Wednesday, December 31, 2003

A Look at Embeds' Role in Coverage of Iraq War

A Look at Embeds' Role in Coverage of Iraq War
Aired December 31, 2003 - 22:00 ET

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

AARON BROWN, HOST: Good evening again, everyone. Welcome to a special edition of NEWSNIGHT. Tonight we'll spend an hour with some of the people who helped tell the story of the war in Iraq, our reporters who were on the front lines, some reporting on their own, some part of the Pentagon's program for embedding reporters with troops in the field. We are always hesitant to focus on journalists and their experiences. This war wasn't about them. It certainly wasn't fought by them. But there's no denying that they had some extraordinary journeys, and they are all well worth hearing about. Maybe not the broadest picture of the war, but the pieces and the most fascinating ones we could find. Before we get started on their stories, an update on some of the other stories that made news today. 

(NEWSBREAK)

(COMMERCIAL BREAK)

BROWN: And now to the story that dominated the year, seen through the eyes of our embeds. CNN's Walter Rodgers was with the Army's Cavalry 3rd Division. Marty Savidge assigned to the 1st Battalion, 7th Marines. Jason Bellini spent the war with the Marines of the 15th Marine Expeditionary Unit. And CNN medical correspondent, Dr. Sanjay Gupta, left the newsroom to join the Devil Docs behind the front lines. We begin our look at reporting the war in Iraq with Walter Rodgers, who even through the herky-jerky technology of the videophone brought back some of the most vivid images of the war as he raced north through the desert. 

(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)

WALTER RODGERS, CNN SR. INTERNATIONAL CORRESPONDENT: The situation here appears to be increasingly tense. A few moments ago, out on the horizon, not very far ahead of the U.S. Army's 3rd Squadron, 7th Cavalry, we heard more than a few explosions.The U.S. Army's 3rd Squadron 7th Cavalry has compiled a rather extraordinary record in the past several days. It was the Army which assigned me to the 3rd Squadron, 7th Cavalry, and that was extremely fortuitous. It was like sitting in a poker game and drawing four aces, because this is a crack unit. It's the tip of the spear. We've had an absolutely terrific story, pushing forward north towards Baghdad. Seventy-two hours of that was under constant fire coming at us from both sides of the road. We just heard a -- what the hell? No, no, I don't know what it is. What you try to do is stay calm and continue your broadcasting, but the worst thing you can do, either as a soldier or a war correspondent, is panic. We're hearing incoming. We're not sure what it is. We see some stuff in the sky. We may have to break this off. I think we're going to break off this live shot for the time being. We're not sure what we see up there. Goodbye. We've got to dive for vehicles, we think. See you, bye. We have been under heavy fire for the past couple of miles, mostly a small arms fire. But the sandstorm has enabled the Iraqis to come very close to the road. Let me give you an example of what the dust is like. Look at this tarp. We have been through days of dust like that. The dust and sand are blowing so badly, you're getting these vague images. It's like being in a blizzard, except, unfortunately, the sand doesn't melt as the snow does. The pictures you're seeing are absolutely phenomenal. These are live pictures of the 7th Cavalry racing across the desert. You've never seen battlefield pictures like these before. What you're watching here is truly historic television and journalism. 

(END VIDEOTAPE)

BROWN: Next on this special NEWSNIGHT, the other embeds. Marty Savidge, Jason Bellini, and Dr. Sanjay Gupta. From New York, this is NEWSNIGHT. 

(COMMERCIAL BREAK)

BROWN: Being an embed in Iraq meant eating and sleeping, waiting out the sandstorms right along with the troops. It also meant putting yourself in the line of fire with them as well. On the battlefield, the most routine missions can turn deadly in an instant. CNN's Martin Savidge spent the war with the 1st Battalion 7th Marines. 

(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Behind you! Behind you! Behind you!

