Martha Raddatz is chief global affairs correspondent for ABC News, co-anchor of ABC’s “This Week” and author of “The Long Road Home: A Story of War and Family.”
Like
so many of my colleagues, I have covered this nation’s wars for
decades, working side by side with our soldiers, sailors, Marines and
airmen. I have shared foxholes and flight decks with these brave
Americans, and I have felt our mutual respect for the responsibility
that each of us holds in our chosen professions. It has been an honor
covering them and the families who support them. I am proud that I can
tell their stories.
It is the job of the media to rigorously cover the
military and to ask hard questions. But I could never have told those
stories if the military did not open its doors to me.
I think of the combat mission I witnessed from the back seat of an F-15
that gave me a firsthand look at the care our aircrews take when
conducting those missions. I think back to the summer of 2004 in Iraq,
when I heard about a battle in which eight of our soldiers were killed
in just a few hours, most trying to rescue a platoon that had been
ambushed. If the Army hadn’t helped me tell that story, if those
soldiers and their families hadn’t trusted me with some of the most
painful memories they will ever have, the heroics of that battle would
never have come to light. There would have been no ABC News stories, no book, no National Geographic series on the battle.
I am proud to have gained the hard-won respect of so many of those I have met over the years. But as I listen to the vitriol aimed at the press by our president, I worry that those days of mutual respect will disappear for the next generation of reporters.
We
in the press are all sadly getting used to listening to some Americans
booing, threatening and belittling the media at the behest of President
Trump. But Trump’s rally before hundreds of veterans at the Veterans of Foreign Wars convention Tuesday in Kansas City, Mo., was especially disturbing.
“Don’t believe the crap you see from these people,
the fake news,” Trump said, pointing to members of the press there to
cover the event.
Have those veterans who booed
and taunted the media in response to Trump’s cue forgotten that some
members of the press corps are combat veterans? Have they forgotten that
there are members of the press who continue to cover the military after
suffering life-altering injuries while at the side of our courageous service members? Have they forgotten that since the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq began, hundreds of journalists have given their lives for their work, many times while reporting from U.S. war zones?
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