Covering the war for the Army: Army Spec. Catherine Threat files stories about the military for the military. She wants to be in the middle of the action--but some stories are off limits.
Spinner, Jackie
Army Spec. Catherine Threat strode across the cement tarmac of LZ
Washington in Baghdad's International Zone, packs strapped to her
front and back and a tripod slung across her shoulder in place of a
rifle. Her weapon, a Beretta pistol, was holstered on the front of her
armored vest and clanked against the tripod as she hoofed it with more
than 60 pounds of gear.
The 37-year-old from Atlanta was catching a Black Hawk helicopter
to cover a story for the American Forces Network in the southern Iraqi
city of Najaf. The trip was later scrapped because of a sandstorm, but
Threat made the most of the ride from the helicopter pad in the IZ
(formerly the Green Zone) to the Baghdad airport and back. She begged
the military contract pilot to make sharp turns, dipping to the left and
then to the right as she angled her Panasonic P2HD out the open door of
the twin-engine utility bird to capture B-roll of the hazy brown Baghdad
neighborhoods unfolding in dizzying scenes beneath her.
[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]
The next morning, Threat talked some soldiers from the Army's
27th Brigade Support Battalion into letting her hop into the turret
until the gunner needed to take his position in the harness. Threat
wanted to shoot her camera from the vantage point of the swiveling
turret, the best seat in the Mine Resistant Ambush Protected vehicle, as
far as she was concerned. It also is the most dangerous. But Threat is
one of those green soldiers in Iraq anxious to get into the fight in
Afghanistan without really knowing what it may cost them.
Threat is a backpack journalist--and like most members of the 209th
Broadcast Operations Detachment from Rome, Georgia, she sees herself as
a journalist, even though her mission is to boost the morale of the
troops. As she puts it, she does not want to be stuck in an office, out
of the action, when the real story is on a mountaintop with a lonely
soldier fighting his own war.
"I like the idea that there's some guy doing something,
and he thinks no one cares what he's doing," Threat says.
"I get to go out and tell his story and tell everyone what
he's doing. I'm not here to tell the world what the soldiers
are doing. I'm here to tell the soldiers that what they are doing
is important."
AFN Iraq is a network of radio stations and TV programming, both
news and entertainment, produced by soldiers for soldiers, a job that
has become easier as combat operations abate and all but 50,000 troops
prepared to leave by the end of August.
What might have been seen as ridiculously soft news, propaganda
even, in previous years has become the real story in the summer of 2010.
Morale is fairly high in most parts of Iraq (with hot spots like Mosul
and Kirkuk being the most obvious exceptions). The biggest complaint at
FOB Prosperity in Baghdad, where AFN Iraq is based, is boredom, routine,
having to provide rote personal security protection for diplomats.
"The war in Baghdad is still going on, but it's not being
fought with mortars," Threat notes. "It's being fought
over chai."
Staff Sgt. Nikki Prodomos, TV/News Team chief for AFN Iraq (and
Threat's civilian equivalent of an assignment editor), is a radio
news anchor from Reading, Pennsylvania.
[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]
"It's a balancing act," Prodomos says.
"I've told my soldiers that in addition to being journalists,
we are public affairs officials."
That means some story ideas might be knocked down because they
simply don't fit the image the Army wants to project. Security
aside, the Army is not likely to report on what this civilian journalist
spotted as potential story lines during a four-day embed: the eagerness
of troops on their first deployment to see action; the battle-scarred
troops on their second or third deployments who know better; the
probability that when the Iraqis assumed control of a U.S. installation,
it would be trashed in a week.
During the layover at the Baghdad airfield, before finding out that
her trip to Najaf had been canceled, Threat wandered around with her
camera, trying to find a story. Most of the soldiers were waiting to
catch flights. Threat was anxious to turn her video camera on but said
"the Army doesn't want to show bored soldiers." So she
didn't bother.
At the same time, Maj. Jeff Weir, the commander of AFN Iraq, says
that like any journalist or station manager, his civilian equivalent, he
strives for credibility. "Walter Cronkite is not the only guy with
a camera like in Vietnam," he says. "Everyone has one. If we
try to say something that is propaganda, people will see right away
that's not true. Everyone knows bad news only gets worse."
Unlike most of her comrades, Threat has not had years of experience
as a digital journalist. Or any kind of journalist, for that matter. She
was a stay-at-home mom with three children who joined the Army a year
and a half ago. She got assigned to MOS 46R (the Army's broadcast
specialty) and only after she was sent to training did she figure out
what it was.
But Threat learned quickly what many civilian journalists armed
with a pen, video camera, digital single lens reflex camera and audio
recorder have discovered: Going out with a backpack of gear she knows
how to use can be enormously liberating. She is the whole production
team, the complete package of journalist who asks questions, picks a
medium to tell the story and then comes back to the office (or borrowed
sleeping space if she's out on assignment) to put it together.
Sgt. 1st Class Patrick Compton is one of the veteran broadcast
journalists of the 209th. He spent six years as a cameraman for CBS and
a year as an editor. With AFN Iraq, he acts as a news director.
Occasionally, he assigns himself a story. "I like to get back to my
roots," he said, unapologetically, as he set out for Camp Cropper
on July 15 to cover the handover of the detainee facility to the Iraqi
government. "I'm excited about this story. This is a cool one
to do."
Compton had already been to Cropper the week before to shoot B-roll
and conduct his interviews. He had special access to the soldiers who
had created oversize, symbolic keys for the event. He had footage of the
detainee camps and exclusive interviews with soldiers who acted as
wardens. But when four detainees escaped the next week, AFN ignored the
story.
Still, Compton says the military environment has produced a crop of
backpack journalists who are competitive, at least in terms of ability
to produce multimedia journalism in some of the toughest environments.
"With other technology, we're always behind, but not this
part," he says. "We've been ahead because we've had
to adapt. We don't have the luxury in a combat situation to send
out two or three guys. We send out one guy."
Because of his dual role as a journalist and public affairs
specialist, Compton says he gets the story in a way some civilian
journalists may not. Like Prodomos, he calls it a balancing act.
"I work in the media, and I work with the media," he
says. "I don't see it as propaganda. It's just the nature
of the beast. If we don't push what is happening, no one is going
to see it."
Jackie Spinner
Spinner (jackiespinner@mac.com) is a former Washington Post staff
writer and author of "Tell Them I Didn't Cry: A young
journalist's story of joy, loss and survival in Iraq." After
leaving the Post in 2009 and starting a literacy project in Belize,
Spinner returned to Iraq in January to establish a student newspaper at
The American University of Iraq.
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