MARTIN SAVIDGE, CNN CORRESPONDENT: Usually the scariest moments are the ones you did not anticipate at all. One particular case, it was supposed to be a routine mission. We did find a team of demolition experts that were going about trying to blow up some abandoned Iraqi tanks and armored personnel carriers located behind a small village. It was as milk toast as it could be. Suddenly out of an alleyway, wham, here comes an RPG that just fizzles through the air. We had been trying to get a live report out all morning with no success. As soon as the shooting starts, bingo, the satellites all click in, and now we're going live in the middle of what was a firefight. It's getting hot. Let's go. That looks like the armored personnel carrier. We're going to keep moving back because these also have ammunition inside of them. There goes your tank down the end. I volunteered to be an embed. I wanted to be in a unit as close to the front or as close to the action, as we say. Commanders with the 1st Battalion 7th Marines who we are embedded with say that, yes, they have had a problem with guerrilla tactics that have been deployed against the supply lines. Many military conflicts, it's about 90 percent of frustration or doing nothing. What have you been doing? 

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Sitting. 

SAVIDGE: What you think about sitting? 

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Not too happy about it. SAVIDGE: There's an avenue of trust that has to be involved here that perhaps does stretch the boundaries when it comes to true journalism. And what I mean by that is we are in as much danger as the military force with which we are embedded. Do you have any knives or anything on you? 

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Negative, sir. 

SAVIDGE: By far, we're probably the most blacked out of any military embed. We can film and videotape during these blackouts. You just cannot file, which in our case means live reporting or beaming signals and images back to Atlanta. When you come out, it's like a black cloud has been lifted and bingo, let's get to work. 

(END VIDEOTAPE)

BROWN: We started out with the veteran of our war correspondents. Now we turn to the youngest, CNN's Jason Bellini. Jason provided some especially incisive reporting from post-war Afghanistan, and in Iraq he brought fresh eyes, a big heart and a keen feel for the people he encountered as he and the Marines of the 15th Marine Expeditionary Unit made their way toward Baghdad. Here's his account. 

(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)

JASON BELLINI, CNN CORRESPONDENT: We've been traveling by helicopter, and that's not a bad way to go. I know they're dangerous. But you get such a great view when you fly in, and they fly those helicopters very low. When we first entered Iraq, we saw villagers waving towards us. That was the very first thing -- one of the very first things we saw entering the country. I remember what excited me about the opportunity to be an embedded reporter, and that was covering this war, be able to be at the ground level, get to know the Marines who I'm with, get to -- with this experience with them. You're eating the same food, or you're sleeping under the same conditions they are. You're waking up at the same hour that they are. And I think that earns you respect, it earns you trust. 

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: We're taking gunfire from them! 

BELLINI: We're going to get things raw, the way things really are out here, and that's what we're really out here seeking. 

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: You know what? We don't want this to be seen. All right? You need to stay back.

BELLINI: You don't have a choice. There are very strict rules under which we operate. In the event of a casualty, we're not going to show the person's face, we're not going to give the person's name, until the next of kin is notified. And you have to respect that. We have a job to do out here. We're here to be witnesses. We're here to report what's going on as accurately as we can. Down here, we have some Marines who are listening to the radio, trying to get a sense of the big picture in this war. It's often difficult when you're out here, when you're only hearing about your own mission, to know where you fit into the larger picture. You're going to hit home that this is really a war, this is not a video game going out there and shooting inanimate objects. You're going out there and you're going to be putting your life on the line in a very serious way. And that's been sobering in the last 24 hours. One of the things that added to the richness of this experience for me personally is the fact that my father was in the Marines. He served during the war in Vietnam. And from the moment he heard that I was to be embedded with the Marines, he became very excited. So I kind of do him proud. 

(END VIDEOTAPE)

BROWN: When CNN medical correspondent Dr. Sanjay Gupta was assigned to cover Operation Iraqi Freedom, it wasn't exactly clear to him or to us what he would see. But within days, his tale became greater than he could ever have imagined. Dr. Gupta became one of the fixtures for CNN's coverage of the war, embedded with the Devil Docs. He reported how the unit would receive and treat the injured, perform surgery in a tent when the elements outside were treacherous. But during his assignment, Dr. Gupta, who is a neurosurgeon by trade, would have to make a crucial and a personal decision. This is his story. 

