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- <text id=91TT0239>
- <title>
- Feb. 04, 1991: Living Life To The Fullest--In Baghdad
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Feb. 04, 1991 Stalking Saddam
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- PEOPLE, Page 72
- Living Life to the Fullest--in Baghdad
- </hdr><body>
- <p>By Sophfronia Scott/Reported by Wendy Cole/New York and Joseph
- J. Kane/Atlanta
- </p>
- <p> With his balding pate, excited voice and habitual twitching
- of the mouth, he is hardly the image of a smooth network
- honcho. His colleagues point out that his TV work still has a
- heady taste of print, the ineradicable remnant of more than 20
- years as a wire-service correspondent in Vietnam and around the
- world. In fact, he has battled constantly with TV producers who
- want pictures to do more of the talking and him less. In short,
- CNN's Peter Arnett is just the right man for the job he has
- held for the past two weeks: the last American reporter in
- Baghdad.
- </p>
- <p> Arnett, 56, is a correspondent's correspondent who believes
- it is better to get out some of the news--even when censored
- and sometimes manipulated by Iraq--than none at all. The
- decision to stay put at Baghdad's Al Rasheed Hotel after his
- colleagues had departed was his alone, and he made it with a
- typical lack of fuss. "I've been in much more dangerous
- situations in my career with much less attention than I'm
- getting now," he said last week. "It's just another story."
- </p>
- <p> Arnett's journalistic odyssey began 30 years ago, when he
- left his native New Zealand after college and went to work in
- Bangkok writing for a small English-language paper. He then
- became editor and sole reporter of the Vientiane World, based
- in the Laotian capital. The brash, gregarious Arnett made many
- friends in his off-hours, his flat New Zealand twang usually
- loud enough to be easily distinguished in a crowded room.
- Visitors abounded at his eclectic residences, one of which
- tended to flood during the rainy season and had snakes
- occasionally popping out of the toilet. For extra money he
- worked as a stringer for the Associated Press, Reuter and
- U.P.I.
- </p>
- <p> Arnett proved a force to be reckoned with when he became a
- full-time A.P. correspondent early in the Vietnam War. He
- stayed in Vietnam for the whole conflict, spending 13 years
- tirelessly on the front lines, in jungles and paddy fields,
- breaking stories left and right and filing them in crisp but
- powerful prose. His Vietnam colleagues remember him as a hard
- worker who enjoyed the basics of his craft, put extra energy
- into digging out the facts and took only prudent risks--no
- Rambo tendencies there. Because he always seemed to know more
- than he was supposed to, he frequently drew the ire of the
- military. Says photographer Horst Faas, who worked with him in
- Vietnam: "He refused to sit in the back of press briefings and
- rely on secondhand or thirdhand reports." Arnett's work in
- Vietnam won him a Pulitzer Prize.
- </p>
- <p> While in Saigon he married a Vietnamese named Nina and had
- two children, Andrew, now 26, and Elsa, 23. He later based his
- family in New York City while he pursued the world's martial
- news; he and his wife separated several years ago. During his
- stint in Southeast Asia, Arnett developed a taste for the local
- artwork, and he has garnered an impressive collection of
- pottery, scrolls, bronzes and sculpture.
- </p>
- <p> Back in New York, Arnett resisted A.P.'s attempts to turn
- him into a deskman. When tapped by CNN to cover the fledgling
- network's international war beat in 1981, he jumped at the
- chance. The job took him to Nicaragua, El Salvador, Moscow,
- Angola and Beirut. He was based in Jerusalem covering, among
- other things, the intifadeh when he seized the opportunity to
- go to Baghdad on Jan. 11.
- </p>
- <p> Today Arnett's home is a three-bedroom apartment in
- Jerusalem decorated with Russian paintings and antique carpets.
- When at home, he rises early for walks in a nearby park, works
- late and afterward likes to seek out fellow correspondents for
- long and talky dinners. But even amid this apparent
- tranquillity, Arnett always seems poised for some new
- challenge. As he has often told his family, "I want to live
- life to the fullest every single day because, who knows,
- tomorrow I could get blown to bits." Being in Baghdad surely
- offers the biggest adventure yet.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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