Region | Iraq
US media focus shifts from Iraq as country-building replaces war
The number of foreign journalists in Baghdad is declining sharply, a media withdrawal that reflects Iraq's changing situation.
- By Ernesto Londono and Amit R. Paley, Los Angeles Times-Washington Post
- Published: 00:02 October 13, 2008

Baghdad: The number of foreign journalists in Baghdad is declining sharply, a media withdrawal that reflects Iraq's changing situation.
The number of journalists travelling with American forces in Iraq has plummeted in the past year. US military officials say they "embedded" journalists 219 times in September 2007. Last month, the number shrank to 39. Of the dozen US newspapers and newspaper chains that maintained full-time bureaus in Baghdad in the early years of the war, only four are still permanently staffed by foreign correspondents. CBS and NBC no longer keep a correspondent in Baghdad year-round.
More complex
"It remains important and it remains interesting," said Alissa J. Rubin, the New York Times' acting bureau chief in Baghdad. "But what's in front of us now is almost a static situation. There's not a clear narrative line. The stories are more complex."
Veteran journalists say stories about Iraq, where roughly 155,000 US troops are deployed and where the US spends approximately $10 billion (Dh36.7 billion) a month, have become tougher to get on the air and into print. News coverage that once centred largely on the US military experience is shifting, like the country itself, to a story of Iraqis taking the halting, often mundane steps toward building their own government.
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