(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)

SANJAY GUPTA, CNN MEDICAL CORRESPONDENT: In the middle of the desert of northern Kuwait, the U.S. military is going over their ABC's. We started that, you know, back in February, several weeks ago, we were looking at medical preparedness. We knew this would be a different sort of conflict. Chemical and biological weapons would be discussed like never before. And have the troops to prepare back then was an important story. We ended up in northern Kuwait, in the desert for some time, and then ended up on a convoy, a multiple car convoy, multiple vehicle convoy, 89 vehicles, three miles long. They told us it would take about five hours to get to the location where we were going to get. It took 17. As you can see, we're wearing our masks, our kevlar and our helmets. That's because we're instructed to do so, as we're instructed also to be here in this bunker. You know, I'm used to being in the studio, wearing a suit on the set. But this has been obviously a huge change for me. We are here just behind the front lines in an FRSS, front line resuscitative surgical suite. Right behind me for the first time ever, an operation has been done on the abdomen for a gunshot wound. There is dust and sand blowing everywhere, yet they're able to keep these operating rooms clean. They're able to do operations. We've seen them do it now, four or five operations just over the last couple of days. And as soon as they found out I was a neurosurgeon, they immediately said to me, well, if we get any head injuries, we're calling you. You have to be scared if you're here. (UNINTELLIGIBLE) killed in action. We are hearing about possible chemical and biological stuff. Absolutely, we're scared. We have been really pleased with the stories we've been able to tell. I think that really -- that's what makes it worthwhile. We're getting the truth out there, we're getting the truth about how people take care of their fallen comrades, how they take care of the Iraqi soldiers as well, how that all happens. We not only get to tell that story but we get to see it firsthand, we get to be a part of it. I mean, I think that's part of the embedding process, too, to not only just do the stories but to know what it's like for the people that you're doing the stories on. 

(END VIDEOTAPE) 

BROWN: As we continue on this special edition of NEWSNIGHT, we'll update the latest news, plus hear from Walter Rodgers and former Pentagon spokesperson Torie Clarke. Around the world, this is NEWSNIGHT.

(COMMERCIAL BREAK)

BROWN: The embeds assigned to cover the war realized they would be breaking new ground on the battlefields of Iraq. Many, if not most, pressed for the job for that very reason. It was journalism as never practiced before, every embed a pioneer, even the most veteran of war correspondent. Even CNN's Walter Rodgers, who barreled all the way to Baghdad with the army's 7th Cavalry 3rd Division. We talked to him after he came back, after he had some time to reflect on what was a remarkable journey which began back in March. 

(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)

RODGERS: The pictures you're seeing are absolutely phenomenal. These are live pictures of the 7th Cavalry racing across the desert. They will -- it will be days before they get to Baghdad, but you've never seen battlefield pictures like these before. You have to realize they've been riding along, bouncing along in these tanks for probably six or more hours now. And if you ride inside that tank it is like riding in the bowels of a dragon. They roar. They screech. But what you're watching here is truly historic television and journalism. 

(END VIDEO CLIP)

BROWN: The familiar voice and now the familiar face of our old friend and colleague, Walt Rodgers. It's nice to have you here. We -- the people who watch this program shared many of those moments with you over the course of the war, including that one. That day, racing across the desert, the exhilaration in your voice matched the exhilarating pictures that you sent back. When you think of it now, after far more dangerous days, how do you see it? 

RODGERS: It's every bit as exciting and more so because I use an assignment as a graduate seminar. So I crammed for that assignment. And when we were rolling across the Iraqi desert with the 7th Cavalry, I thought of the Pantheons, the Chaldeans (ph) rolling across that same desert. Alexander the great with the Macedonians and Greeks rolling the other direction across that desert. To me, the Americans were the latest invaders to go across Iraq in a tapestry of history through 4,000 years. 

BROWN: None of those people you mentioned had videophones. 

RODGERS: That's true. 

BROWN: The fact that you were able to file live while this was happening, that times you're going to say it well and perfectly and sometimes you're not. Increase the pressure, would you have preferred to do spots than do it live? 

RODGERS: No. I mean, I love spots. I love to do the creative process of videotape crafting and, again, creating a tapestry. But there's nothing -- nothing more exciting. I've never done drugs but I'm telling you there is no drug in the world as high as live television and particularly live television in times of war. 

