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TIME: Almanac 1995
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TIME Almanac 1995.iso
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1994-03-25
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<text id=91TT0239>
<title>
Feb. 04, 1991: Living Life To The Fullest--In Baghdad
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
Feb. 04, 1991 Stalking Saddam
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
PEOPLE, Page 72
Living Life to the Fullest--in Baghdad
</hdr><body>
<p>By Sophfronia Scott/Reported by Wendy Cole/New York and Joseph
J. Kane/Atlanta
</p>
<p> With his balding pate, excited voice and habitual twitching
of the mouth, he is hardly the image of a smooth network
honcho. His colleagues point out that his TV work still has a
heady taste of print, the ineradicable remnant of more than 20
years as a wire-service correspondent in Vietnam and around the
world. In fact, he has battled constantly with TV producers who
want pictures to do more of the talking and him less. In short,
CNN's Peter Arnett is just the right man for the job he has
held for the past two weeks: the last American reporter in
Baghdad.
</p>
<p> Arnett, 56, is a correspondent's correspondent who believes
it is better to get out some of the news--even when censored
and sometimes manipulated by Iraq--than none at all. The
decision to stay put at Baghdad's Al Rasheed Hotel after his
colleagues had departed was his alone, and he made it with a
typical lack of fuss. "I've been in much more dangerous
situations in my career with much less attention than I'm
getting now," he said last week. "It's just another story."
</p>
<p> Arnett's journalistic odyssey began 30 years ago, when he
left his native New Zealand after college and went to work in
Bangkok writing for a small English-language paper. He then
became editor and sole reporter of the Vientiane World, based
in the Laotian capital. The brash, gregarious Arnett made many
friends in his off-hours, his flat New Zealand twang usually
loud enough to be easily distinguished in a crowded room.
Visitors abounded at his eclectic residences, one of which
tended to flood during the rainy season and had snakes
occasionally popping out of the toilet. For extra money he
worked as a stringer for the Associated Press, Reuter and
U.P.I.
</p>
<p> Arnett proved a force to be reckoned with when he became a
full-time A.P. correspondent early in the Vietnam War. He
stayed in Vietnam for the whole conflict, spending 13 years
tirelessly on the front lines, in jungles and paddy fields,
breaking stories left and right and filing them in crisp but
powerful prose. His Vietnam colleagues remember him as a hard
worker who enjoyed the basics of his craft, put extra energy
into digging out the facts and took only prudent risks--no
Rambo tendencies there. Because he always seemed to know more
than he was supposed to, he frequently drew the ire of the
military. Says photographer Horst Faas, who worked with him in
Vietnam: "He refused to sit in the back of press briefings and
rely on secondhand or thirdhand reports." Arnett's work in
Vietnam won him a Pulitzer Prize.
</p>
<p> While in Saigon he married a Vietnamese named Nina and had
two children, Andrew, now 26, and Elsa, 23. He later based his
family in New York City while he pursued the world's martial
news; he and his wife separated several years ago. During his
stint in Southeast Asia, Arnett developed a taste for the local
artwork, and he has garnered an impressive collection of
pottery, scrolls, bronzes and sculpture.
</p>
<p> Back in New York, Arnett resisted A.P.'s attempts to turn
him into a deskman. When tapped by CNN to cover the fledgling
network's international war beat in 1981, he jumped at the
chance. The job took him to Nicaragua, El Salvador, Moscow,
Angola and Beirut. He was based in Jerusalem covering, among
other things, the intifadeh when he seized the opportunity to
go to Baghdad on Jan. 11.
</p>
<p> Today Arnett's home is a three-bedroom apartment in
Jerusalem decorated with Russian paintings and antique carpets.
When at home, he rises early for walks in a nearby park, works
late and afterward likes to seek out fellow correspondents for
long and talky dinners. But even amid this apparent
tranquillity, Arnett always seems poised for some new
challenge. As he has often told his family, "I want to live
life to the fullest every single day because, who knows,
tomorrow I could get blown to bits." Being in Baghdad surely
offers the biggest adventure yet.
</p>
</body></article>
</text>