Friday, November 28, 2003

Consumers Crowd Stores On Black Friday; Iraqi Response To President Bush Visit Mixed; Terrorism In Turkey Linked To Fighting In Iraq

Consumers Crowd Stores On Black Friday; Iraqi Response To President Bush Visit Mixed; Terrorism In Turkey Linked To Fighting In Iraq

Aired November 28, 2003 - 22:00 ET


THIS IS A RUSH TRANSCRIPT. THIS COPY MAY NOT BE IN ITS FINAL FORM AND MAY BE UPDATED.


CAROL LIN, CNN ANCHOR, NEWSNIGHT: Good evening again. I'm Carol Lin. In the business world, the word black, more often than not, has a negative meaning. There have been Black Mondays and Tuesdays and Thursdays, all connected with bad things like market crashes. But on this day, Black Friday, the word has a positive connotation. It's the day, according to tradition, that retailers finally get out of the red and into the black. Finally -- well, finally began making a profit this year, at least that's what hare hoping. We're going to get to some of the signs of the season a little later in the program. But "The Whip" begins with President Bush's trip as seen by the Iraqis who didn't have a chance to see it in the first place. CNN's Nic Robertson on that for us tonight.Nic, a headline. 


NIC ROBERTSON, CNN INT'L CORRESPONDENT: Well, Carol in Baghdad, confusion, concern and anger even from Iraqis who thought President Bush's trip to Baghdad really didn't show him their lives at this time. Carol. LIN: Thank you, Nic. Next to Turkey and a possible connection between terror attacks there and in Iraq. CNN's Mike Boettcher is in Istanbul with the story and a headline. Mike?


MIKE BOETTCHER, CNN INT'L. CORRESPONDENT: Well, Carol, terrorism does not happen in a vacuum. And in Turkey, they're learning what happened here with four suicide bombings has a lot to do with what's happening next door in Iraq. LIN: All right. And on to the possibility, the possibility that authorities in Ohio have a serial sniper on the loose. Brian Cabell with that for us tonight. Brian, a headline from you. 


BRIAN CABELL, CNN CORRESPONDENT: Carol, Ohio authorities don't want to say they have a sniper on their hands. But what they do have is a problem. Someone is firing into cars outside Columbus, Ohio, and motorists are getting alarmed. LIN: Finally, Black Friday, and signs that consumer spending is finally back in the pink. Allan Chernoff has been watching cash registers ring for the better part of the day. Allan, a headline?


ALLAN CHERNOFF, CNN SENIOR FINANCIAL CORRESPONDENT: Consumers crowd the shopping malls on the first official day of the holiday shopping season while retailers try to protect their bottom lines. How long can they hold out before offering those deep discounts? Carol. Thanks, Allan. Back to you and the rest, shortly. Also coming up this Friday edition of NEWSNIGHT: The flu hits with a vengeance. We are going to get a status report with a doctor dealing with one of the worst-hit part of the country. And the film on "The Reagans" hits the airwaves this weekend. We'll find out from the head of Showtime what happened to all the controversy. All that, and more, in the hour ahead. We begin, once again tonight, with President Bush's trip. A day later, the reviews are coming in both here and at -- well, perhaps, more importantly, on the Iraqi street. Two reports tonight. First, CNN's Dana Bash, who today learned a lot more about just how the trip came to be. 


(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE) 


DANA BASH, CNN WHITE HOUSE CORRESPONDENT (voice over): President Bush back in Texas, back at the ranch, so we're told, basking in the afterglow of his cloak and dagger Thanksgiving trip to Baghdad. White House Chief of Staff Andy Card pitched the idea to his boss in Asia last month. But it wasn't finalized until hours before he left, almost scrapped several times because of security concerns.


CONDOLEEZZA RICE, NATIONAL SECURITY ADVISOR: The president finally on Wednesday morning, with Vice President Cheney, with Andy Card and myself, looked at the arrangements one last time and said, yes, he thought it was a go. 


BASH: The White House carefully made this trip and all its images about the troops, not the war, making it hard for Democrats to criticize. Senator Hillary Clinton in Baghdad on her own meet and greet with the troops. 


SEN. HILLARY CLINTON (D), NEW YORK: Any time that a president can meet with troops who are in an active conflict situation, it makes a real difference. 


BASH: From deep in the political trenches, mostly praise. 


SEN. JOE LIEBERMAN, DEMOCRATIC PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE: The commander-in-chief was in the place he should have been yesterday, with the men and women in uniform. 


BASH: From Richard Gephardt's camp: "It's a wonderful idea. "The commander-in-chief should spend time in the field with our troops, said Retired General Wesley Clark. The White House may be hoping these images replace this one, a reminder for many of a postwar conflict much harder than expected. 


PETER FENN, DEMOCRATIC STRATEGIST: Landing on carriers and bucking up the troops does not substitute, unfortunately, for a policy that may be failed. 


BASH: So on another day an American soldier was killed in Iraq, Democrats are also trying to stay on their message. Howard Dean saying, "Those brave men and women should never have been fighting in Iraq in the first place." 


BASH (on camera): Bush officials understand no matter how big a bounce the president may get from his trip to Baghdad, it's the situation on the ground in Iraq in the coming months that really matters. Dana Bash, CNN, Crawford, Texas. 


(END VIDEOTAPE) 


LIN: The soldier who died today was killed in a mortar attack in Mosul, which until recently seemed like a fairly safe place. Now the army is beefing up patrols and going door-to-door in search of the bad guys. This, in turn, runs the risk of alienating more of the good guys. And so it goes. Perceptions count for a lot in Iraq, which is why we wanted to know how Iraqis view President Bush's visit. With that, here's CNN's Nic Robertson. 


(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE) 


NIC ROBERTSON, CNN INT'L. CORRESPONDENT (voice over): On the streets of Baghdad, business as usual the morning after President Bush's brief visit. Faeeze Said (ph) opens his toy story, happy trade has been picking up over the last few weeks. Confused about Mr. Bush's visit. "I hope that his visit is to improve the situation," he says, "not to make it worse." On the streets outside...


UNIDENTIFIED MALE: We are welcome, here, in Baghdad to him, because he give us our liberty here. 


ROBERTSON: Others questioning why the U.S. president never left the security of Baghdad Airport. "Let him come and see democracy," this man says. "Can he come among the people without security," adds his friend. "He can't. He was only here for two hours."Across town, in a poorer neighborhood, anger on Mr. Bush's visit. "What have been the benefits," he says, "There is no progress or development." "If Bush is a real man," he says, "let him announce his visit and we'll let him know what we think. He is responsible for the destruction in Iraq." The night before, around a well-to-do dinner table, just as Mr. Bush was addressing troops, the Muhammad family was entertaining friends, celebrate the Muslim festival of Eid (ph). 


UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Just before the holiday four of them were kidnapped. 


ROBERTSON: The current lack of a security, a staple of the conversation. Thoughts about the U.S. President's visit ...


UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: Doesn't mean anything to me, because he didn't come to see the Iraqis. 


ROBERTSON: A sense the trip never intended to enlighten Mr. Bush. 


UNIDENTIFIED MALE: He must not see only the army. He must see the people and the result of war also. He has to go in Baghdad and see the situation of Iraqis. 


ROBERTSON: The unspoken word on the streets here, in Arabic culture, almost an insult to visit unannounced. The feeling compounded to have left without staying for the customary hospitality. 


(END VIDEOTAPE) 


ROBERTSON (on camera): Four Iraqi politicians from the ruling governing council here did meet with President Bush and they actually said they were encouraged by the visit because it did show a level of commitment to Iraq's problems at this time. Carol.


LIN: Nic, it almost seems crazy to the reasonable person for the Iraqis to literally expect that the president of the United States could walk down their streets and experience what they call the customary hospitality. I mean, if he were to do that, reasonably speaking, what did they think would happen to him, given that an American there is being shot almost on a daily basis? 


LIN: I think, Carol, they really want to make the point that they just don't feel safe in their daily lives and they think if President Bush had come down to meet them, they could explain that personally. But, also, he would see for himself, the streets of Baghdad, the extraordinary levels of security that would have to be put in place for him to come down. I think really they just wanted that opportunity to convey to him personally, but really for him to see and experience their lives. That's perhaps what really cuts deep here in Baghdad, that he didn't get a sample of Iraqis' lives at this time, Carol.


LIN: This might be a stretch, Nic, but yesterday, Walter Rodgers, your colleague out there, reported that some Iraqis may actually see President Bush's speech as a provocation; just hours after he left Baghdad another U.S. soldier was killed in a mortar attack. Would there be a stretch to say there is possibly any connection between the two events? 


ROBERTSON: Well, certainly we were prepared or on the lookout to see if there was a surge in attacks. And perhaps it would have been a little quick to expect the anti-coalition forces to mount a sort of a larger offensive, as we saw at the beginning of November where they had already a high level of attacks, perhaps 30 or so attacks a day. But certainly some people we talked to here -- I talked to one quite well off middle-class family. And they told me, yes, many people might see this as President Bush saying to the anti-coalition forces, the insurgents, I came here despite of everything you're doing. You shot at an aircraft with a surface-to-air missile, in Baghdad Airport over the weekend, yet I still flew in. There are people who might see this that way, but we haven't seen an extreme increase in attacks against U.S. troops. But again, as you say, one soldier from the 101st killed today in the northern city of Mosul. 


LIN: Thank you very much. Nic Robertson, reporting live in Baghdad.President Bush calls Iraq the front line in the battle against global terrorism. And tonight, a recent string of bombings in Turkey is again raising questions about the connection between terror groups in Iraq and other parts of the world. Here is CNN's Mike Boettcher. 


(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE) MIKE BOETTCHER, CNN INT'L. CORRESPONDENT (voice over): Few in Turkey believe they have seen the last of terrorism. Security forces are on highest alert. Trucks and vans, like the ones used in the four suicide attacks here, are often stopped and searched. But rather than just a new front in the war on terrorism, there is growing belief among security and intelligence officials in the region that Turkey has become embroiled in Iraq's expanding terrorism battlefield. Among those detained by Turkish authorities in connection with the bombings here are members of two radical Islamic groups, Turkish Hezbollah and Biet Alima (ph). Intelligence officials in the region believe these two groups have strong ties to what is considered by American authorities to be the most dangerous terrorist group operating in Iraq, Ansar al Islam. Turkish author and terrorism Emin Demeirel has long followed the growth of Turkish Hezbollah and its associates. 