(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)

RODGERS: We are moving in the direction of Baghdad. We're taking small arms fire to the right. For the past 15 or 20 minutes, our tank in front of us has been firing. It's 120 millimeter gun off to the right of us, shooting targets no more than 200 to 300 meters away. 

(END VIDEO CLIP) 

BROWN: When things got nasty and they would get nasty really a couple of days later down the road, did you ever worry about live television and war colliding in the worst possible moment? An artillery shell hitting one of those tanks, hitting one of those guys? 

RODGERS: That sort of thing was happening the first night in the ambush as we approached the canal -- 7th Cavalry approached the canal before it crossed the Euphrates River defense line. The 7th Cavalry and we were just seven or eight vehicles back was ambushed by a battalion of Iraqis on both side of the road and I saw tracers coming in at night. Two vehicles ahead of me bouncing off and going straight up in the air. I saw rocket-propelled grenades. I thought the tank in front of me had been hit. And in point of fact, it bounced in the dirt beside it. That made great television, but, you know, you didn't think in terms of great television. You just said, this is where I'm supposed to be. This is the story I'm supposed to tell and I will tell it. 

BROWN: You said to me one night -- I don't remember quite what was happening. It was early. And I think the expression you said was, "this is great fun." 

(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)

RODGERS: Thanks, Aaron. This is great fun. Listen we're out here with the 3rd Squadron, 7th Cavalry on a muddy road in south central Iraq. 

(END VIDEO CLIP)BROWN: I think some people heard that in a way you didn't mean it. 

RODGERS: I love what I do. I really love what I do. And if it's reporting from a war zone, I love it passionately -- passionately. And if I can't do it -- if I don't enjoy it, I won't do it. 

BROWN: How close did you come to Captain Clay Lyle, who became well known to all of the regular "NEWSNIGHT" viewers and that group that you traveled with? How close were you? 

RODGERS: You mean physically? 

BROWN: No, I mean...

RODGERS: I mean, we were right behind his tank the whole time. 

BROWN: No, I don't mean physically. I mean emotionally. 

RODGERS: Well, he was from Texas and I'm from New England so he is a Confederate and I'm a Yankee. We could tease each other about that. But I respected him immensely, because he was a first class professional soldier in the United States Army. I consider soldiering an honorable profession. I -- it was easy to report on him and he was extraordinarily useful as a source. And it was a great colorful individual to report on. I knew his family. I mean, I knew his name. He's got a daughter named Emily (ph). I think she's 3 years old. Never met his wife, his wife Stephanie (ph). I got to know these people just because it was important to me and it helped me understand them. 

(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)

RODGERS: We have a surprise for you. We think we've established contact with your wife on the phone back at Fort Stewart. We're going to try to see if she can speak to you at this point. We hope it's working. Go ahead, talk to her. 

CLAY LYLE, U.S. ARMY: Stephi. STEPHANE LYLE, WIFE OF CLAY LYLE: Hi, Clay. Hi, sweetie. 

C. LYLE: Can you hear me? 

S. LYLE: I hear you. Hi. 

C. LYLE: Hi. We're all safe. 

S. LYLE: I know. 

C. LYLE: We're all safe and a little tired.

 S. LYLE: We've all been watching you and we're all very proud of you. 

C. LYLE: Good to hear your voice. 

S. LYLE: We've all been watching and we're proud of everything you're doing. Your in our thoughts and prayers.

C. LYLE: (UNINTELLIGIBLE). As long as and Emily are doing OK, I'm doing, OK. 

S. LYLE: We're fine. We love and miss you.

(END VIDEO CLIP)

(COMMERCIAL BREAK)

BROWN: Of the criticism that some people have that the process, the embed process, put you too close to sources and inherently, because you come to feel affection towards them, makes it less likely that you will report the bad things, if bad things do happen, you would say what? 

RODGERS: I've covered the White House and I like some of the people I covered. And I like people I didn't cover. I covered the Senate. I like some senators. I didn't like other senators. It's any other beat.But what made the embedding process so remarkably unique was here you are in a football game and you're in the huddle. You are literally in the huddle. The quarterback is Lieutenant Colonel Terry Ferrell. He lays his maps out on the back -- or on the hood of a humvee and his captains are all standing around. I poke my neck in. I'm taking notes off the objectives following the route. And I raised my hand and I said, "Colonel, are we going to have close air support over there?" You know, because you know it was going to get dodgy.

