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My So-Called Glamorous Life As A Foreign Correspondent

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  • My So-Called Glamorous Life As A Foreign Correspondent

    MY SO-CALLED GLAMOROUS LIFE AS A FOREIGN CORRESPONDENT

    the Los Angeles Times
    http://www.latimes.com/la-fg-glamour25-2008j ul25,0,6561321.story
    July 25, 2008

    COLUMN ONE

    With the breathtaking moments of history come many perils -- all
    manner of diseases, nights on the floor in remote areas without indoor
    plumbing. Not to mention the bullets and missiles dodged.

    APPROACHING HAVANA -- The blast of insecticide jolted me awake. A
    Mexicana flight attendant had just doused me with a chemical cloud
    while her colleague explained over the intercom that the Cuban Health
    Ministry requires arriving aircraft to be fumigated.

    "The substance isn't harmful to humans," we were assured, amid a
    chorus of coughing.

    Ah, the glamorous life of a foreign correspondent.

    Nights spent in war-zone villages without heat or indoor plumbing.

    Days of driving through blistering heat to hell-and-back outposts
    with no chance to bathe before bedding down with bugs, dust and
    strangers. Scary rides on dubious aircraft and lost-luggage nightmares
    so prolonged you burn the clothes on your back once you can take
    them off.

    The Mexicana debugging, presumably part of the Cuban government's
    campaign against mosquito-borne dengue fever, set me to reminiscing
    about 25 years of reporting abroad as the plane descended in mid-June
    for what would be my last trip as a foreign correspondent.

    Bad smells, unsafe transportation, fear and humiliation exponentially
    overwhelm the breathtaking moments of history and excitement. More
    "Perils of Pauline" than "The Year of Living Dangerously," my journal,
    if I'd kept one, would be titled "The GLC Factor" (Glamorous Life of
    a Correspondent), or perhaps "The Indignity Index," and allot points
    for each assignment's discomforts and impositions.

    >From my first foreign posting to Moscow in 1984 through pro-democracy
    revolutions and rebuilding in Eastern Europe and wars, rebellions
    and natural disasters from Pakistan to Haiti, the experiences have
    been dramatic; the comfort and elegance, well, not so much.

    I've contracted giardiasis, caused by a microbial parasite, in Iraq
    and Afghanistan, and amoebic dysentery in the Balkans. A mold-spewing
    air conditioner in the Dominican Republic left me with bronchitis for
    six months. I've had food poisoning on four continents and rashes,
    gouges and bruises all over my body.

    I've been bitten by bed bugs at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, and spent
    sleepless nights clutching a can of Chinese-made bug spray in a rented
    house in Kabul, poised to ward off cockroaches as big as my hand.

    That was The Times' second house in the Afghan capital, secured at
    war-profiteering rates in the aftermath of the October 2001 invasion.

    The first house, in a slightly more upscale neighborhood, didn't have
    roaches but came with a cook with a tubercular cough, dirty hands
    and more than a touch of body odor.

    Grim accommodations are the norm where there's conflict or catastrophe,
    the sad staples of foreign reporting.

    Only weeks into the Bosnian war that began in 1992, shellfire had
    blasted out the windows at the Sarajevo Holiday Inn. We referred to the
    rooms as "air-conditioned," and, during the couple of hours there was
    electricity each evening, learned the fine balance between powering
    up laptops and heating water in our hot pots for bathing. We ate in
    a bunkered dining room where the noise of the generator overpowered
    conversation and, during the worst of the siege, the only fresh
    offering was stewed goat.

    Consuming undesirables is often a cultural necessity. To refuse
    fermented yak milk in Central Asia would be an insult to the host.

    Fried ants are a snack in parts of Latin America, offered as a friendly
    gesture the way one might share a bag of M&Ms. The only way I found to
    get out of Soviet-era officials' vodka toasts to peace -- at 9 a.m. --
    was to feign pregnancy, and even that wasn't always persuasive.

    Embarrassment is a good teacher. After a magnitude 7 earthquake struck
    at 1:30 a.m. on the Soviet-Romanian border in 1986, crushing walls and
    shattering windows at my hotel, I fled my sixth-floor room barefoot --
    and in a baby-doll nightgown. I stood outside with other evacuees,
    many in even less clothing, until we figured it was safe to go back
    in. Note to self: Pack modest sleepwear.