EMIN DEMEIREL, AUTHOR, TERRORISM EXPERT (through translator): They help each other providing intelligence, camps, training and weapons. It's very normal that Islamic groups cooperate with each other. 


BOETTCHER: The link between Turkish and Iraqi terrorist groups, according to anti-terror, coalition intelligence sources, is this man. Abu Musabu Zarqawi (ph), a close associate of Osama bin Laden. A Jordanian-born terrorist, he is one of the U.S.'s most wanted with a $5 million price tag on his head. Zarqawi operates his own network and is, according to U.S. intelligence sources, directing his operations from Iran. There is strong belief among the region's counter terrorism officials that Zarqawi is directing the expansion of terrorism operations in Iraq to neighboring nations that are U.S. allies, Turkey, Jordan and Saudi Arabia. CNN has learned that Middle East security services have already detected suspected terrorists, associated with Zarqawi, attempting to smuggle surface-to-air missiles, like these, out of Iraq and into neighboring countries. The Turkish terrorism expert sees a clear message being delivered to Turkish. 


DEMEIREL (through translator): Those who did the work have relationships with al Qaeda. This is totally parallel to the war in Iraq. 


(END VIDEOTAPE) 


BOETTCHER (on camera): The ties between Turkish and Iraqi terrorist groups are complex and are even difficult for top counter- terrorism officials to piece together. But they believe for success to occur in this volatile region, they must figure out how these new emerging terrorism alliances are working. Carol. 


LINP: Mike, but when you take a look at the map that you presented in your piece, I mean, is it just a geographic coincidence that these terrorists may be focusing on Turkey now? Or is there more to it? 


BOETTCHER: It's not a coincidence, even though Turkey is always said to have had one foot in Europe and one foot in Asia. If you look at the map, you've got Turkey to the south. To the east, you have Georgia and the Pankisi Gorge (ph) area, which works as a base for al Qaeda in the region. And it's become a crossroads. It's no coincidence that this place is, and has been for many years, a place where terrorists pass through and plan their operations. Carol. LIN: All right. Thank you very much. Mike Boettcher, investigating for us tonight. Ahead on NEWSNIGHT: Did President Bush's visit to Iraq accomplish anything? We'll speak with an American journalist in Baghdad and an Arab journalist in Washington to get their perspectives on the trip. And later, the controversial Reagan film is set to air this weekend. Are the risks worth the rewards for the network, which is showing it? This is NEWSNIGHT from New York.


(COMMERCIAL BREAK) 


LIN: More now on how President Bush's trip was seen and how differently it was seen, depending on the audience. In Baghdad, Jon Hendren of "The Los Angeles Times"; and in Washington tonight, Hafez Al-Mirazi with Washington bureau chief of Al Jazeera television. Welcome to both of you.John let me begin with you, on the ground in Baghdad. Reading on the Internet, a Lebanese newspaper, "On Nefar" (ph), what they basically said was the president came, he saw nothing and he conquered. The sense of the Iraqis that you are hearing about the president's visit there?


JON HENDREN, "THE LOS ANGELES TIMES": You get a really mixed review from Iraqis from where I stand. Of course, there are a number of Iraqis that are very happy that Saddam Hussein is gone. And they're naturally fans of the president. However, you see a lot -- you talk to a lot of people who wonder why the president came like a thief in the night and slipped out after two and a half hours at the airport, and who wonder why Iraqis were not addressed when he came. A lot of people think that with the occupation, the president should have spoken to the Iraqi people. And that's kind of the sentiment you hear on the street here. LIN: Well, Hafez, the president believes he did speak to the Iraqi people. His remarks were carried around the world on various networks. He addressed the Iraqi people, directly, in saying Saddam Hussein was gone and that the U.S. coalition was there to improve and free up their lives. 


HAFEZ Al-MIRAZI, WASHINGTON BUREAU CHIEF, AL-JAZEERA: That's true. He mentioned the Iraq -- like the way he mentioned the Iraq and talked about the Iraqi people from London or Washington or any other place. He talked about the four members of the Iraqi council that -- who were there in his speech, as guests, that talked about them that they joined us. And this is the main problem. That the trip of President Bush had -- highlighted two issues and two things. The Iraqi people lost, since that war started or the U.S. invasion and they have not regained until now. And I don't think it's in the interest of the president to highlight and to remind them of it, which are the independence or sovereignty of Iraq. 


LIN: All right. AL-MIRAZI: The second one is security. And the president -- this is the first U.S. visit -- visit by a U.S. president to Iraq, that was done without an invitation. 


LIN: Let me ask you, Hafez, I don't mean to interrupt you on this point, because getting beyond policy, what I'm hearing from the Iraqis, certainly in Nic Robertson's piece, was that they took this visit personally. They called him a coward for not coming out into the streets and talking to them. And, frankly, they even said he was just downright rude. 


AL-MIRAZI: As I mentioned, unfortunately, there were some stuff like that. Again, this is the president, because this is the second one -- about the security. The president is so protective about himself, he's just visiting the country for two hours, sneaking in, and sneaking out. And then that's an admission to the rest of the whole world that things are -- in Iraq are so bad, to the extent that he cannot stay more than two hours and he cannot announce his visit until he just leave the country. The second thing is, as we heard today, Friday, in Iraq, the weekly sermon, from a very influential religious clerk in Iraq, a Shiite cleric, Mukad Assad (ph), who said that the president showed disrespect for the Iraqi people by coming to them without any permission from him, as a foreign leader to come to a sovereign country or what is supposed to be a sovereign country. 


LIN: Jon, how do you think this opinion will manifest itself on the ground? 


HENDREN: Well, it's hard to say. Iraqis don't have the same conception for security that we do. They don't understand why the president can't announce his visit, and they don't understand why the president can't come out and speak to them in person. They're wondering why he sort of flew in and flew out in such short terms. And you get a lot of people sort of asking why he didn't make himself known to the Iraqi public. So it's really a manifestation of Iraqi public opinion. They are already increasingly anti-coalition. And when the president comes and does not speak to them, it becomes sort of an issue for them. 


LIN: Hafez, how do you think it might manifest itself on the ground going forward? 


AL-MIRAZI: I think it might embold and empower at least it might give a false sense of empowerment for the elements against the American presence because they feel they achieved something by forcing the American president to be so protective about himself. And it also levels the playing field in the comparison between him and Saddam Hussein. It takes it from Saddam Hussein the stigma out of being a coward and sneaking in and out ... LIN: That's interesting. 


AL-MIRAZI: ...because he is no different from others who are sneaking in and out during the darkness. LIN: You know, that is something the White House may not have considered. Hafez Al-Mirazi, thank you very much, with Al-Jazeera. John Hendren with "The Los Angeles" in Baghdad.More now, on presidential politics, and the primacy of primary season. Obvious enough where the Democrats are concerned, crucial too, believe it or not, for President Bush, which goes a long way towards answering a $200 million question. Here is CNN's Jeff Greenfield. 


(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE) 


GEORGE W. BUSH, PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES: I want to thank you for coming and giving of your hard-earned dollars.


JEFF GREENFIELD, CNN SENIOR POLITICAL ANALYST (voice over): Here's President Bush at a fund-raiser, if you think this money is for his reelection, you're wrong, sort of. In fact, he's raising money for his re-nomination, even though he has no Republican opposition. Therein lies a significant political tale. 


GREENFIELD (on camera): If history is any guide, Bush's lack of primary opposition may be one of his key assets. Why? Because for the last half century, every incumbent president who has faced a serious challenge to his re-nomination has failed to win reelection. By contrast, every incumbent president without such opposition has been easily re-elected. 


GREENFIELD (voice over): In 1952, Tennessee Senator Estes Keyfauver (ph) won the New Hampshire presidential primary. President Truman refused to campaign there, a short while later he announced he would not seek another term.


UNIDENTIFIED MALE: While we're distracted in Vietnam...


GREENFIELD: When senators Eugene McCarthy and Robert Kennedy challenged Lyndon Johnson for the 1968 Democratic nomination, the president shocked the country when he said.


LYNDON B. JOHNSON, FMR. PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES: I shall not seek and I will not accept the nomination of my party for another term as your president. 


GERALD FORD, FMR. PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES: I am honored by your nomination and I accept it.


GREENFIELD: 1976 saw president Gerald Ford narrowly escape the challenge of former California Governor Ronald Reagan. 


RONALD REAGAN, FMR PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES: I am a candidate for the presidency. 


GREENFIELD: That battle came right down to the convention. Ford would lose a close race in November to Jimmy Carter. 


SEN. TED KENNEDY (D), MASSACHUSETTS: In this campaign and in this country...


GREENFIELD: Four years later the intra-party battle between President Carter and Senator Ted Kennedy created a burden that may have contributed to his land slide defeat at the hands of Ronald Reagan that fall. The first President Bush was never in real danger of losing to commentator Pat Buchanan in 1992.


PATRICK BUCHANAN (R), POLITICAL COMMENTATOR: Thank you very much.


GREENFIELD: But Buchanan's strong showing in New Hampshire forced Bush to spend time and resources shoring up his conservative base and ranking Buchanan a primetime convention slot. Bill Clinton won the White House that fall. All of the recent incumbents, without any real primary opposition, Eisenhower in '56, Johnson in '64, Nixon in '72, Reagan in '84, Clinton in '96, all won reelection easily. 


GREENFIELD (on camera): And what, you may ask, will President Bush do with all that re-nomination money? The same thing Bill Clinton did in 1996. Use it all spring and to hammer away at whoever the Democrats have chosen. Jeff Greenfield, CNN, New York.


(END VIDEOTAPE) 


LIN: Coming up on NEWSNIGHT, heading into the black -- Black Friday, that is. Did the busiest shopping day of the season live up to its billing? We'll find out as NEWSNIGHT continues.