(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)

RODGERS (voice-over): The Air Force was called in with a number of A-10 Warthogs. They have big gatling guns in the front. They plowed through the Iraqi lines over there. 

(END VIDEOTAPE)

RODGERS: You were not in -- you were in the huddle. You weren't playing the game. 

BROWN: And how did they see you? 

RODGERS: It was very interesting. You know, it was a gradual process of getting to know and trust each other. And for them trusting me was knowing I would not blow their objective and get us all shelled with artillery.How did they get to know us? I think they got to like us a lot. The interesting thing, Aaron, in retrospect, is I think our presence actually helped morale in the unit. They liked having us there. They liked me calling Atlanta and saying, these are the 16 teams in the sweet 16. They liked me handing a phone to a Puerto Rican medic who hadn't talked to his mother in two months. Here, call your mother. 

BROWN: And that's down the road in the process. At the beginning, when you first met them, were they wary of you? 

RODGERS: Sure, as rightly they should be and I was wary of them. But what was remarkable was when Colonel Ferrell briefed us the second day we were there, he just laid it all out in front of us. Here's where we're going, here's the route, and this is the way it's going to be. And you're sitting on the story before you ever cross the line, before it begins. You say, my God, I've got the greatest story in the world and I can't file.It was really something, but you have to exercise restraint and you know what the rules are and you play by the rules. And when you played by the rules, it worked beautifully for everyone. 

BROWN: What was the diciest moment? 

RODGERS: A lot of those ambushes. And there was one time in...

BROWN: Were these during the sandstorms or after? RODGERS: Well, sometimes it was during sandstorms. The 7th Cavalry was under fire almost continuously for two weeks straight. 

(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)

RODGERS: We have been under heavy fire for the past couple of miles, mostly small arms fire, but the sandstorm has enabled the Iraqis to come very close to the road. And if I sound a little nervous, it's because we're in a soft skin vehicle and everybody else is in armor.

(END VIDEOTAPE)

RODGERS: The diciest moment I never knew about, my cameraman, Charlie Miller and I, were standing outside our vehicle in a huge firefight at night. There was no point being in the vehicle, because it was soft skin. There was no protection. And maybe if we stood out in the front and back a little, nobody could hit us.And shooting the guy in the tank was shooting in front of us, Mercutio Posey (ph), a loader, in Captain Lyle's tank. And somebody came up to me the next day and said you ought to thank that man. And I said, "Why?" And he said because there was a guy creeping up in the ditch five meters away from you with a Kalashnikov and he was about to blow you and your cameraman away. And Specialist Posey (ph) had night vision goggles on. So he could see the guy. We couldn't. The guy was just over there. Five meters, that's halfway to a first down in a football game. And Posey (ph) saw him, swung his 7.62 around, cut the Iraqi down. Otherwise, I wouldn't be here. 

(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)

RODGERS: We just heard an incoming -- what the hell? No, no, I don't know what it is. 

(END VIDEOTAPE)

BROWN: Did you ever wish were you armed? 

RODGERS: Good question. There was one point in the sandstorm when the Iraqis were shooting at us. And I was so mad -- you know, somebody's trying to kill me. I said to myself privately, "I wish I had a gun so I could shoot back," just to vent my frustration. You know, I was really angry somebody was trying to kill me. It wouldn't have done any good. And I'm glad I wasn't. 

(NEWSBREAK) 

(COMMERCIAL BREAK)

BROWN: I'm sure you're aware of some of this, that there has been a fair amount of criticism that television in particular, and these days when you talk about news on television, pretty much talking about cable, sanitized the war, that the reality of the horror of war was kept off the screen. Do you think from the perspective you had, which was a limited perspective -- you had a view of one story, one part of the story -- that there's truth in that or not? 

RODGERS: There is truth in it in that there were no embeds with the Iraqi army. 

(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)

RODGERS: You can see smoke rising from a Soviet vintage BMP, an armored personnel carrier. Again, just to the right of that, you see a figure lying in the road. That is a dead Iraqi soldier.

