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On
the frontline - A reporters absorbing
account of recent momentous events
Manhattan to Baghdadm
By Paul McGeough. Allen and Unwin. 288pp. $29.95
Reviewer
::
David Sibley
Over
the next few weeks, perhaps, well be reading the words of
foreign correspondents from newspapers about a certain place in
the Middle East.
The
place of foreign correspondents is crucial for the understanding
of how conflicts erupt and develop and what happens during their
course.
Reporters,
such as the Sydney Morning Heralds Paul McGeough, are able
to say, in effect, I was there, I saw it happen.
This
is especially important when those who dislike what has happened
or would prefer another result had occurred challenge the veracity
of actual events.
A good
example of this is the Holocaust, where extreme right-wing ideologues
have fashioned a virulent industry out of claiming the murder of
6 million Jews never occurred.
In
McGeoughs case, he was in New York on September 11.
Just
weeks before, he had been in Afghanistan, seeking to interview anti-Taliban
commander Ahmad Shah Masoud.
Months
later he was back in Afghanistan, reporting on the collapse of the
Taliban as a result of their support of Osama bin Ladens al
Qaeda terrorist attack on September 11.
This
is gritty, seat-of-the-pants reporting from the front line.
Although
some might disagree with McGeoughs assessment of where the
US has taken the war against international terrorism, it is hard
to dispute his courage in writing hard-hitting news which is the
basis of this book.
Manhattan
to Baghdad is hard to put down and, given current events, might
well be the first in a series from the accomplished correspondent.
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