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- FROM THE PUBLISHER, Page 6
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- When Iraqi troops marched into Kuwait, the crisis demanded
- fast moves by news organizations around the world. Neither Iraq
- nor Kuwait encouraged much coverage by outsiders, and both
- countries were totally closed after the invasion. The challenge
- was to surround the area quickly.
-
- The man in charge of deploying TIME's troops is Barrett
- Seaman, deputy chief of correspondents. As the key link with
- our reporters around the globe, Barry is used to getting calls
- at all hours of the day and night. "On the day of the invasion,
- I talked to our Cairo correspondent Bill Dowell just after
- dawn," he says. "I told him the obvious: `Get close to the
- action.'"
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- That was easier said than done. Dowell dashed off for Dubai,
- one of the few countries along the gulf willing to take Western
- journalists. Cairo bureau chief Dean Fischer, who was working
- in New York City when the story broke, quickly grabbed a plane
- back to Cairo. By Monday, when we were planning this week's
- cover story, Seaman had seven correspondents in or on their way
- to six countries in the region. Dowell later moved on to
- Bahrain, much closer to the action. Senior correspondent James
- Wilde flew to Amman, Jordan, while Rome bureau chief Cathy
- Booth returned from vacation and headed for Ankara, Turkey.
- Seoul bureau chief David Jackson, who had reported from the
- Middle East for three years, flew to Dubai, and Beirut stringer
- Lara Marlowe headed for Damascus. "The way we operate is like
- a zone defense in football," Seaman says. "We have to move
- people over a vast and complicated field to cover the news."
-
- Seaman's major problem last week stemmed from Saudi Arabia's
- refusal to permit any reporters into the country. Reclusive in
- the quietest of times, the Saudis prohibited journalists even
- from covering American troops, although the Pentagon normally
- ferries a pool of journalists on combat missions. TIME and
- other news organizations protested the exclusion, and at week's
- end the Pentagon announced that a military pool would go to
- Saudi Arabia.
-
- Barry is used to dealing with delicate issues. He was TIME's
- chief White House correspondent before moving two years ago to
- his current hot seat in New York. Occasionally, he looks
- forward to a dull moment.
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- -- Louis A. Weil III
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