(END VIDEOTAPE)

RODGERS: They were so overmatched that their story couldn't be told. But if someone has a complaint that the Iraqis don't let Western reporters in with their soldiers, that's not an issue that you should take up with a CNN correspondent. We wouldn't -- I know our management. If we could have had an embed with the Iraqi army, we would have -- CNN would have done it. 

BROWN: Would that have been appropriate? 

RODGERS: Sure. When we were in Sarajevo, we covered the Serbs and we covered the Bosnian Muslims. When we're in Russia, we covered... 

BROWN: Well, here -- but here you had American forces. This wasn't Serbs and...

RODGERS: That's an excellent question. I don't know. But if I were assigned, I would have done it. 

BROWN: You would have gone? 

RODGERS: Sure. 

BROWN: Yes. You're 62? 

RODGERS: 63 in a couple of months, about 10 weeks. And would I do it again? You bet. BROWN: Did you have any concerns going in that this sort of work, this particular kind of work, covering a war, particularly a war in these conditions -- there's no going back to the hotel at night -- that this was young man's work? 

RODGERS: I knew David Bloom well. And I knew how excited he got. He thought he -- he told me the night -- you know, before we parted and he went to his unit, that he was going to be the ace reporter of this war. And David was only 38. And you know, awful tragedy. He's dead.Do I think it's young man's work? Well, not for me. I'll go back any time they send me back, because I believe in our craft. It's honorable. We're in the truth-telling business. And the best thing was I lost 14 pounds. I got stronger at the every day. And at the end of the time, I was keeping up with the soldiers 19, 20 years old. 

BROWN: We've known each other literally for 12 years in two different places. You are to me the quintessential foreign correspondent. You spent much of your career overseas. Were you aware -- I'm sure you're aware now -- were you aware at all then that people talked about you as the "scud stud" of the war? 

RODGERS: Only you.

BROWN: No.

RODGERS: And I think that's hilarious, because remember the first stud scud was Arthur Kent.

BROWN: Yes.

RODGERS: And then his ex-wife came out and said he was the scud dud. Having said that -- I mean that was in all the papers. I'm not making that up. I -- whenever asked about that, I say my wife would be amused. And she was. The important thing, you know though as Oscar Wilde said, men get older, they never get very good. I think that's probably true. 

BROWN: When you got to Baghdad...

RODGERS: Right. 

BROWN: There was a couple of days spent just outside the airport. 

RODGERS: Right. 

BROWN: The first of those days, you and I were on the air for a long time together that night. 

(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)

RODGERS: What you're looking at is the furthest advance northward of the U.S. Army's 3rd squadron 7th Cavalry. They are not trying to advance any closer to the airport. That's not their mission, but the Bradley fighting vehicle, which you see in the distance and a tank beyond that is assigned to hold this position. 

(END VIDEOTAPE)

BROWN: Talk about what it was like for the unit to have finally arrived there? 

RODGERS: The 7th Cavalry and the CNN embedded with it was under fire all the time. It was a -- as long as you're under fire, it isn't over. And as soon as things started to quiet down, the unit and we as well had to be especially alert, because again, we were still in a combat zone. There were still people trying to kill us. That was when we were under the heaviest fire, well, at least as heavy as any other point when we were just two miles west of the airport. I had to hedge our distance.

BROWN: Right.

RODGERS: We're just two miles west of the airport. So 7th Cavalry was here. 3rd battalion of the 3rd Infantry Division was at the airport. And then here's Baghdad. And we were out there on a limb. We were the blocking unit in case the Hammurabi division or the Adnan division tried to flank and roll up the 3rd Infantry Division.And what it's like is we're 7th Cavalry Apache troop was only 18 vehicles. I couldn't tell you that at that time. It was 10 bradleys and 8 tanks. And if they roll in 500 tanks or 30, 40, 50 tanks, the 7th Cavalry had to be darn good, because you were always outnumbered. 

(COMMERCIAL BREAK)

BROWN: It was about 1:00 in the morning on the East Coast and you reported that a military source had told you that they had gone into Baghdad? 

RODGERS: That's right. 

BROWN: And that they really had not found much resistance. 