(COMMERCIAL BREAK) LIN: Any other year, this might be the lead, even more so coming the year after a dreadful holiday shopping season, doubly so at the start of the presidential campaign season. So 'tis the season to be jolly? CNN's Allan Chernoff went to the mall. 


(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE) 


UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: Look at this, sweaters on sale. 


ALLAN CHERNOFF, SENIOR FINANCIAL CORRESPONDENT (voice over): Tracy Bodkin is on a mission to find holiday gifts at sale prices. 


TRACY BODKIN, HOLIDAY SHOPPER: I want to wait to see prices coming down. I could never get it all done in one day anyway. We've seen a lot of great bargains, but there will be more. 


CHERNOFF: Right after Turkey Day, savvy shoppers decide whether to play a game of chicken with retailers, waiting for stores to drop prices as the holidays approach. Some stores opened with crack-of-dawn sales, so-called doorbusters. And there are discounts to be found. But many retailers are holding off on the kind of sales they offered last year. 


DWAYNE DIXON, MANAGER, SHARPER IMAGE: Everything is doing very well, so we're not having to drop any prices on anything. 


CHERNOFF: The economy is improving; the stock market is up; even the job picture is getting brighter; all boosting consumer confidence. 


NICOLE STONE, HOLIDAY SHOPPER: I just feel better about this year giving gifts. I don't have any financial worries right now in the way. So I can spend a little more money.


BARBARA STEIN, HOLIDAY SHOPPER: You just figure why not have a little fun during the holiday season and really try to make everybody else happy, too. 


CHERNOFF: Managers at the mall in Shorthills, New Jersey, said traffic was up 10 percent compared to the same day last year. And nationwide, the National Retail Federation is predicting sales will rise 6 percent. Instead of big discounts, Abercrombie & Fitch is resorting to alternative promotional techniques. Luxury retailers selling jewelry fine leather and high-end apparel are even raising prices, with little resistance from consumers. 


CHERNOFF (on camera): But analysts say most retailers will cut their prices later in the holiday season, just later than last year. And the longer they can hold off the better for their profit margins. Carol.Well, Allan, I'm going to be one of those people playing chicken. I don't want to pay full price because I know I don't have to. They're going to come down, those prices, sooner or later. 


CHERNOFF: That is exactly what many Americans have gotten accustomed to and it is very difficult for the retailers to end this addiction to discounts.LIN: There are some actually, some brands which were refusing to have sales now, because they want to retrain their customers to pay full price for brand loyalty. 


CHERNOFF: It is the retailer's dream, to be able to -- quote, unquote -- "retrain" their customer. But it's a hard thing to do. 


LIN: Yes, especially after years and years of paying half-price. I like the sound of that. Thanks, Allan. You have a good holiday.


CHERNOFF: You, too.


LIN: Well, a few more items now in our "MONEYLINE Roundup" tonight, starting with those big, tough SUVs -- not -- at least not according to the Insurance Institute For Highway Safety. They've been crashing mid-size models into barriers and adding up the bill, just five miles an hour. But even the best performer, a Honda, racked up $404 in damage. And the worst, the Kia Sorento, would cost more than $6,500 to fix. Johnson & Johnson has stopped a number of clinical trials of its anemia drug, Procrit, this after patients began developing blood clots. The trials were aimed at proving Procrit's worth in building up the blood during cancer treatment. Shares of the company fell slightly today. And markets went mostly nowhere in very light trading on this abbreviated trading day. The Dow and Nasdaq closed up slightly. The S&P lost a hair. Still to come on NEWSNIGHT: Is another sniper on the loose? The latest as police in Ohio investigate a series of shootings along an interstate. And later: the film that CBS dropped and Showtime caught, "The Reagans."Stay with us. 


(COMMERCIAL BREAK) 


LIN: Every year around this time, the networks do the obligatory pieces on traffic jams and highway checkpoints and everything else that can turn your holiday travel into a nightmare -- well, not everything. As people driving a stretch of highway near Columbus, Ohio, have come to know, there are nightmares, but none as horrifying as a recent string of shootings. The story now from CNN's Brian Cabell. 


(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE) 


BRIAN CABELL, CNN CORRESPONDENT (voice-over): Ohio authorities aren't using the term serial sniper, but a 911 tape tells a chilling tale. 


(BEGIN AUDIO CLIP) 


911 OPERATOR: 911. 


UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: Oh, somebody just shot them in the car, and my girlfriend's been shot. We're on 270, right at the High Street exit. 911 OPERATOR: Is your friend in the car?


UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: Yes, she is. And she's groaning and she's terrible.


OPERATOR: All right, let me


(CROSSTALK) 911 OPERATOR: Ma'am.


(END AUDIO CLIP) 


CABELL: Sixty-two-year-old Gail Knisley, the passenger in the car, died when a bullet pierced the door of the car. Officials now say there have been 10 shooting incidents since May on and around a southern section of I-270, Columbus's beltway. In the nine other shootings, no one was hurt. But now, officials say, ballistics tests tie the bullet that killed Knisley to at least one of the other shootings. 


CHIEF DEPUTY STEVE MARTIN, FRANKLIN COUNTY SHERIFF'S DEPARTMENT: Because of these findings, it's clear that the shooting incident which resulted in the death of Ms. Knisley was not a single or accidental act of violence. CABELL: Although all of the shootings took place along the same general stretch of highway, the reports were filed by different agencies and weren't coordinated until Tuesday. Columbus drivers now have something besides traffic congestion and accidents to worry about. 


MARK WELCH, DRIVER: We got some idiot out there shooting people -- or shooting at people. And I think it's just really bad. 


DONNA PRANTL, DRIVER: Who would ever think someone would just be out there as a sniper? And it's happening here in Ohio. It's very scary. 


CABELL: Authorities are calling on the shooter or shooters to contact them to open up a dialogue. 


(END VIDEOTAPE) 


CABELL: So the officials are asking the shooter to contact them. They also want citizens to contact them, in case they have noticed that anybody has radically changed his behavior recently, or perhaps changed his appearance, or perhaps shown an undue interest in the highway shootings. They say they have lots of leads. But so far, they do not have a suspect or at least one they will name -- Carol. LIN: Brian, why in the world would authorities think that the shooter would contact them? 


CABELL: Well, sometimes, people are trying to get attention, they believe, and perhaps this would be a way to do it. As you will recall in the Washington sniper case, in fact, there was an attempt to get in touch with authorities. LIN: And are they contacting the Washington authorities for any advice on this case? 


CABELL: They haven't mentioned that so far. They don't want to say this is a sniper case yet. They are avoiding that word. They are saying there are shootings. They say two of them are connected. But beyond that, they don't want to say this is a serial sniper or even a sniper at this point. They are saying this is some shootings they're trying to get solved. 


LIN: All right, thank you very much, Brian Cabell.Before we go to break, a few more items from around the country, starting outside Baltimore, with a naked man who turned up last night on the doorstep of baseball great Cal Ripken Jr. His name is Brian Robins. And he was wounded. Mr. Ripken called 911. Mr. Robins went to the hospital. He later told police three men had kidnapped him, held him in the trunk of a car, forced him to strip naked, and then shot him in the back. Needless to say, they're looking into his story. And Tiger Woods is tying the knot. The world's best golfer and one of the world's most eligible bachelors is engaged to the former nanny and model he's been dating the past two years. And, guys, in this case, if you're wondering, well, she has a sister, a twin. Ahead on NEWSNIGHT: a powerful flu outbreak. We'll talk with a doctor on the front lines in one of the hardest-hit areas. This is NEWSNIGHT from New York.


(COMMERCIAL BREAK) 


LIN: The numbers are staggering: 36,000 people die each year in the United States from the flu. And while the last couple of years have been pretty mild in terms of the flu outbreak, this year is already shaping up as a bad one. One area that has been particularly hard-hit is Denver.And we are joined now by someone who has seen it firsthand. Dr. Connie Price is an infectious disease specialist at the Denver Health Medical Center. Welcome to NEWSNIGHT, Dr. Price. 


DR. CONNIE PRICE, DENVER HEALTH MEDICAL CENTER: Thank you. 


LIN: I think what has really touched so many of us with this story is that children are now dying from the flu. And I don't typically think of children as dying from the flu. I usually hear reports of elderly people. What's going on? 


PRICE: Well, that's true. Usually, it's either the very young or very old. And, in this case, the flu has been so widespread among the pediatric age group, I think we're just seeing a -- because it's so widespread, we're seeing the numbers of some of those kids starting to -- at least higher morbidity and mortality in those kids. So far, in Colorado, about four children have died of the flu. 


LIN: Anywhere from, what, 21 months to 15 years old. 


PRICE: That's right. And two of the children -- what's unusual -- as you were saying, that it's usually in the very chronically ill kids. But two of the children were healthy children. And that's very unusual. 


LIN: And some people who actually got their flu shots are getting this flu. What's going on there? 


PRICE: That's true. This year, the flu vaccine does not contain the strain that is the most predominantly circulating. When the CDC tested the isolates, they found that about 80 percent of the flu vaccine strains they were getting were not contained in the vaccine. However, there is some cross-reactivity for protection. So people should still get their flu vaccine. However, it's not completely protective, not as good as it has been in previous years. 


LIN: Because, every year, Dr. Price, really, it's just a guessing game as to what you throw into that vaccine that they think might actually strike. So, as someone here -- I hate to say it -- I don't get flu shots, because I just don't think that it's worth the trouble, for that very reason. There's no guaranteed protection. 


PRICE: Well, in normal years in a normal healthy adult, it should be about 70 percent to 90 percent protective against the flu. And this year, it's probably not that good. But there is some cross-protection. I think, certainly, if you're in a demographic group that is at higher risk for complications, you really ought to get the shot. And anyone who doesn't want to get it who is otherwise healthy should also get it. But it's most important in those who are -- who have risk factors for very serious influenza. 


LIN: All right, so babies as young as 6 months now are being recommended, and definitely senior citizens. 


PRICE: That's right. 


