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- <text id=90TT2389>
- <title>
- Sep. 10, 1990: Front-Row Seat
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- Sep. 10, 1990 Playing Cat And Mouse
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- PRESS, Page 67
- Front-Row Seat
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> Luck is the residue of design, an old saying goes, and
- Caryle Murphy of the Washington Post has turned that into her
- own version of Murphy's Law. As Saddam Hussein intensified his
- war of words against Kuwait, she decided to fly from her bureau
- in Cairo to the Persian Gulf emirate for a firsthand look. Thus
- she was the only American reporter in Kuwait when Iraqi troops
- invaded on Aug. 2. Her calm, lucid eyewitness reports--some
- printed without a byline to disguise the fact that she was
- there--will surely be among the prime candidates for
- journalism prizes next spring. As Murphy wrote in one dispatch,
- she had "a front-row seat for witnessing a small nation being
- crushed by its larger neighbor."
- </p>
- <p> Murphy, who moved into the apartment of some American
- friends to avoid Iraqi troops in her hotel lobby, was initially
- able to tour the city by taxi with two European journalists.
- Some diplomats, including Belgians, provided facilities for
- filing stories. On Aug. 14 some Europeans made an early-morning
- run for Saudi Arabia; Murphy, who was staying across town,
- could not join them. Two days later, Iraq ordered all American
- and British citizens to report to hotels and register with
- Iraqi forces. "I did make a couple of taxi trips after that,"
- she said, "but it was pretty nerve-racking."
- </p>
- <p> In one dispatch, Murphy described the Iraqi attack on the
- Emir's palace as seen from her hotel window. "Throughout the
- day," she wrote, "the sound of machine-gun and mortar fire
- echoed through the city as a dull percussion accompaniment" to
- the siege. A few days later, she described the captured city
- as being like "the eye of a storm" as the main highways "give
- off a low hum from the washboard-like ruts caused by the tread
- of heavy tanks."
- </p>
- <p> Murphy eventually made contact with someone who helped her
- join a convoy making a daring cross-desert escape to the Saudi
- border. A cheer went up when word reached the Washington Post
- newsroom last week that she was safe. Through the whole ordeal,
- the Massachusetts-born Murphy, 43, managed to keep her Yankee
- sense of thrift. When she telephoned the Post from Riyadh last
- week, an assistant tried to switch her to foreign editor David
- Ignatius. Murphy demurred. "This hotel is charging too much.
- Have David call me back."
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-