RODGERS: That's true. 

BROWN: It was the first sign we had, the first reporting we had that somehow the Iraqi government had disappeared, had vanished. 

(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)

RODGERS: It is quiet in the city of Baghdad, according to what the U.S. Army is telling us now. We're in the southern suburbs of Baghdad. The lead of the story continues to be that a senior army officer has told CNN -- and this is a quote -- "that the majority of the Iraqi forces have now given up." By given up, we do not mean surrender. We're strongly suggesting -- and every evidence suggests -- that what they're doing is deserting, turning in their uniforms, running away. 

(END VIDEOTAPE)

BROWN: What do you remember about that day and that moment? 

RODGERS: What I remember is that I had the best source in the U.S. Army at that point. And that was General Buff Blount (ph). And my colonel just let me listen to the general's briefings every single morning. So I heard...

BROWN: These were on the phone? 

RODGERS: No, well, it was on like a walkie talkie system.

BROWN: Yes.

RODGERS: And it was -- you were sitting in the back of a Bradley fighting vehicle. And you could hear all the commanders calling in, reporting from where they were. And if you -- if there was anything you missed, the colonel I had, Colonel Ferrell, was just saying, well this is what they're getting there by way of resistance or what they're not getting by way of resistance.And he would -- you know, there was that trust that's built between a reporter and his source. And they gave us everything, which is the way Torie Clarke at the Pentagon envisaged...

BROWN: Yes.

RODGERS: ...that this would work. And it was the way Rumsfeld, the Secretary of Defense, who I think still sees embedding as okay you guys think you're tough? Go with our guys. And that was the way Rumsfeld approached it. And I thought that was quite remarkable. 

BROWN: Do you think everybody got out of it what they needed to get out of it? That the Pentagon would, I think, honestly tell you that one of the things they wanted out of this was a human -- a more human look at American soldiers. Clearly, they got that. 

RODGERS: Yes, they did, as rightly they should. And, again, I talked to a three star, I think the corps commander, General William Wallace. And I was grungy in a T-shirt. And I walk up, hello general, how are you? I said, "I'm Rodgers, CNN. By the way, how's it going?" He said, "Embedding is one of the best innovations of the war." They loved it. 

BROWN: General Clark talked a lot about one of the reasons that he was so supportive of the process was he felt there were wonderful stories in the first Gulf War about brave, smart, professional soldiers that never got told because no one saw them. So let's say the Pentagon got what it wanted. Did CNN, did the media broadly -- there was a lot of media out there -- did it get what it needed out of it? 

RODGERS: Without a shadow of a doubt because a reporter wants access. And the Pentagon gave us -- my unit at least, total access. We were there when it happened. We got to report it. And the public got to see war real-time. 

(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)

RODGERS: We're hearing incoming. We're not sure what it is. We see some stuff in the sky. We may have to break this off. I think we're going to break off this live shot for the time being. We're not sure what we see up there. Goodbye. We've got to dive for vehicles, we think. See ya. Bye. 

(END VIDEOTAPE)

BROWN: Were there ever points where you and the company commander disagreed on what was reportable? 

RODGERS: Yes, just once. And I still don't understand the incident. We were headed -- we had crossed the Euphrates. We were headed for the bridgehead on Najaf. And we were doing such live real- time coverage shooting of the shooting and the sandstorm and the ambushes that I think somebody either at the command headquarters in Kuwait, or maybe even at the Pentagon said shut those guys down.So it was the end of the day. It was a sandstorm. We were practically out of business anyhow running out of daylight. And they said "No more live broadcasting."And it got dark and I asked why. And they said well maybe you showed that bridge up there and that was a -- that would have been a no-no, if we'd shown a location where we could have been hit.Or -- and then we said, but we didn't look at our pictures. And they said, well, maybe it was this and maybe it was that. And we could never pin them down as to why that afternoon they shut us down. But the next morning, I talked to our colonel again. He said go on, back up again. Don't worry about it.That was the interesting thing, Aaron. It was the military who wanted this to happen. And Defense Secretary Rumsfeld was the last guy in the world. Or he was reluctant. And what they did, the generals in Kuwait slid the embeds in sort of when Rumsfeld wasn't looking.

