WASHINGTON,
October 6 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) - Almost as soon as the
United States unleashed its might against Afghanistan, another
conflict re-emerged between the U.S. military and the journalists
covering the war.
Journalists
and observers say much of what happened in the year since the war
began remains hidden because U.S. military officials imposed strict
controls on information and denied reporters access to the fighting,
sometimes at gunpoint, reported Agence France-Presse (AFP).
Military
officials, for their part, respond by saying secrecy is essential in a
war against a shadowy enemy.
Both
journalists and military officers familiar with the conflict say much
of it stems from mutual misunderstanding.
"I
think both sides benefit more from established professional
relationships," said Army Colonel Hiram Bell, commander of the
Defense Information School at Fort Meade, Maryland, which trains U.S.
military officers to handle the news media.
Telling
the story of the Afghan war proved costly to the media - at least
eight reporters died in the past year. Many journalists have sought
the relative security offered by close contact with U.S. troops even
as they chafed at the restrictions on coverage.
Those
who try to operate independently complain the U.S. military makes a
dangerous situation worse by harassing and threatening them.
One
notable incident occurred February 10, when Washington Post reporter
Doug Struck was restrained at gunpoint by U.S. troops while
investigating a missile attack in eastern Afghanistan that killed
suspected members of the al-Qaeda militant group.
"It
shows the extremes to which the military is going to keep this war
secret, to keep reporters from finding out what's going on,"
Struck told The Post in an interview from Afghanistan.
Another
reporter, Taiseer Allouni, had a very close call when the U.S. fired a
missile destroying al-Jazeera Satellite TV's office in Kabul.
Allouni escaped death miraculously then.
Military
officials speaking on condition of anonymity point out, however, that
the U.S. troops were on a combat patrol when Struck, accompanied by
armed bodyguards, approached them in an unmarked vehicle similar to
those used by enemy forces - creating the perception of a threat in
the soldiers' minds.
The
Afghan war began without the U.S. military activating pools of
reporters set up for just that purpose. Defense Secretary Donald
Rumsfeld launched a crusade against leaks to the media that included
threats of prosecution for anyone caught passing classified
information.
It
was only four months later, in late February, when the military
allowed general access to combat operations, creating a pool of
reporters to ride along in a massive offensive known as Operation
Anaconda that began March 2 in the Shahi Kot valley of eastern
Afghanistan.
The
use of special forces and air power for most of the fighting in
Afghanistan shifted the balance of power from the news media to the
military bureaucracy - and the public is the biggest loser, said
Richard Rubenstein, a professor at the George Mason University
Institute for Conflict Analysis and Resolution in Fairfax, Virginia.
"There's
a kind of strange naiveté on the part of journalists, especially in a
war situation when it comes to accepting official explanations,"
he said.
"One
gets the feeling that the press is being played."
The
complaints from reporters in Afghanistan mirror those made during the
1990-1991 Gulf war, when the U.S. military kept most reporters away
from the fighting, allowing only select pools to accompany troops.
In
exchange for access, the pool reporters were required to submit their
reports to military censors escorting them and who could delete
information defined as a security threat under ground rules accepted
by both sides.
A
big problem in the Gulf war was disagreement over what constituted a
security threat, said Carl Rochelle, a former CNN Pentagon reporter
who covered the war.
"A
lot of times, access was denied because they were afraid of how the
story might come out," he said. "If you do something stupid
and get people killed, expect it to be reported."
Military
guidelines call for maximum access consistent with security
requirements, Bell said, although he admits that doesn't always
happen.
"Obviously,
when you embed a journalist with a unit you're completely opening
yourself up to them," he said. "A lot of commanders are
apprehensive of that kind of exposure."
"No
one has ever been fired for not talking to the media," he added.
Reporters
need to do their part by taking the time to understand how the
military works and by keeping an open mind and not viewing the
military as "a bunch of baby-killers," Rochelle said, adding
the key to better war coverage is better access to the troops.
Reporters
and soldiers "need not be afraid of each other," he said.
Rubenstein
suggested that in future wars, the United Nations consider
establishing a press camp staffed with skilled people who can do
independent, neutral reporting, with international guarantees of
access to all sides similar to those of the International Committee of
the Red Cross