home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- FROM THE PUBLISHER, Page 7
-
-
- Despite the danger, 120 degrees desert heat and threat of
- poison gas, many gung-ho journalists would jump at the chance
- to travel with U.S. troops to the Middle East. But the Pentagon
- brings along only a small pool of reporters, who gather
- information for the rest of the media. News organizations take
- turns being on call for such operations, ready to send a
- journalist at a moment's notice. When the pool was mobilized
- for Operation Desert Shield, TIME was the newsmagazine standing
- by to participate (as it was, by coincidence, during last
- December's Panama invasion and 1987's Persian Gulf tanker-escort
- mission).
-
- TIME's minutemen in the current pool are Washington
- correspondent Jay Peterzell and photographer Dennis Brack, who
- were summoned to Andrews Air Force Base on Aug. 12. The
- assignment was a welcome one for Peterzell, a specialist in
- military and intelligence affairs. He packed hastily and caught
- a few hours of sleep before making the 5 a.m. rendezvous. The
- pool of 20 journalists flew from Andrews to MacDill Air Force
- Base near Tampa for a briefing with General H. Norman
- Schwarzkopf, commander in chief of U.S. Central Command. The
- reporters were astonished to learn the Pentagon's proposed
- itinerary: just one night in Saudi Arabia. "That struck us as
- unsporting," said Peterzell.
-
- But the Pentagon gradually relented. "As the life of the
- pool was extended a day or two at a time, we learned that the
- Saudis themselves had put no limit on our stay," Peterzell
- said. "This whole exercise," he added, "has been one in which
- all sides are feeling their way forward from a situation in
- which there was no Western coverage of events from inside Saudi
- Arabia to one of increasingly unrestricted access." Brack, who
- took part in the Persian Gulf press pool in 1987, noted that
- the military has so far placed few restrictions on the pictures
- he could take. "Some of the Army's photo opportunities might be
- corny," Brack says. "But they are getting photographers where
- they need to be -- and the troops do the rest. That's what we
- came to see."
-
-
- -- Louis A. Weil III
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-