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- FROM THE PUBLISHER, Page 15
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- Old and new are terrifyingly juxtaposed in war, and senior
- correspondent Bruce van Voorst has had a unique opportunity to
- observe both. For this week's issue he talked to U.S. troops
- in the Saudi Arabian desert close to the Kuwaiti border. They
- are on the eve of battle, and, as generations of warriors have
- done before them, they wait and wonder what it will be like.
- Meanwhile, a formidable aerial attack thunders overhead.
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- During the past months, Van Voorst has covered the prelude
- to war, traveling between Washington and Dhahran to study the
- logistics of the U.S. buildup and to witness firsthand the
- deployment of a half-million men and women in the Middle East.
- He watched Saudi highways become clogged "until finally," he
- says, "the number of troops and tanks and artillery in one
- place was greater than anyone in this generation has ever
- seen." After Operation Desert Shield became Operation Desert
- Storm, Van Voorst reported on the air arsenal of high-tech
- guidance systems and sophisticated weaponry that has been used
- with such precision. There too are war's anachronisms: "Vintage
- B-52s drop thousands of tons of `smart' bombs," Van Voorst
- notes, "and the carrier Midway, which launches aircraft that
- can outfly anything the Iraqis can put up, was commissioned in
- 1945."
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- This is not Van Voorst's first experience with war. He has
- covered fighting in the Dominican Republic and the revolution
- in Iran that brought the Ayatullah Khomeini to power. As
- national-security correspondent he reports on spies,
- intelligence surveillance and arms-control issues as well as
- on the Pentagon, patrolling the offices of the nation's top
- brass. Since the Iraqi occupation of Kuwait, he has been a
- frequent guest on PBS's MacNeil/Lehrer NewsHour, discussing
- strategy and technology.
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- War, says Van Voorst, is a time when journalists relearn
- many things. One truth they rediscover is about the quality of
- America's soldiers, the "grunts" who carry on the fight.
- "Whether standing in a cold drizzle, rain leaking into their
- ponchos," he says, "or hunkered down for hours in a bunker
- under artillery fire, they exude personal and professional
- integrity." It is another old lesson: in battle there are no
- ordinary soldiers; they are all extraordinary.
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- -- Louis A. Weil III
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