LIN: In the meantime, take a look at the pattern that's happening with this flu outbreak. Obviously, you've been hit-hard in Colorado. And now Texas is starting to see a spread, a report also recently saying that, with holiday travel being up, being the holiday season, likely, the flu is going to spread through travelers visiting families. Are you looking at just an unusual flu season? Are you looking at an epidemic on the scale of what we saw with the SARS virus? 


PRICE: Well, what we're seeing is a very early flu epidemic. And, in Colorado, our number of confirmed cases has exceeded the number of confirmed cases for the entire flu season last year and at least five years prior. It's probably the earliest flu season we've seen since 1976. 


LIN: So how bad is it going to get? How far is this thing going to go? 


PRICE: Well, it's hard to say. Usually, the flu takes about a month to peak. And then, over the following month, it tends to die down and eventually go away. However, with the peak occurring right as our holiday travel season is starting, it certainly bodes for a very bad season this year. It certainly makes spread more likely, as people are gathering, going to holiday parties, traveling around the country.


LIN: Right. 


PRICE: Spending time with family members, and maybe even more crowded households. 


LIN: All right, Dr. Price, another argument for washing your hands. And if you don't feel well, stay home, because it could be really bad this year. You might be saving some lives by doing so. Thank you very much, Dr. Price. 


PRICE: Thank you. 


LIN: Well, a few more now from around the world. First, election results from Northern Ireland. As expected, hard-liners gained seats in the legislature. London and Dublin had been hoping moderates would carry the day, providing a boost for restoring the assembly, which has within suspended since last year, when a coalition government fell apart. Instead, what British officials had been privately calling their nightmare scenario apparently has come to pass. A judge in France acquitted three paparazzi in connection with the car crash that killed Princess Diana and Dodi Al Fayed. The three were accused of breaching French privacy laws. The Al Fayed family is appealing today's decision. And elsewhere in France, France is celebrating the TGV's billionth passenger. The TGV, the abbreviation for the French words meaning very fast train, made its first trip 22 years ago. It can go upwards of 180 miles an hour, and, in those 22 years, over all those miles, has yet to record a single fatality. When NEWSNIGHT continues: is the controversy over the film on the Reagans, is set to air this weekend. So what happened to the uproar? Stay with us. 


(COMMERCIAL BREAK) 


LIN: There was a sure sign tonight that fall sweeps are over. Not only was there no "Survivor" or "Bachelor" to watch, but, on CBS, you could find that holiday filler favorite "Frosty the Snowman." Of all those reality-based programs that networks have come to rely on, the one that got perhaps the most noticed this fall never even saw air, at least not yet. It was a made-for-TV movie called "The Reagans."


(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE) 


(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP, "THE REAGANS") 


JAMES BROLIN, ACTOR: I told the American people I did not trade arms for hostages. 


(END VIDEO CLIP) 


LIN (voice-over): CBS hoped "The Reagans" would help boost its ratings during November sweeps. But, instead, it became a cause. Though no one had actually seen it, conservatives and members of the Reagan family immediately criticized it, saying it was an inaccurate portrayal of the family and a left-wing smear of one of the nation's most beloved presidents. 


MICHAEL PARANZINO, FOUNDER, BOYCOTTCBS.COM: We had plenty to go on to know that this was a biased hit piece, a smear, if you will, from the left. 


LIN: Among the specific complaints were that Reagan was portrayed as suffering from memory loss. 


(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP, "THE REAGANS") 


UNIDENTIFIED ACTOR: What's the matter? What's he doing? 


JUDY DAVIS, ACTRESS: He's concentrating. 


(END VIDEO CLIP) 


LIN: That he spoke disparagingly about gays and people with AIDS, and that Nancy Reagan was portrayed as an eccentric control freak who ran the White House. 


(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP, "THE REAGANS") 


DAVIS: From now on, you don't just call the president to tell him what's happening. You call me.


(END VIDEO CLIP) 


LIN: The actors and producers involved with the film defend their work as fair and balanced and point out that it includes many of Reagan's personal and professional accomplishments. 


BROLIN: He's an icon. He's a legend. And I can see why, for both reasons, the good reasons and the bad ones. 


(END VIDEOTAPE)


LIN: CBS eventually decided to pull the movie from its schedule, saying it did not present a balanced portrayal and denying that the controversy had anything to do with the decision. Even so, the movie can be seen this Sunday on Showtime, which is owned by CBS' parent company, Viacom. Joining us now is the head of Showtime, Matthew Blank. Thanks for coming in, Matt. 


MATT BLANK, CHAIRMAN & CEO, SHOWTIME NETWORKS: Thanks, Carol.


LIN: Have you seen it yet? 


BLANK: I haven't seen the final edit. I actually hope to see that tomorrow. It's still being worked on. But I did see the original version that the filmmakers gave to us about two weeks ago. 


LIN: Now, when you say edit, that is now a politically loaded word. 


BLANK: Yes.


LIN: Were portions of the film edited out to appease some of the critics? 


BLANK: Well, first of all, I think we've made about 300 movies at Showtime in the past 10 years. Every one of them has been edited. So that's a normal part of the process. There is the one famous line about AIDS that the filmmakers chose to take out actually believe even giving the film to us to look at. 


LIN: Does it surprise you that this political kind of furor could influence a major broadcast network to change its plans? 


BLANK: Well, I think everybody was surprised by the breadth and depth of the furor a couple of weeks ago. I mean, I think a lot of that has to do with the attention that the media gave to it. I think, if the Michael Jackson incident had happened three weeks later, this movie might have played on CBS and nobody would have noticed it. It just seemed to pick up some speed. And all of the sudden, CBS felt they couldn't play the movie, which was an opportunity for us. 


LIN: So what do you think the indications are, though, of this political kind of pressure on a network and how it responded, in terms of what actually goes on the air and who is actually in control of those airwaves? 


BLANK: Well, I think we'll have to see. I think the folks at CBS made the best decision they could at the time, with the film that they had in their hands coming up on an airdate. Whether that has any impact on the type of things we see on television in the future, I don't know. We're not at all afraid to deal with a controversial subject. And we know that our subscribers in fact like us to take those risks. 


LIN: Are you excited?


BLANK: Absolutely.


LIN: Are you excited at the prospect that you have got this provocative piece of film in your hands that is airing Sunday? 


BLANK: Absolutely. I think it's going to be great for us. And I think that the nice thing about this, people will finally get to see the movie. There's all this talk and no one actually saw it. 


LIN: But nobody is going to really know whose version they're seeing.


BLANK: Well, I think that you're seeing the filmmakers' version. And, at the end of the day, that's true any time you go to the movies or any time you watch a movie on television. 


LIN: All right, the Republican National Committee wanted Showtime to air something like every 10 minutes, a warning to the audience that this was a fictional portrayal. Are you complying with that? 


BLANK: Absolutely not. Would you comply with that? I think, what's next, put it on the newscasts, edit our old news broadcasts? I think that's just silly. I think we did take a very unusual step of providing a forum on Monday evening with a number of experts on both sides to talk about the movie live on Showtime for an hour at 9:00 p.m. And we think that that will, given the controversy, give both sides an opportunity to air their thoughts about the movie, once they've finally seen it. 


LIN: The filmmakers, when there was a discussion about the content of this film, did they present it as something that was accurate to you, that they wanted to air in the form in which they would present to you? 


BLANK: No, that's just not the way the process works. The filmmakers came to us. They were delighted that it was going to be on Showtime. That very controversial line, as I mentioned, was already out. And we talked about a lot of things that we could do to the movie, frankly, to make it better and to make it play a little bit better 


(CROSSTALK) 


LIN: Better in what sense? 


BLANK: As a three-hour movie, rather than a four-hour miniseries on CBS. We're going to play it right through on Sunday evening all the way through. So some of the changes we made obviously reflect those needs also.


LIN: You expecting big ratings?


BLANK: I think we'll do pretty well. 


LIN: You get about, what -- you average about, what, 500,000 people?


 BLANK: Yes. This is a much smaller base than the broadcast networks. But, for our universe, I think we'll do extremely well. 


LIN: Right. Were you insulted at all when it was portrayed in the media that this movie was being shunted over to Showtime? 


BLANK: Well, I wouldn't say I was -- I certainly wasn't insulted. But we certainly would like to get a little more credit, because of all those people who come into -- pay every month to get that service. 


(LAUGHTER) 


LIN: Yes, you bet. Cable, indeed.All right, thank you very much, Matt Blank. 


BLANK: Thank you. 


LIN: We'll see what happens with the ratings and the fallout. Up next, we're going to update our top story and preview Monday. Stay with us. 


(COMMERCIAL BREAK) 


LIN: Before we leave you tonight, here's a quick recap of our top story. With President Bush back on the ranch, reviews of his trip have started coming in. Soldiers were delighted, Democratic challengers, for the most part, supportive, Iraqis, on the other hand, somewhat skeptical. Residents of Baghdad we spoke to said the president missed an opportunity to see how they are living these days. And many attribute the trip to election-year politics. Aaron is back on Monday. And coming up on the program: tough questions about Israeli strategy where the Palestinians are concerned, questions coming not from students, but generals and even current Israeli leaders. And that's NEWSNIGHT for tonight and this week. Thanks for watching. I'm Carol Lin."LOU DOBBS TONIGHT" is next.Good night.


END


TO ORDER A VIDEO OF THIS TRANSCRIPT, PLEASE CALL 800-CNN-NEWS OR USE OUR SECURE ONLINE ORDER FORM LOCATED AT www.fdch.comPresident Bush Visit Mixed; Terrorism In Turkey Linked To Fighting In Iraq>

Thursday, November 27, 2003

President Bush Surprises World With Trip To Baghdad

President Bush Surprises World With Trip To Baghdad
Aired November 27, 2003 - 22:00 ET

THIS IS A RUSH TRANSCRIPT. THIS COPY MAY NOT BE IN ITS FINAL FORM AND MAY BE UPDATED.


