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- <text id=91TT0385>
- <link 91TT0434>
- <link 91TT0262>
- <link 91TT0057>
- <title>
- Feb. 18, 1991: Jumping Out Of The Pool
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991 Highlights
- The Persian Gulf War:Desert Storm
- </history>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Feb. 18, 1991 The War Comes Home
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- THE GULF WAR, Page 39
- THE PRESS
- Jumping Out of the Pool
- </hdr><body>
- <p>A growing number of reporters are circumventing military
- restrictions in hopes of getting a better picture of the war
- </p>
- <p>By RICHARD ZOGLIN -- Reported by Lara Marlowe and Dick
- Thompson/ Dhahran
- </p>
- <p> Carl Nolte, a reporter for the San Francisco Chronicle,
- spent his first few days in Saudi Arabia wandering around
- Dhahran's International Hotel, mostly reading pooled reports
- from his peers. Then he moved to Riyadh, where he sat in on
- military briefings. Finally, exasperated, he climbed into his
- rented Chevrolet Caprice and simply headed north. He got lost
- several times on the poorly marked roads but eventually hooked
- up with U.S. troops, who complained to him about everything
- from inadequate supplies to late paychecks. Nolte duly sent the
- news home. "If you sit around waiting for the scraps to be fed
- to you," he says, "you're going to get the kind of things a dog
- gets: leftovers."
- </p>
- <p> Military officials refer to Nolte and his roving confreres
- as unilaterals. Reporters prefer to call them free-lancers.
- More bluntly, they are pool busters: reporters who are
- circumventing the superintended pool system imposed by the
- military to limit the number of journalists venturing into the
- Middle East battlefield. In the grand tradition of buccaneering
- war correspondents, these reporters are taking risks to give
- audiences a fuller picture of what is happening in the gulf.
- </p>
- <p> Journalists in Saudi Arabia have been griping about the pool
- system since before the war started. One fear was that military
- censors, who screen pool dispatches, would purge any material
- deemed unfavorable to the military. Despite a few incidents of
- tampering, that has not happened. But editors and reporters
- have a more basic objection: the news emerging from the pools
- is too limited, and often too late, to be of use in the
- competitive climate.
- </p>
- <p> The battle for Khafji was a case in point. Though pool
- reporters were stationed with the 1st U.S. Marine Division
- outside the Saudi city, they were not allowed into the town
- until 18 hours after fighting started between Iraqi armor and
- coalition forces. Early accounts of the battle came mostly from
- reporters operating on their own. One of them, John King of the
- Associated Press, sneaked into the city on the first night of
- fighting and watched as Arab troops tried to retake the town.
- "The pools did not get an accurate view [of the battle] because
- they didn't see it," says King. "They wrote that the Saudi and
- Qatari liberated the city, but they had no realistic view of
- how long it took, what happened or how many Iraqis were in
- there." The best footage of the battle came from two French TV
- crews and a team from Britain's Visnews, which were in Khafji
- well before U.S. pool cameramen. (Little of this was seen on
- American TV.)
- </p>
- <p> Free-lancing reporters have scored many other coups. Some
- of the first shots of the mammoth Iraqi-instigated oil slick
- came from a British ITN crew fully two days before pool footage
- arrived. A group of nonpool journalists driving near the
- Iraq-Saudi border last week got a scoop when four hungry Iraqi
- army deserters approached them and surrendered. Complaints
- about the pool reports have been growing. "Why didn't we get
- the oil spill? Why wasn't a pool on the [battleship] Missouri
- when it fired its guns?" asks Thomas Giusto of ABC, who is
- coordinating pool coverage for the four U.S. networks. "The
- pools have not been granted access to things when they are
- happening."
- </p>
- <p> Military officials continue to claim that the pool system
- is the best way to protect allied forces from being overwhelmed
- by reporters and to safeguard the journalists. The
- disappearance of CBS correspondent Bob Simon and his three-man
- crew, whose vehicle was found abandoned near the Kuwaiti border
- almost three weeks ago, weighs heavily on journalists, but it
- has not dampened their desire to do more independent reporting.
- "The last thing Bob Simon would want," says the A.P.'s King,
- "is for us to stop covering the war because he disappeared."
- </p>
- <p> Though there are no formal penalties for violating the
- rules, U.S. military officials have reported offenders to the
- Saudis, who have temporarily revoked some press credentials.
- For that reason, editors are reluctant to admit that they are
- encouraging reporters to break the pool restrictions. But it
- is clear that the practice is at least tacitly condoned. Robert
- Rosenthal, foreign editor of the Philadelphia Inquirer, says
- he tells his gulf reporters to "use your initiative to do what
- you can safely."
- </p>
- <p> Though pool busting appears to be on the rise, it is by no
- means always successful. Two A.P. reporters who showed up
- uninvited last week at the U.S. 24th Mechanized Infantry
- Division were detained for three hours and then sent back to
- Dhahran. A French TV crew that arrived on the outskirts of
- Khafji during the fighting was greeted by angry shouts from
- attending pool reporters. According to producer Alain Debos,
- the crew was forced at gunpoint by Marines to give up videotape
- it had shot of a wounded U.S. soldier.
- </p>
- <p> Some correspondents argue that the tight military
- restrictions add to the dangers they face. To skirt the rules,
- many are disguising themselves as military personnel, thus
- increasing the chances of being mistaken for combatants by the
- Iraqis. But even obeying the regulations can be hazardous.
- After pool reporter Douglas Jehl of the Los Angeles Times
- reported 50 U.S. military vehicles were missing, officials
- complained that his story, which had been cleared by censors,
- was contrary to the "best interests" of the military. They
- ordered him to leave the pool. Incidents like that will not
- make reporters any more eager to play by the steadily fraying
- rules.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
-