    So, when dispatched from Bonn to accompany a German Red Cross search
    team to Armenia after an earthquake in December 1988, I packed flannel
    pajamas. I took off in a snowstorm with 30-odd German shepherds, their
    handlers, and a German journalist for what proved to be a 13-hour
    ordeal before we landed in Yerevan for the overland journey to the
    quake site. The wet-dog smell permeated my coat, which I had to use as
    a blanket, not having had the sense to bring a sleeping bag. Neither
    had the Der Spiegel reporter, so we spent the night huddled together,
    pressed back to back and layered with our coats to hold in our body
    heat. Neither he nor I ever spoke of it when we ran into each other
    again while working on stories.

    Sharing beds is the ultimate glamour-buster, like when we slept in
    shifts in 1991 while covering the first elections in Albania. Tirana
    had only a few dozen available rooms, and three times as many foreign
    observers and reporters had poured in.

    It was a practice that I later learned is known in the U.S. Navy as
    "hot-racking" -- when there are too few berths to go around, one
    sailor climbs in after another gets up, the bedding still warm.

    We didn't have to do that during the month I spent aboard the Abraham
    Lincoln for the 2003 invasion of Iraq. But with six of us crammed into
    a four-bunk stateroom and two cots taking up the remaining floor space,
    it quickly took on the look of a prison cell after a riot.

    My upper berth was just under the No. 4 catapult, propelled by
    screaming steam engines to hurl warplanes on their bombing missions.

    The hearing in my right ear has never been the same.

    Wars, which unfortunately dominate today's foreign assignments, have
    a scary way of combining the hazards of munitions, nervous armed
    factions and unsettling modes of transportation.

    In the mid-1980s, when the Soviets occupied Afghanistan, the Foreign
    Ministry would take Moscow-based foreign correspondents there to
    show how well they had everything under control. Once we arrived, we
    flew around in the Red Army's fixed-wing Antonov-26s, spewing flares
    to divert the heat-seeking Stinger missiles supplied to mujahedin
    insurgents by the United States. Those scenes at the end of "Charlie
    Wilson's War" of AN-26s being shot out of the sky were playing in my
    head 20 years before it was a movie.

    Dodged bullets and close brushes breed a kind of gallows humor,
    inspiring self-deprecating accounts that make light of dangers that
    might otherwise give one pause about risking it again.

    Hours after I was knocked unconscious in a freak accident at a flooded
    village in Haiti in 2004, we were laughing to the point of tears over
    how a few of my colleagues -- who say they didn't see me hit by the
    flying, nail-studded wooden pallet -- left without me on the Black
    Hawk helicopter that had taken us to the scene.

    Numb from painkillers provided by the U.S. Navy medic who revived me, I
    returned to our hotel six hours later on the last chopper to leave the
    relief site, to cheers in rum-soaked reverie as a GLC Hall of Famer.

    Some assignments serve as disquieting reminders that I'm not 25
    anymore. The weeklong Pentagon boot camp for journalists planning to
    "embed" with U.S. troops for the Iraq invasion in 2003 included four
    simulated combat exercises involving physical tests that I either
    failed -- becoming a simulated "KIA" -- or stressed muscles to the
    point of paralysis when it was over.

    The boot camp was intended to prepare us for the Lincoln, where
    some colleagues regarded certain moments on the aircraft carrier as
    thrilling, like the arrested landings and catapulted takeoffs. The
    former feels like being in a plane crash, just without the explosion
    and dying. The departing plunge leaves your breath and stomach 100
    yards behind you.

    I've perfected The Clench for such moments, including the spiral dives
    into Baghdad airport to evade any ground fire. I hold my breath,
    freeze, close my eyes and listen to my mind scream: "Why on Earth
    did you agree to do this?"

    It's a question best answered after the assignment, when you're back
    home regaling friends and family with tales of hardship and hilarity.

    The stories end up sanitized, to protect loved ones from fearing
    for your life the next time you go out and to dissuade the rest from
    thinking you an idiot with a death wish.

    You also reflect on the golden moments, when all that you dreamed of
    in living and working abroad came to be.

    I've breezed through chandelier-lighted palaces in the Kremlin,
    been dog-sledding in Greenland, cycled along the Danube, traveled
    the Trans-Siberian railroad and hiked atop China's Great Wall.

    I've interviewed world leaders, such as Soviet President Mikhail
    Gorbachev, chatted in Hungarian [admittedly bad] with Pope John Paul II
    in the Vatican, communed with inspirational geniuses such as renowned
    astronomer Carl Sagan and sipped champagne at celebrity-studded film
    festival parties in Moscow, Berlin and Havana.

    I've wept at the sight of West Germans cheering their long-isolated
    countrymen as they poured through Checkpoint Charlie when the Berlin
    Wall fell. And 11 years later, I greeted a millennium just a few
    steps away amid fireworks and jubilation in a Europe whole and free.

    The glamour might have been sparse, but it was still enough for
    a lifetime.
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