CAROL LIN, CNN ANCHOR: Good evening again. I'm Carol Lin. Safe to say nobody had to dig for a lead tonight. Also safe to say only about five people saw it coming. As surprises go, a president turning up at a turkey dinner in the middle of a war zone ranks right up there. Talk about shock and awe. So the day and the hour is dominated by President Bush's sudden and risky journey. His visit to the troops in Baghdad is one for the history books. It leads the program tonight, and naturally the whip. First to Dana Bash in Crawford, Texas, where she and the rest of the press corps was told the president was spending Thanksgiving there. Dana, a headline. 


DANA BASH, CNN WHITE HOUSE CORRESPONDENT: Well, Carol, almost no one knew. The president's parents weren't told until they arrived here in Crawford for the holiday this morning. His twin daughters were told just hours before. The press traveling with him were forbidden from calling anyone until the president left Baghdad. As one of the locals just said to me, down here they call what happened to us today getting hoodwinked -- Carol. LIN: Thank you Dana. Next to Baghdad and CNN's Walt Rodgers. Walt, the headline there. 


WALTER RODGERS, CNN SENIOR INTERNATIONAL CORRESPONDENT: Carol, the headline here is the best kept secret in Iraq remains the whereabouts of Saddam Hussein. But President Bush's visit here was a close second. He was gone before most people ever knew he arrived. 


LIN: Walt Rodgers in Baghdad. We'll try to fix that problem there. Finally to Washington where the political dimension of today's trip is likely to be topic A in the days ahead. CNN's White House correspondent John King is on that for us. John, a headline from you. 


JOHN KING, SENIOR WHITE HOUSE CORRESPONDENT: Carol, this commander-in-chief is also a candidate for reelection. So the dramatic trip today and these dramatic pictures already added to the debate over his policy in Iraq. The president says his mission must succeed. The Democrats say, nice pictures Mr. President, but the policy has gone bad -- Carol. 


LIN: Thanks John. Back to you and the rest shortly. Also ahead tonight, we are going to talk with a reporter from time magazine who was in the room as the president visited with the troops. Later we'll put the trip into perspective. Just how rare is it for a president to slip off to a foreign country without anyone knowing about it? And in segment 7, we'll continue our series of reports on America's war wounded. Beth Nissen has the story on a new generation of medics trained to save even more lives. All that and more in the hour ahead.We begin with a rule every child knows by heart. Before leaving the house, always tell your parents where you're going, something President Bush neglected to do, something his father would understand. Presidents don't have to eat their broccoli and they don't have to say where they're going, either, even when it's Iraq. Here is Dana Bash. 


(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)


BASH (voice-over): It may have well been dubbed as Operation Surprise. 


L. PAUL BREMER, U.S. ADMINISTRATOR IN IRAQ: Let's see if we have anyone more senior who can read the president's Thanksgiving speech. Is there anyone back there who is more senior than us? BASH: From behind the curtain, the commander-in-chief himself telling 600 shocked U.S. troops...


GEORGE W. BUSH, PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES: Thanks for inviting me to dinner. 


BASH: President Bush's two hour and 32 minute visit to Baghdad, the first ever for a U.S. president, a tightly held secret even for a White House known for keeping a lid on information. Only a handful of senior staff and secret service officials knew. Shortly after a spokeswoman announced Wednesday Mr. Bush would have a quiet holiday at the ranch, approximately 8:30 p.m. Eastern time, the president hiding under a baseball cap, slipped out of Crawford in an unmarked car, then was flown to Andrews Air Force base. At about 11:00 p.m. Eastern time the president left on a 13-hour journey to Baghdad. Reporters were warned on the plane for security reasons, if word leaked out the plane would be turned around. At 5:30 p.m. Baghdad time, Air Force, one using a secret call sign, lands without lights with Mr. Bush in the cockpit. The president's message, one of thanks, but also one of resolve. 


BUSH: We did not charge hundreds of miles into the heart of Iraq, pay a bitter cost of casualties, defeat a ruthless dictator and liberate 25 million people only to retreat before a band of thugs and assassins. 


BASH: At a mess hall named for Bob Hope, he doled out sweet potatoes, smiled for the cameras and shook hands with elated servicemen, telling reporters afterwards their reaction made the risk and secrecy worthwhile. The audience was not just the U.S. troops, it was also the Iraqi people. 


BUSH: You have an opportunity to seize the moment and rebuild your great country based on human dignity and freedom. 


(END VIDEOTAPE)


BASH: This may have been a stealth mission, but it was far from spur of the moment, the president telling reporters it's been in the works since mid October. And for those who may call this secrecy a PR stunt, the president insisted that it was important to keep under wraps for his safety and for the safety of others who were traveling with him -- Carol. 


LIN: Dana, you talk about the planning. How involved was the president in the planning of this surprise? 


BASH: We talked to reporters on his way back, which of course he still is on his way back. And he said he had a number of extensive meetings with top officials even yesterday, talking by secure video- conference with the vice president, his chief of staff and the national security adviser, making sure everybody knew what the details were. And he said even at the last minute, he was prepared to turn this baby around. That's what he just told reporters. And there was one close call, Carol. A British Airways pilot actually spotted Air Force one in the air and radioed to the plane saying, is that Air Force one? And the president's captain responded back, no, it's a Gulf stream. and there was apparently a large pause. And then the British Airways pilot responded back, oh. Clearly that pilot understood that there was a secret and he did keep it. 


LIN: Imagine what was going through his mind. Thanks so much Dana Bash. Live at Crawford Well, now more on the reaction among the troops. Said one sergeant who posed for a picture with the president, "we were expecting Nicholas Cage or Shania Twain." Here is CNN's Walter Rodgers. 


(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)


BREMER: Let's see if we've got anybody more senior that can read the president's Thanksgiving speech. Is there anybody back there who is more senior than us? 


RODGERS: The president's visit to Baghdad was the second best kept secret in Iraq. The first still being, where is Saddam Hussein? Thanksgiving with the troops is, however, a time-honored U.S. presidential tradition. 


BUSH: I was just looking for a warm meal somewhere. 


RODGERS: Homesick soldiers, eager to see a friendly face from home, greeted their commander-in-chief with explosive euphoria. Mr. Bush told them why they will still be here for some time to come. 


BUSH: You're defeating Saddam's henchmen so that the people of Iraq can live in peace and freedom. 


RODGERS: He had a message for the Iraqi people as well. 


BUSH: We'll help you find and bring to justice the people who terrorized you for years and who are still killing innocent Iraqis. We will stay until the job is done. 


RODGERS: At times, the occasion brought tears to the president's eyes. And in accordance with army convention, when senior officers serve Thanksgiving dinner to the troops, the commander-in-chief also helped serve chow. Privately, however, some troops are beginning to grumble, one telling me he doubts U.S. forces should have stayed as long as they have. Another adding, it is more dangerous now than when we arrived lived months ago. And a third soldier saying all I want to do is get out of here alive. Still, the fact the president shared the danger of a war zone won him universal praise from troops. 


UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: Just surprising and wonderful for us. 


UNIDENTIFIED MALE: He's our commander in chief. He's great. And it was great to see him, great to have him out here and it really tells us that he's our commander and he cares. 


(END VIDEOTAPE)


RODGERS: As stunning as the president's visit was, it may not be without political calculation. The president's show of solidarity with the troops on America's most important holiday is going to provide him with some splendid imagines when he runs for reelection next year. 


LIN: Walter, what do you think, is it going to change anything on the ground? 


RODGERS: Absolutely not. The American forces here are facing a guerrilla insurgency, which becomes increasingly violent. Indeed, people here, U.S. officials here, are predicting more violence and more terror, especially against Iraqi civilians in the coming months. That is not going to change. And the fractiousness of the makeup of the Iraqi society, the Shiite Muslims quarreling with the Sunni Muslims, battling for power. The Kurds trying to get their ore in the same water. Nothing is going to change here on the ground. Indeed, things could well get worse -- Carol. 


LIN: All right, Walt Rodgers, live in Baghdad. Walt was just touching on some of the politics out there. The president's mission sends a number of messages to the troops, to ordinary Iraqis, to the bad guys and, as Walt just mentioned, here at home. With that side of the story, here is CNN's John King. 


(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)


KING (voice-over): A Kodak moment in any event, all the more so because of the element of surprise. 


BUSH: I'm proud to be your commander-in-chief. I bring greetings from America. May God bless you all. 


KING; In this case, the commander-in-chief is also a candidate for reelection. So while the White House calls this a Thanksgiving tribute to those on the front line, some Democrats privately call it a stunt, designed, they say, to push this made for TV moment a bit back in the memory. The mission accomplished event was nearly seven months ago. The escalating attacks and rising death toll in recent weeks a reminder the mission is anything but over. 


SCOTT REED, GOP STRATEGIST: Obviously, the big weakness for the president and the upcoming campaign is Iraq. And it's weak for one reason, it's an unpredictable circumstance. 


KING: And one visit to Baghdad, for all the attention it gets, won't answer the big political questions.


ROBERT DALLEK, PRESIDENTIAL HISTORIAN: This can be -- or what seems to be, a kind of quagmire. Can we bear the cost financially? More importantly, in terms of loss of lives? It's a story that will unfold now. KING: For all the problems in post-war Iraq, some Republicans believe that scenes like this play to a key Bush campaign strength. 


BILL MCINTURFF, COP POLLSTER: The Democratic party and the candidates have zero credibility as a people trust to have the capacity to stand-up to international terrorism.


KING: Yet, for all the cheers from the troops from Baghdad or at a base here at home, there are some who worry Mr. Bush is too defined by images of war. 


UNIDENTIFIED MALE: They have to play to that strength and repeat that strength and remind people of his qualities of strong leadership. I just think that at some point, he has to also get back to people understanding that he's also a regular guy. Like you and me. I want somebody, you know, that -- as we used to say, somebody you want to sit down and have a beer with. 


KING: The president's aide say the secret visit to Baghdad was to say thank you, period. But everything this president does in the next 11 months also has an element of politics and everything said now about the images and meaning of this dramatic visit far less relevant than how the politics of the Iraq debate look 6 or 10 months from now. 


