sadly, many of the journalists who are putting themselves in
harm's way today in Syria, Iraq and Afghanistan are freelancers.
For freelancers covering war has always been the fast track
to establish their journalistic chops and work their way into a professional
news organization. Reputations are made this way.
It takes guts to go into a war zone with little more than
the clothes on your back and the vague promise that if you file enough "good
stuff" you might "get a shot at the big time."
My advice to those who feel they MUST race off to places
like Syria, Iraq and Afghanistan: Make
haste slowly. Life is already short. And I have yet to find a story that was
worth more than my life, insignificant as it may be.
As a colleague of mine at the Chicago Tribune always told me: "Take
time to stop and smell the flowers."
Good advice that.
(The link below will take you to a video about Austin Tice)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ezwZdCXXqps
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