http://www.examiner.com/a-1000014~Author_reveals_the_horrors_of_war.htmlAuthor reveals the horrors of war
Oct 20, 2007 2:00 AM (6 hrs ago)
by Jessica Novak, The Examiner
Q: What does the average person not know about the Iraq War?
A: The level of violence for the people — over a million Iraqis have been killed; the catastrophic level of the refugee crisis — well over four million Iraqis are refugees; and the level of lawlessness on the ground. The U.S. military does not have control over anything that's not on base.
Q: What dangerous experiences have you encountered?
A: On several occasions I was shot at by U.S. troops … Once a car bomb detonated very close to my hotel. It blew up my door and windows. Chunks of my ceilings were falling. I was also temporarily detained with my translator by some resistance fighters. The
were so immediate, they happened so fast … I was just in survival mode, thinking ‘What happened?’ ‘Where do I need to go?’
{Being detained by fighters} was very scary because I had time to think ‘What’s going to happen?’ ‘Where am I going to be taken?’ Thankfully, it was over in an hour and they decided to let us go.
Q: Of all the devastating events you witnessed, what day stands out?
A: I think my most intense experience was in Fallujah during the April 2004 siege on the city. I watched a 10-year-old boy die who had been shot by a military sniper. Ambulances couldn't come because they were being shot at so his father drove to the clinic. The car jumped up over the curb. The father got out and carried his son into the clinic. I watched them working while he was on the table. That was really a profound thing to see especially being an American.
Q: How does being an American affect your work?
A: Seeing events from an Iraqi perspective probably had even more impact because I was an American. My government primarily caused the brunt of this suffering. definitely brought out feelings of shame and guilt. But you know as a journalist, when you’re on the ground, you shelve that stuff and get the job done.