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Home / World

Arnett joins Daily Mirror after NBC firing over Iraqi interview

1 Apr, 2003 04:23 AM4 mins to read

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8.55am

LONDON - Britain's Daily Mirror has hired veteran New Zealand reporter Peter Arnett, sacked by American TV network NBC after he told Iraqi television the US, war plan against Saddam Hussein had failed.

"I report the truth of what is happening in Baghdad and will not apologise for it," he told
the tabloid newspaper, one of the most prominent opponents of Britain's involvement in the war.

Arnett, 68, who as a CNN reporter in 1991 was one of the few western journalists reporting from Baghdad during the previous Gulf War, said in an interview on Sunday with state-owned Iraqi TV that the US military would need to rewrite its war plan.

"I am still in shock and awe at being fired," Arnett - who won a Pulitzer prize for his Vietnam War coverage - wrote under the banner headline "This war's NOT working."

America was re-appraising the battlefield, delaying the war, maybe a week, and re-writing the war plan, Arnett said in the interview. "The first war plan has failed because of Iraqi resistance now they are trying to write another war plan."

Arnett, who won a Pulitzer Prize for his coverage of the Vietnam War, told NBC's "Today" show, "I said in that interview essentially what we all know about the war, that there have been delays in implementing policy, there have been surprises.

"But clearly by giving that interview I created a firestorm in the United States and for that I am truly sorry. My stupid misjudgement was to spend fifteen minutes in an impromptu interview with Iraqi television," he said.

His assignment with NBC and National Geographic represented a chance for redemption after he was fired from CNN in 1998 after the network retracted a documentary, in which Arnett alleged that US commandos had used sarin gas on American defectors in the Vietnam war.

NBC said in a statement it was wrong for Arnett to grant an interview with state-controlled Iraqi TV at a time of war and chastised him for making personal observations and opinions.

"His remarks were analytical in nature and were not intended to be anything more," the network said.

On Sunday, Arnett told Iraqi television that American war planners had underestimated the determination of Iraqi troops to fight US and British troops and that the Pentagon seemed to be amending its original strategy.

MSNBC, which had been using Arnett's reports, also severed ties with him. "I'm not aware of anybody in the journalism community who has seen the war plan, much less Peter Arnett," said Erik Sorenson, MSNBC president and general manager.

"It's just inappropriate and arguably unpatriotic for an American to be communicating these things to the Iraqi government and the Iraqi people," he added.

Asked how much of a priority patriotism should be for an objective journalist, he said, "When you go on state-controlled television after Iraq's vice president promised to send terrorists into your country, I do think some patriotism is appropriate in this instance."

On Saturday after a suicide car bomb that killed at least four US soldiers, Iraq's vice president Taha Yassin Ramadan said it would use any method that "stops or kills the enemy."

Arnett also said there was a "growing challenge to President Bush about the conduct of the war and also opposition to the war."

That view echoed similar comments in many US media after the rapid advance of US forces through southern Iraq slowed south of Baghdad amid disruptive attacks on its long supply lines and persistent resistance, particularly in the towns.

Arnett's remarks were received with anger by the administration in Washington. One White House source said they were based on "a position of complete ignorance."

In another media development, veteran reporter Geraldo Rivera, a correspondent for Fox News, is being removed from Iraq by the US military for reporting Western troop movements in the war, the Pentagon said on Monday.

Hundreds of reporters from around the world are currently assigned to US and British military units to report the war in Iraq under ground rules that allow them freedom to report without compromising the security of the troops.

Arnett, while apologetic on NBC, said he has granted many interviews in the past and that his remarks were not "out of line with what experts think."

"Maybe some people think I'm insane, but I'm not anti-military," he added. "This is the biggest story of my life." Asked what the future held for him, Arnett said: "There's a small island, that I've inhabited in the South Pacific that I will try to swim to."

"I'll leave, I'm embarrassed," he said.

- REUTERS


Herald Feature: Iraq war

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