Abstract
The Pentagon made it clear from the beginning of the war against Iraq, writes eminent journalist and author Knightley, there would be no censorship. What it failed to say was that war correspondents might well find themselves in a situation similar to that in Korea in 1950. This was described by one American correspondent as the military saying: "You can write what you like - but if we don't like it we'll shoot you." The figures in Iraq tell a terrible story. Fifteen media people dead, with two missing presumed dead. If you consider how short the campaign was, Iraq will be notorious as the most dangerous war for journalists ever - and the most dishonest.
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