Accidently, On Purpose

This must read from Wretchard.

Even with today’s proliferation of compact photographic equipment, a legitimate photojournalist rarely gets the opportunity to capture an execution. Apart from the beheadings which are purposely recorded on video by the jihadis and from gun camera film, most footage of people actually being shot are taken by photographers in company with combatants who are ready to film an ambush. Those individuals are combat cameramen for their armies or embedded reporters. The most famous analogue to the Associated Press sequence of photographs is probably the Eddie Adams photo of the execution of Vietcong Captain Bay Lop by South Vietnamese General Nguyen Ngoc Loan. Adams owed that opportunity to General Loan himself, who brought Adams along to cover what he believed to be a justifiable summary execution. Adams depressed the shutter at exactly the moment Loan fired and photo analysis actually shows the impact of the bullet on Bay Lop’s skull.
It may have been pure luck, but it was surely the longest of odds that would have brought an Associated Press cameraman to the site of a surprise attack on two Iraqi electoral workers. As it was, the AP photograph was unable to capture the actual execution, only the moments shortly before and after the Iraqis were killed. Although the Eddie Adams photograph was widely used to illustrate the ‘brutality’ of the Saigon government, the photos taken by the Associated Press
are unlikely to reflect badly on the electoral worker’s killers. Press reports highlight the confidence and boldness of the insurgents. “Both of the victims shown in the sequence wore traditional Arab headscarfs. In contrast, the attackers were bareheaded and apparently unafraid to show their faces”, suggesting that ‘collaborators’ must conceal their faces while the Ba’athists stride with impunity through the light of day. It was fortunate for the AP that their photographer was accidentally there.

A similar thing happened during the murder and desecration of the 4 contract workers in Fallujah. Though it was an Arab news outlet, the cameras were there and rolling. The “ambush” was carefully set up for media consumption.
They learned from the best. I don’t know what was more outrageous – the admission by Eason Jordan that CNN had been functioning as the Western propoganda wing of Saddam Hussein’s information ministry – or the mild mumble of disapproval that the rest of the MSM reacted with.
How long are we going to tolerate media outlets who accept invitations from terorist regimes and organizations, in order to capture a few drops of bloody propoganda on film? At what point do their actions cross the line from observer to participant? I can honestly say that I’d sleep better tonight knowing the AP photographer who panted along behind these thugs like an adrenaline-intoxicated puppy was behind bars under terrorist conspiracy or accessory to murder charges.
It’s bad enough that news consumers have to do their own fact checking, and bring in their own document experts to verify the information being presented as “truth”. Now we have to worry that the RPG triggerman who has selected our restaurant, our bus, our airplane for random anhilation has a goddamn AP cameraman in tow.

9 Replies to “Accidently, On Purpose”

  1. We’re getting to a point where the ‘journalists’ felt it’s perfectly right to ’embed’ themselve with the terrorist to get some good shot of American getting killed.
    Fine, those ‘journalists’ also have the rights to get blown away by JDAM along with their terrorists sponsors with no recourse.

  2. Playing the Devil’s Advocate here, perhaps the journalist’s images can be used for purposes of prosecution in a murder trial? At least that way some good would come of it.

  3. To play Devil’s advocate, in this case, means the Devil has a better shot of winning an acquital.
    The journalist wasn’t a casual observer. He was a participant in the process – surely it cannot be argued with a straight face that he did not anticipate what sort of scene was about to unfold on his behalf. And what did he do? Snapped dutifully away, and turned over the images for public consumption. That sealed the bargain.
    Who knows how many others will die as a result of his complicity, as his images provide aid and comfort to the enemy.

  4. You’re talking to the guy who spent an hour and a half crawling across a farmer’s field on his stomach this past Saturday evening to snap some pics of the Acclaim natural gas well fire:
    http://tinyurl.com/5hhsu
    http://tinyurl.com/46pzc
    There was a lot of security roaming the area thus the serpentine approach. Did I mention that it was bloody freezing, there were snow drifts, and that I had 40 lbs of gear with me?
    While I don’t think I’d work with a Jihadi (I’d be too tempted to shove a landmine up his wazoo), I can’t deny the ungodly compulsion to get ‘the shot’.

  5. Crawling through the fields on your stomach? I wish I was with you, I coulda brought along my – ERR – my family’s 12-gauge shotgun and maybe bagged a couple of deer.
    Signed,
    J. F. Kerry
    P.S. nice pics

  6. Well if you had bagged the security guards instead I wouldn’t have had to do the whole stealth thing. It certainly didn’t help my cold along any — I spent most of Sunday sneezing my head off. 🙁

  7. Whose side are they on? I think we already know.

    I do want to squelch one rumor before it gets started: I’m reasonably certain AP didn’t know about 9/11 in advance. Why? Because if they had we’d have film of the first plane approaching the Trade Center.

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