(END VIDEOTAPE) 


KING: And publicly, Carol, all the Democrats could do today was tip their hat and say it was right for the president to go to Baghdad to say thank you for the troops. One Democrat, John Kerry, said the president was right to do this on Thanksgiving, but added this. "When Thanksgiving is over, I hope the president will take the time to correct his failed policy." Look for that to echo, Carol, in the coming days. 


LIN: Well, speaking for the upcoming campaign, John. How much positive sticking power do you think these images and this day has for the president going into 2004? 


KING: There is no one who can argue with the president of the United States going to say thank you to the men and women of the military, especially in Iraq. So there is no political risk in that. There are some who say, what if there are a series of attacks over the next several days. Would the terrorists, those attacking coalition force, take this as in your face, if you will. Remember a few months back the president was asked about the attacks on the troop and said, bring them on. Some military family members have since complained those who are under attack or those who have lost loved ones, said the president was being a bit too macho there. Some will say, if there are a series of attacks in the days to come, that the president might have provoked the terrorists. The White House would say these men and women are in harm's way risking their lives every day and this is what a president is supposed to do. 


LIN: John King, thank you very much. 184 troops have died since May 1 when he declared major combat over on that aircraft carrier. Well, earlier today, General Ricardo Sanchez was asked, what it took to pull off a presidential visit in the middle of a war zone. It's a whole lot easier with the military at the center of it. You say what needs to be done and people get the job done. He was probably being just a little modest. Joining us in Tucson to tell us what it took and what it all means is CNN military analyst retired General Don Shepperd. Good to see you again, Don. 


GEN. DON SHEPPERD (RET), CNN MILITARY ANALYST: Hello, Carol. 


LIN: How risky was it? 


SHEPPERD: From the standpoint of physical risk, not real risky. The air plane, Air Force One, went in at night, which basically is a great defense against shoulder fired, heat-seeking missiles. It's also equipped with the latest equipment to decoy heat-seeking missile. The danger would come once the air plane is on the ground. Once the president is there, rockets and mortars, which happen periodically. But he stayed near Baghdad Airport and the palace headquarters of the joint task force. So there wasn't much physical danger. The real danger, Carol, was in the policy and what could have gone wrong if the plane had to turn around or came under attack. That would have been a very positive message for the Ba'athists that wish us evil. 


LIN: Don, you're a pilot. Take us through the mechanics of what it took to fly into the airport itself. There were actually special maneuvers that Air Force One had to take. 


SHEPPERD: Well, first of all, the pilots were probably surprised as anyone else. They didn't have a lot of notice on this, but they're good rapid planning. They basically, probably refueled several times en route to get there. Once they got to Baghdad, their arrival had to be timed properly.Now, in a smaller airplane you circle in over the airport. I was just there about a month and a half ago in a C-130 and we circled down over the airport. You couldn't do the same thing in a 747 like Air Force One. But basically, you would stay as close to the airport as possible, you would do lights out, including all of the windows closed in the airplane. The crew would likely be on night vision goggles with night vision cockpits. We regularly do light-out landings, if you will. It's something the military practices. So there is not a lot of danger in this. But there are a lot of steps and a lot training and a lot of professional people involved in the air and on the ground, Carol. 


LIN: But, if there are heat-seeking missiles fired at aircraft, what difference does it make whether your lights are out or whether you fly in at night or not? 


SHEPPERD: It makes a lot of difference, because these heat- seeking missiles, you have to see the airplane coming. Then you have to point the missile at the airplane. You have to hear a tone, indicate it's locked on and then fire the missile. So at night, when you don't know where to point it, it's like looking through a soda straw in the heavens trying to find an air plane. Even though you might be able to hear it, trying to get the missile to lock on it and fire is a different problem. In addition, you are going to have decoying mechanisms on the air plane. The latest available, Carol. So, they're likely was very little danger from the heat seeking missiles. LIN: Don, quickly, just from -- forget the technological point of view, but just from an intelligence point of view, how difficult was this to pull off? 


SHEPPERD: Not difficult at all, because the military is there in place, with great security around all the places he was going to go in. The difficulty was the security arrangements and making sure that the word did not get out. Because the communications are encrypted. That's not a problem, but word of mouth of all the people that had to be finally involved in all of the arrangements is the greatest danger. America can still keep a secret, as we can see, Carol. 


LIN: All right. Thank you very much, Lieutenant General Don Shepperd for joining us tonight, our military analyst. Ahead on NEWSNIGHT, more on the president's surprise visit. We're going to talk with a journalist who was in the room as the president showed up and get her impressions of the event. And later, the newest generation of military medics. They are known as 91 Whiskeys. And we'll see how they're trained. This is NEWSNIGHT from New York.


(COMMERCIAL BREAK)


LIN: More now on the president's journey and the buzz when he got there. "TIME" magazine's, Vivian Walt, was on the ground when he made his appearance and she joins us now from Baghdad. Vivian, good morning to you over there. I know it's early there for you. I'm just wondering, you were actually in the room when the president appeared before the troops. What was that moment like? 


VIVIAN WALT, "TIME": I can only describe it as kind of explosive. I mean, usually we have explosions here of a different kind, but this one was just quite wild. I would say nobody in the room really expected it. You could have, I guess, counted on perhaps two hands at most the people in the room that knew about it. I don't even think the coalition officials who were escorting us into the airport, knew that the president was on his way. So the moment he arrived, there was a second of astonishment before the entire place erupted in roars. Quite a euphoric moment, actually. 


LIN: What was going through your mind when you saw the president of the United States standing there? 


WALT: It's one of those things, Carol, where it's so surreal and so out of place, it takes you a millisecond to realize it is the president of the United States. When I did see him, I think one of my first thoughts is, oh, my gosh, how risky it is to land at Baghdad Airport, a place that most of us regard as too dangerous to fly in or out of anymore. There he was, flying Air Force One right into the heart of Baghdad. However, the moment was really -- had such impact, I think, on everybody in the room. I don't think there was a single thing that he could have done that would have had that same kind of effect, Carol. 


LIN: Well, he was actually crying. I mean, was the president of the United States standing in that room shedding tears? 


WALT: I wouldn't say shedding tears, but there was certainly one little tear that did roll down his cheeks. He seemed pretty overwhelmed. I think it must have been the mixture of several things, the tension of having to keep such a massive secret from the world mixed, of course with the risk that something disastrous could have gone wrong and just being in a room of 600 adoring fans all in military uniform, nonetheless. Certainly people who just seemed thrilled to see him there. 


LIN: Do you think this was personal for him or do you think this was politics as usual? Just well disguised? 


WALT: I think it was a bit of both, Carol. I mean, firstly, this is really the closest thing he has had to a victory lap. He can really not in the least bit declare victory yet. And it might be many, many months more before he can. But the fact that he's landed in Baghdad at this time, after the most violent month of the entire occupation, I think, was in fact a kind of taste of victory. On the politics level, there is a lot of politics going on inside of Iraq, which might be a bit lost over there, the subtleties might seen a little arcane from the U.S. But in Iraq, there is really a struggle for power going on that's taking place these weeks, the last couple of weeks and particularly this weekend has been quite fierce. 


LIN: So, Vivian, then, were the Iraqis impressed at all? 


WALT: There were no Iraqis there of course except for three members of the coalition-run Iraqi media network, which is the local television station here, that the U.S.-led coalition runs. And I think they sort of -- when I spoke to them afterwards, I said what do you think Iraqis will say about that? They said we think Iraqis will really see it as some kind of commitment to rebuild the country. a lot of people are fairly skeptical of that still. 


LIN: All right, Vivian Walt, thank you very much. "TIME" magazine. An exciting day for you. Thanksgiving day. All right. Coming up on NEWSNIGHT, the secrecy factor. Bruce Morton looks at the history of presidents going places in secret and what it gets them on Thanksgiving. This is NEWSNIGHT.


(COMMERCIAL BREAK)


LIN: The president's trip was so secret that his normal routine was scrapped practically from start to finish: an unmarked car, top aides wearing baseball caps and no elaborate motorcade speeding through red lights. President Bush joked to a few reporters who were with him it was the first time in three years he had encountered traffic. CNN's Bruce Morton now on secret trips by other presidents and high ranking officials of administrations gone by.


(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE) 


BUSH: I was just looking for a warm meal somewhere. 


BRUCE MORTON, CNN CORRESPONDENT: President have gone into danger before. Lyndon Johnson went to Vietnam during that war. President- elect Dwight Eisenhower went to Korea. Franklin Roosevelt had wartime meetings, some on Navy ships at sea with allies. But they never managed, as George W. Bush, has to visit a war zone in secret. 


DOUGLAS BRINKLEY, PRESIDENTIAL HISTORIAN: The White House has become a glass house. And everything -- there is a complete blend and blur of public and private life. So to pull off something like this Thanksgiving journey to Baghdad, it takes a lot of preparation, a lot of secrecy. And just zipping your lips the best that you can. MORTON: Presidents can evade sometimes. John Kennedy faked a cold and canceled a campaign trip to head back to the White House to discuss the Cuban Missile Crisis. But usually it's aides who do the secret stuff, Henry Kissinger flew secretly to Beijing, for negotiations, which led to President Nixon's much publicized trip later, a trip that changed relations between the two countries. In 1989, after the Chinese government opened fire on pro- democracy demonstrators in Tiananmen Square, world reaction was angry. So was the reaction from Washington, but the first President Bush sent Brent Scowcroft in secret to reassure Beijing's leaders that the U.S. still wanted good relations. He got criticized when the story finally got out, but got his message through, too. Those secret visits had big effect. Bush's secret Thanksgiving drop-in will cheer up the troops. What else? It got Michael Jackson off the news and something that's very patriotic, a Norman Rockwell-esque moment here for America on this particular Thanksgiving. So in his biography, it will make up a few very important pages, but doesn't solve the problems of being entrenched in an angry Baghdad. 


MORTON: Only time will tell how that goes. But one bet, there will be wall-to-wall reporters around the ranch come Christmas to make sure they don't get fooled again. Bruce Morton, CNN, Washington. LIN: And joining us now from New Orleans is a man who you just heard from in Bruce Morton's story, David Brinkley, a presidential historian and distinguished professor at the University of New Orleans. Doug, it's been a busy holiday. Thanks so much for leaving your family for us and joining us tonight. Why would a president risk doing something so risky and unexpected? 


