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Antiwar journalist tells of experiences in Iraq
Jamail questions U.S. motivations, media coverage of the war

By Teresa Mioli
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Journalist Dahr Jamail speaks to students and community members in the Jackson Geological Sciences Building Thursday.
Media Credit: Jon Huang
Journalist Dahr Jamail speaks to students and community members in the Jackson Geological Sciences Building Thursday.

Journalist Dahr Jamail, who worked for eight months as an unembedded journalist in Iraq, spoke to a packed auditorium Thursday night in the Jackson Geological Sciences Building.

The Center for Middle Eastern Studies, the School of Journalism, the International Socialist Organization, MEChA, Campus Antiwar Movement to End the Occupation, Campus Progress, Iranians for Peace and Justice and the Palestine Solidarity Committee sponsored the event.

Jamail said he made more than four trips to Iraq between November 2003 and February 2005. In his book "Beyond the Green Zone: Dispatches from an Unembedded Journalist in Occupied Iraq," Jamail includes interviews with Iraqi citizens and U.S. soldiers.

"Watching the buildup to the war and how the media handled that situation, the mainstream media, which was essentially a selling of the war without asking any of the responsible questions and critical questions that should have been asked, I was outraged at that kind of so-called journalism," Jamail said. "So I decided to go over to see what's happening in Iraq myself."

Texas State University student and Iraq War veteran Brian Henretta

opened for Jamail. Henretta worked in communications for the military while in Iraq and said the truth of what was happening overseas was not reported.

Jamail said some media outlets are improperly reporting the success of the military surge in Iraq, which began in early 2007.

When discussing justification for the war in Iraq, Jamail spoke about oil, Bush administration connections to contractors in Iraq, such as Halliburton, and the U.S. strategy for "global domination."

Greg Foster, Texas State University student and Iraq Army veteran, said there is not enough debate about the war.

"As long as we're believing the lies that are being told to us by the administration and by the media in this country, then we're gonna continue to be harming people in Iraq and we're gonna continue to be doing a disservice to our troops," Foster said.

Jamail said recent polls report that at least 70 percent of Iraqis support immediate, unconditional U.S. withdrawal from Iraq.

Mustafa Mezaal, an ESL student from Baghdad who arrived in Austin three months ago, said he does not agree with Jamail and that a majority of Iraqis do not want the U.S. to withdraw immediately.

"It's gonna be big chaos. It's gonna be like a big mess," Mezaal said. "I'm sorry, but we don't agree with you."
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Viewing Comments 1 - 9 of 9

Concerned Citizen

posted 4/04/08 @ 8:22 AM CST

This is very poor coverage by Teresa Mioli. She fills so much of this article with things that are irrelevant compared to the many serious stories of war crimes and poor journalism that Dahr Jamail documented. (Continued…)

TX Teacher

posted 4/04/08 @ 1:24 PM CST

I have to agree with "Concerned Citizen" about the poor reporting here. The choice to end the article with quote from a single student from Iraqi shows a strong bias on the journalists report. (Continued…)

Real Patriot

posted 4/04/08 @ 1:36 PM CST

She obviously didn't listen to the presentation, which spoke of the consequences of media continuing to fall to mainstream pressure of supporting the war. (Continued…)

David

posted 4/04/08 @ 3:03 PM CST

All the wars of the Twentieth Century have been financed, almost exclusively, through a system of debt and taxes, via the Federal Income Tax and the Federal Reserve Bank. (Continued…)

Laura Brady

posted 4/05/08 @ 4:37 PM CST

I too, agree with "concerned citizen" who points out that Teresa Mioli should never again cover the war in Iraq. In fact, she should be crafting a genuine apology for her past efforts at war-related journalism. (Continued…)

Greg Foster

posted 4/05/08 @ 5:21 PM CST

Actually I was misquoted. I didn't say, "gonna" I said "going to." Actually, I don't think "gonna" is a word. "Going to" is two words. Thanks.

Mohammed Al-Saedi

posted 4/05/08 @ 10:58 PM CST

I am one of the three Iraqi students who were sitting there on that day, and I'm Mustafa's friend.I respect all the opinions that are said here, this is a poor coverage of the event for sure. (Continued…)

Dana Cloud

posted 4/07/08 @ 2:25 PM CST

I emcee'd the Thursday night event with Dahr Jamail.

I spoke with Texan Editor Claire Harlin after the event about Teresa Mioli's hurt feelings. Contrary to Ms. (Continued…)

Mohammed Al-Saedi

posted 4/07/08 @ 2:40 PM CST

As a matter of fact, Mr.Jamail shook our hands and said I'm sorry I can't say everything in one hour, he admitted lying!

Cheers,

Mohammed

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