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In conjunction with our 45th anniversary and our special issue on the war, Columbia Journalism Review presented a panel discussion November 3 featuring five exceptional journalists with deep experience in Iraq. They are Deborah Amos of NPR; Rajiv Chandrasekaran of The Washington Post, Ali Fadhil, an Iraqi doctor turned translator/stringer for western journalists; Patrick Graham, a Canadian freelancer who spent a year in Fallujah; and Chris Hondros, a prize-winning photojournalist. Listen in on the conversation.


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Mind Games by Daniel Schulman
The Stringers by Paul McLeary
Scathing Memory by Judith Matloff
Baghdad Diary by Farnaz Fassihi
The List by Douglas McCollam

In August 2004, CJR asked Farnaz Fassihi of The Wall Street Journal to keep a diary of her time in Iraq. Before we could print her piece, we were scooped, inadvertently, by Fassihi herself. She often sent e-mails to friends, and her September 2004 letter reflected her mood at the time: grim. “Being a foreign correspondent in Baghdad these days is like being under virtual house arrest,” she began, and then later, “The genie of terrorism, chaos, and mayhem has been unleashed . . . as a result of American mistakes.” Somebody in the chain put the letter on the Internet, and it went around the world. Among fellow journalists the reaction was swift: some worried that an objective reporter had revealed so much; others felt she made it seem as if no reporting could be accomplished in Iraq; still others thought the e-mail was dead on. Meanwhile, something about the personal nature of the note communicated the reality, more forcefully than yards of standard prose, of what Iraqis call “the situation.” Here at CJR we wanted more, and for our forty-fifth anniversary issue we interviewed Fassihi and forty-six other journalists who have covered the war in Iraq. Out of their anecdotes and insights we constructed an oral history — the first of its kind. These people are covering the most significant story of our time and doing it under circumstances that nearly defy belief. They have lived and studied “the situation” closely, some of them for four years or more. This is their story.


Toby Morris


Chapter Ten: The Continuing Story
" I think a lot of journalists want every war to be like the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict: a place where you can stay in a nice
hotel, get up in the morning, drive in your car, see a battle … and then drive back just in time to send your pictures and have a nice dinner … But the world isn’t conformed to how journalists should cover—the world is as it is and we as journalists go and do it. Sometimes things are easy and sometimes things are incredibly hard. "- Chris Hondros, Getty Images

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