BRINKLEY: Pause it's good for the country. It's good for the morale of our troops. It was the right thing to do. And that's the best politics, when you do the right thing. The White House is filled with secrecy. Every day we have top secret documents that nobody is going to be allowed to look at. But to actually move in the modern era with any shroud of secrecy around you is near impossible. So one has to appreciate the planning that this took, something that President Bush apparently kept just to himself and a very small group of people, not even sharing with his own wife and always leaving the contingent to cancel at last minute if need be.I'm sure if there was any press report, yesterday for example, that this whole thing would have been scrapped. So everything worked just the way the White House wanted it to. 


CAROL LIN, CNN ANCHOR: That's right. President Bush telling reporters if they were to make a call, that definitely the plan would be off. But give us a perspective. I mean we're talking about Thanksgiving. Granted Thanksgiving dinner with troops halfway around the world, but in perspective, how does really this compare with say Lyndon Johnson's trip to Vietnam or Eisenhower's trip to Korea? 


BRINKLEY: Well this is much more dramatic. Eisenhower like a drum beat in the 1952 presidential campaign when he ran against Adlai Stevenson kept saying I will go to Korea and find a solution to the war. That I will physically go. Lyndon Johnson going in 1966 to Camron Bay (ph) was again meant to be a morale boost, but it didn't really have the kind of play. For one thing, there wasn't the 24-hour news cycle. You would get a headline for that, couple of days of television press on it and that's it. Today, on Thanksgiving, when there is not a lot of other big news this has been the dominant story and it's been beaten into everybody's house. And it's hard for Republicans or Democrats and anybody really to complain about this. Of course, you know, success has a lot of friends. If this had gone sideways, if somehow Bush had been ambushed on his -- on the journey or something, a mishap happened, you would have critics coming out of the woodwork. As it is now, I think most Americans will say, job well done. 


LIN: Well, when you take a look at what he has done -- I mean I feel like every time I turn around, I see President Bush in a flight suit, you know, standing with the background of a bunch of troops. Given what's happening on the ground in Iraq, how much of a risk is he taking by actively linking his image to this war? 


BRINKLEY: That's a good question. Notice he didn't have the flight suit on today. It was a little more toned down with just a very modest Army jacket on. The -- you know, of course, he's caught a lot of flack from going on the "USS Lincoln" having "mission accomplished." It was seen as a bit of hot dogging on his part. So that was a political risk today if somehow this didn't work and the flight had to be aborted and the mission canceled, it would have looked like perhaps Bush hot-dogging it again. I think this is going to help balance the image of the "Lincoln", which I think most people feel was a political mistake to claim a victory in the war in Iraq when it should have been a time to kind of stiffen people's resolve for the difficult task of building a civil society there. This was the successful other side of the coin, if you'd like, to what happened when he went on the "Lincoln".LIN: I'm sure we're going to be seeing a lot of this videotape in the campaign in 2004. Thank you very much...


BRINKLEY: Thanks.


LIN: ... Brinkley, for joining us tonight. Well before we go to a break, an abbreviated "MONEYLINE" roundup. Tomorrow kicks off the holiday retail season and the National Retail Foundation expects a good one. Sales up 5.7 percent compared to last year. Now that's on the bullish side. Wall Street anticipates a 4- percent sales growth this year. Markets are closed for the holiday. They're going to pick up where they left off yesterday slightly on the upside for the day and the week so far. Still to come on NEWSNIGHT for this Thanksgiving -- morale booster, media event or both? We're going to take a look at the aftereffects of the president's visit with Howard Kurtz of "The Washington Post" in a moment. This is NEWSNIGHT.


(COMMERCIAL BREAK) 


LIN: By most accounts, the White House press corps is still steaming mad tonight, mad that they didn't know about the president's trip to Iraq until after he had left Baghdad. To most Americans, that feeling of reporters being in the dark might be all well and good. But for our next guest, the secret trip to Iraq is much more than a well executed surprise. Howard Kurtz is the media writer for "The Washington Post" and host of the CNN broadcast "RELIABLE SOURCES". Howie, tell it like it is. How do you really feel about the president's trip?


HOWARD KURTZ, HOST, CNN "RELIABLE SOURCES": Well look, it's a great thing for the president to have gone to Baghdad, boosted the morale of the troops and probably boosted his own political standing as well. But there is the small, but inconvenient fact that the White House lied to the press. They put out a story saying the president will be spending Thanksgiving in Crawford with his family. They even put out the menu, free range turkey, if you're interested, and a lot of the journalists I've talked to today are upset that this kind of deception was engaged in, not for military secrecy -- although clearly there was a security aspect, but to set up this grand turkey photo op for the president.


(CROSSTALK) 


KURTZ: Other journalists, I should add, say...


LIN: 


(UNINTELLIGIBLE) 


KURTZ: ... they don't think it's a big deal. 


LIN: Well wait a second. I mean don't you think this is sour grapes because those people weren't included on the plane? 


KURTZ: I don't think it's sour grapes because some of the people I talked to were bureau chiefs and news executives who wouldn't be going on the trip themselves. And they feel that, you know, they take very seriously the notion that the White House ought not to mislead the press and through the press, the public. Clearly, there are some people who are just angry because they got stranded in Crawford and missed the big story. But also the White House by doing this as a super-secret operation put a handful of journalists, those in the pool, who did go on the trip in the uncomfortable position of having to keep that secret. For example, Mike Allen of "The Washington Post" didn't tell any of his editors that he was going and they were quite surprised to learn that he was in Baghdad.


LIN: Well, but at the same time, I mean do you think the public really cares that a bunch of reporters are saying -- are crying foul because they were told the menu and turned out that the menu was taking place in Baghdad? 


KURTZ: I don't think 98 percent of the public cares about the press and its predilections. I do think perhaps some people will care about the deception aspect. Most people I am sure will say that the White House was justified because of any possible security risk to the president in putting out what amounted to a cover story. But I must say in terms of the media, the impact is not just on the reporters who got shortchanged, not just on the news executives who didn't know about it, but in terms of the coverage today watching all three cable news networks, I would say it ranged from upbeat to gushing. A retired colonel on MSNBC, for example, saying this shows you can't underestimate George Bush. So by limiting it to that video, which everybody had to rerun again and again, there was no real live coverage because of the quick nature of the trip and the secretive nature of the trip. The White House got a really good ride on television today. 


LIN: Well if you had full access, Howard, I mean what's the downside really? What's the dark side of a trip like this? It was great for troop morale, it made pretty pictures, it made people feel good on an American holiday. 


KURTZ: Well you know you might have some reporters doing stand- ups raising the question of whether this would have any lasting effect, whether people will forget about this after the glow wears off if there are continued attacks against American soldiers in Iraq. In other words, dealing with the politics of -- not just the politics of the situation, but the continued dangerous situation for all the American servicemen and women who are working there. 


LIN: What about the -- how the White House handled the press corps, which was actually allowed to fly on Air Force One? I mean the fact that they were sworn to secrecy, that they had to give up their cell phones, that you know the president would look them in the eye and say, no phone calls and made a cutting motion across his throat, threatening them if they should actually reveal any of the plans and that the reporters went along with it.


KURTZ: Well, look, once they had bought into the idea that they were go on this secret trip, they didn't really have any choice and they weren't about to get on their cell phones and call their moms and say guess what I'm doing on Thanksgiving. But at the same time, they did become -- you know the press was used to some degree because these were very pretty pictures, very uplifting story for a president, who clearly has been struggling on this issue, as so much of the news out of Iraq has been depressing, has been difficult for the U.S. forces there. But, you know, you should keep in mind that the press routinely keeps secrets when it...


(AUDIO GAP)


KURTZ: ... military conflict. The question here is whether the level of deception was justified for what was the president serving turkey to the troops as opposed to something where you know there was actually a military operation under way. And that's something that's going to be debated pretty heavily I would say over the next few days. 


LIN: (UNINTELLIGIBLE) Howard Kurtz, food for thought. Thanks so much.


KURTZ: Thank you.LIN: President Bush's trip wasn't the only one. Senator Hillary Clinton turned up at Bagram Air Base in Afghanistan, along with Jack Reed, her Democratic colleague from Rhode Island. After a turkey dinner with the troops, Senator Clinton said the American people are fully behind them. Back in her home state, the Macy's Thanksgiving Day parade came off without a hitch. Sunny skies, gentle winds and despite a whole lot of extra security, no one had any trouble getting into the holiday spirit. Thanksgiving also means the flu season is in full swing, an especially rough one this year. Four youngsters in Colorado have died of an aggressive strain of the disease, one that came on the scene too late to be included in this year's flu shot. That said, health officials still recommend getting vaccinated because the other strains aren't exactly a walk in the park either. Ahead on NEWSNIGHT, more on the shock and awe visit. We'll have more on the president's comment and the reaction of the soldiers to them. Stay with us.


(COMMERCIAL BREAK) 


LIN: For many of us, Thanksgiving is a day to grab a great meal and take a lot of obligatory holiday photographs, you know, the ones that mom usually insists on taking and going and putting them into the holiday cards. As we've been saying, George Bush's Thanksgiving was a lot like that, except the cameras were bigger. Here's some of what it looked like and how it was received. 


(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP) 


UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Is there anybody back there who is more senior than us? 


(CHEERING)


(APPLAUSE) 


UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Oh, I think it was really inspiring for the soldiers to see him here today. This is exactly what we needed to do for our soldiers today. And it is just inspiring when you see that kind of leadership, stand in front of the soldiers and you get the reaction that he got. They trust the leadership. It's very inspiring today to have him here. 


UNIDENTIFIED MALE: What did y'all think when the president walked out behind the curtain there? 


UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Shocked. Surprised. 


UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Big surprise...


UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Yes.


(CROSSTALK) 


UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Any idea? No clue at all? 


UNIDENTIFIED MALE: No clue...


(CROSSTALK) 


UNIDENTIFIED MALE: No. 


UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: I thought it was pretty nice that he came down and spent Thanksgiving with us. 


UNIDENTIFIED MALE: What does it mean to you guys being here and have the president show up? 


UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: He's sacrificing a little bit for us too. It's nice. 


UNIDENTIFIED MALE: That's where your mind is. It's on home at this time of year and think about your loved ones and friends and things like that. And then you have the leader of our country come here and share dinner with us. That's actually very special. 


GEORGE W. BUSH, PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES: (UNINTELLIGIBLE) 


UNIDENTIFIED MALE: It helps a lot, knowing that you know the commander-in-chief himself is going to come out here and make some of the same sacrifices, away from his family, away from his home, to show that he's (UNINTELLIGIBLE). 


UNIDENTIFIED MALE: I've never seen him. So like for the first time, you know, it was a great surprise and it felt good. It really boosted my morale up, you know, knowing that he was here and started serving with us. 


UNIDENTIFIED MALE: That's a great surprise. And it's what we expect, you know. Because he's here with us, where he's needed (UNINTELLIGIBLE) he's showing us support. I think it's great (UNINTELLIGIBLE) I think it's great (UNINTELLIGIBLE). I think these soldiers appreciate him showing up. That means that his words ring true. I think they understand what he was saying. They understand why they're here (UNINTELLIGIBLE).


UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Today was the day to do it 


(UNINTELLIGIBLE).


UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Yes. Absolutely. 


(END VIDEO CLIP) 


LIN: A lot more happening around the world today. Here's a quick roundup. Israel's prime minister appears to be preparing the political ground for giving up settlements in the West Bank and Gaza. It is clear, he said, that we, meaning settlers, will not be in all the places we are right now. Now, by the same token, Prime Minister Sharon said time is running out for a deal with the Palestinians. He raised the possibility he would take certain unilateral steps absent a negotiated settlement. Next to Taipei where Taiwanese lawmakers raised the stakes in the conflict with mainland China. They voted to give the Taiwanese president the power to call a referendum on independence if China appears ready to invade the island. For its part, China's official media warns that Taiwan is courting disaster. Police in Western England have arrested a man believed to have ties to al Qaeda. They later found explosives at his house. The man who is a 20-year-old British subject of Asian origin was arrested on suspicion of involvement in the commission, preparation or instigation of acts of terrorism. Authorities are saying little more than that. And Britain's best known footballer now has OBE at the end of his name. David Beckham played -- paid the queen a visit today and walked away with an order of the British Empire. The always fashionable Beck's (ph), as he is called, wore a top hat and tails and a posh spice on his arm. Still ahead on NEWSNIGHT, the job of saving lives in wartime. We'll look at the newest and best trained medics in America's arsenal, the 91 Whiskeys. This is NEWSNIGHT from New York.


(COMMERCIAL BREAK) 


LIN: Finally from us tonight, a big reason why some of the troops made it home this holiday, home safely in spite of battlefield injuries that not so long ago might have been fatal. The reason is combat medics with a difference. Every war from Korea to "Operation Desert Storm" has seen general improvement in the training of combat medics. But this war has seen a breakthrough. Civilians might call them super medics. In military lingo, they're 91 Whiskeys. Here is NEWSNIGHT's Beth Nissen. 


(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE) 


UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: (UNINTELLIGIBLE) 


BETH NISSEN, CNN CORRESPONDENT: At Fort Sam Houston in San Antonio, Texas, soldiers drill for a bio/chem attack, practice how to take care of themselves on the battlefield and how to take care of others, the wounded, the injured. 


(SHOUTING)


UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Medic. 


NISSEN (voice-over): These are the Army's newest combat medics. Military designation, 91 W's or 91 Whiskeys. 


UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Three, two, one...


UNIDENTIFIED MALE: (UNINTELLIGIBLE) NISSEN: The most advanced combat medics ever fielded by the U.S. military. 


UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: We got it.


LT. COL. BRUCE MCVEIGH, BATTALION COMMANDER, 232 MEDICAL BATTALION: Before they were trained at very rudimentary levels, basic putting on bandages, pressure dressings, stopping the bleeding. Now we're teaching them to manage the airway, manage the bleeding and also be able to do the procedures they need to get that soldier packaged up and evacuated back to the next level of care. 


UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Did you all save some of those bodies?


(SHOUTING)


NISSEN: In 16 intensive weeks of classroom work and practice drills, 91 Whiskey trainees certify as full-fledged EMTs. 


UNIDENTIFIED MALE: (UNINTELLIGIBLE) 


NISSEN: They learn how to intubate patients, insert IV's, start medications. 


MASTER SGT. ROGER THOMPSON, 91 WHISKEY INSTRUCTOR: A lot of these young soldiers are going to go right to Iraq. That's why every soldier that we send out has to be pretty much ready to step out the door and do their job day one. 


UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Is the pressure up here?


UNIDENTIFIED MALE: That's it. That's it.NISSEN: 91 Whiskeys practice on each other. They practice basic nursing care on patients at nearby Brooke Army Medical Center, taking vital signs...


UNIDENTIFIED MALE: BP 149 over 84.NISSEN: ... doing patient assessments, some on casualties from "Operation Iraqi Freedom".


UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Does that hurt at all?


PVT. 2 JASON GUTIERREZ, 18 YEARS OLD, 91 WHISKEY: It's so much information you got to keep in your mind. It feels like a year's worth of training and they cram it into like 16 weeks. 


UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Take your time hall (ph).


NISSEN: The emphasis is on hands-on training. More critical procedures are practiced on human simulators. Computerized mannequins with working lungs, circulation, human skeletal structure.


UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Feel for the fourth rib.


(SOUNDS)


NISSEN: Computers monitor and control the simulator's breathing, pulse rate, bleeding, which change in response to the medic's treatment. 


UNIDENTIFIED MALE: (UNINTELLIGIBLE) open fractures. 


NISSEN: All treatments are recorded by a human controller, who reviews how well the trainees manage to do in 10 minutes in the dark. 


UNIDENTIFIED MALE: I (UNINTELLIGIBLE) towards the end of treating your patient (UNINTELLIGIBLE) stop the bleeding on your patient. 


UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Has bleeding been controlled? 


NISSEN: The simulated injuries are typical of the most serious wounds seen in Iraq, open fractures, burns, amputations. 


LT. COL. ERIN EDGAR, DIRECTOR COMBAT MEDIC TRAINING: Soldiers still die in combat the same ways they always have. We're trying to prevent those causes of death that are preventable. Largely, bleeding from limbs, you know controlling bleeding and managing airways and breathing. 


(SHOUTING)


UNIDENTIFIED MALE: (UNINTELLIGIBLE) 


NISSEN: And medics have to learn to do that under combat conditions. Exercises are designed to simulate the chaos, the confusion of an active battlefield. 


(SHOUTING)UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: I'm not feeling a pulse on this patient. 


(SHOUTING)UNIDENTIFIED MALE: How long are you going to take to do that tourniquet, medic? 


NISSEN: Noise levels, stress levels are high. 


(SHOUTING)


UNIDENTIFIED MALE: How long are you going to take? He's dying. 


UNIDENTIFIED MALE: You've got bodies lying all around. 


UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: The patient is gone. No pulse.


(SHOUTING)


SPC. CHARLES SCOGGINS, 28 YEARS OLD, 91 WHISKEY: Some are dead. Some are alive. If this person is alive, you've got to treat them. You've got to do what you can to keep them alive and move to the next person. PVT. 2 SHAUNTELYA TYLER, 91 


WHISKEY: If you can't work under pressure, you have people out there who are depending on you and you're going to let them die. 


UNIDENTIFIED MALE: You can never replicate the real thing but I think we get them to the point where they have a pretty good idea of what's expected of them.


NISSEN: Nothing does that as effectively as the last phase of training. A week in the field. 


UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Hey hold up. Hold up.


NISSEN: 91 Whiskeys go on patrol, respond to calls for help. 


UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Blackhawk down! 


UNIDENTIFIED MALE: (UNINTELLIGIBLE) medic.


UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Blackhawk down!


(SHOTS)


UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Oh my arm.


(SHOUTING)


UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Let's go! Let's go! 


UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Wasted too much time. Let's go...


(CROSSTALK) 


UNIDENTIFIED MALE: ... let's go! 


UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: You guys got everybody out? 


UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Let's go. Let's go. Let's go.


UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: We have an amputation over here. This soldier has a head wound. 


UNIDENTIFIED MALE: You need to hurry up (UNINTELLIGIBLE) medic. You need to be...


(CROSSTALK) 


(SHOUTING)


UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Incoming...


(SHOUTING)


(CROSSTALK) 


(SHOTS)


UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: Make sure you roll him over. Make sure that he has no injuries on his back. 


UNIDENTIFIED MALE: (UNINTELLIGIBLE) 


UNIDENTIFIED MALE: You are not moving fast enough! 


UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: One, two, three...


UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Let's move! Let's move...


UNIDENTIFIED MALE: (UNINTELLIGIBLE) 


UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Let's go...


UNIDENTIFIED MALE: You better pick it up. 


NISSEN: They try to remember all they've been taught, reassure the patient. 


UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: Hang in there. Come on. 


UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: (UNINTELLIGIBLE) 


UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: Come on, stay with me. 


NISSEN: They assess the patient. 


UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: Check his airway, breathing and circulation. 


(CROSSTALK) 


UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: I don't even know how I know it but I know I do. Because I learned it. I learned it. They said it and I grasped it and I'm using it. 


NISSEN: Some of the 91 Whiskeys already deployed in combat. Anecdotal reports from the Hill to give graduates of the two-year program, plus the forward field hospitals credit for saving hundreds of lives. 


UNIDENTIFIED MALE: The chances that America's sons and daughters are going to come home alive from these deployments are better now. They're doing a great job out there. 


NISSEN: Beth Nissen, CNN, San Antonio. 


(END VIDEOTAPE) 


LIN: That's NEWSNIGHT for this Thanksgiving. Thanks for watching. I'm Carol Lin and I'll see you here again tomorrow night. Good night. 


END


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