BROWN: Yes.

RODGERS: They let our vehicles in. And they were going to present the Secretary of Defense with this fait accompli and say, isn't this great coverage we're getting? 

BROWN: A couple of other things. Wouldn't you agree that there is a certain amount of luck of the draw here? 

RODGERS: Absolutely. BROWN: And that you drew well? 

RODGERS: I drew well, but I also calculated well. I embedded with 3rd Infantry in December. I saw it was going to be an overwhelmingly Army show. It was at least 70 percent Army. And I had done aircraft carriers before. I had done the Marines in Afghanistan before. I wanted to go with the Army this time.I did not realize how well I had drawn. If you've got a second, we were on this bus going to our embed location. And a fellow from the BBC was beside me. And we were chatting. And they yell in the dark, "All right, BBC 3rd Infantry." And I sort of wanted to go with the 3rd Infantry. I'd never heard of the cavalry as, you know, in modern Army. And they said, "CNN 7th Cavalry." And there's this voice coming out of the dark on the bus that says boy, those guys got balls of steel. And I had no idea what I was getting myself into. 

BROWN: That's a military term. 

RODGERS: Yes. 

BROWN: Yes. Did it change you? 

RODGERS: Yes. After two weeks on this enormous high and then the let-down of having it all over, within two or three days afterwards, I became humble to have been spared, profoundly grateful to be alive. And I don't think there's -- even though I've been in these situations before, this one changed me. And now often in the morning, I just get up and say, no matter what, I'm glad to be alive. BROWN: Well, I'll speak for me, but I think I speak for most of your colleagues. And I know you've heard this. I hope you've heard this. We are immensely proud of the work you did. You represented not just this organization, but television reporters as they ought to do their craft incredibly well. And it's an honor to have worked with you those days. And we worked a lot. Thank you. 

RODGERS: Thank you. I feel the same way about your work, Aaron. 

BROWN: Thank you.

(COMMERCIAL BREAK)

BROWN: The whole idea of embedding journalists, putting them with military units during the war was a first. Never before had so many journalists had such access to the military during the fighting itself. It changed the way we saw the war for sure.Torie Clarke works for CNN now, but during the war she worked for the Pentagon. She was the Pentagon spokesperson. She's also the person who pushed for the idea of embedding. We spoke with her recently about that decision and about what followed.

(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)

BROWN: Torie, talk to me about what the Pentagon wanted out of the embed process. And it's pretty clear what we wanted. We wanted access. What did you guys want? 

VICTORIA CLARK, FMR. PENTAGON SPOKESWOMAN: Well, actually, the objectives were very similar. We wanted to get out as much news and information about what the military was doing because, one, it's the right thing to do. You really have an obligation when you work at a place like the Pentagon to help people be as informed as possible, because then they can make good decisions about things.But we wanted people to see up close and personal what we knew, that these young men and women in uniform are incredible. They perform with such discipline and dedication and commitment. They're so good. And we knew the more people saw of that, the more support the military would have.And public support over the long haul is very, very important to military success. We also knew one other very important objective. We also knew that we'd be going up against a formidable foe in the Iraqi regime, and that they would do terrible things, that they would spend a lot of time and effort on disinformation and deception and propaganda. And we needed a counterweight to that, if you will. And nothing's better than the eyes and ears of the international media. 

BROWN: Don't run away from this. Did you feel by engaging in this process, by having these agreements signed, that you had some measure of control over media that you might not otherwise have had? 

CLARK: It wasn't about control. It was about mission and intent, if you will, and a very good working relationship. Before the first boots hit the ground, before the war started, literally thousands of hours were spent by people who worked for me at the Pentagon and people who worked for all the news organizations, including technicians, working out the guidelines and the policies and the rules and regulations, if you will, by which we would undertake this extraordinary experiment. 

BROWN: In transmitting live television pictures from a war, there is always the possibility that something truly horrific will happen, that an artillery shell will hit, that a tank will get blown up, that all of that will be seen live in a way that it never in fact would have been seen if it were tape. 

CLARK: Right. 

BROWN: Did you worry about that? 

CLARK: Well, we worried about a lot of things. And as we were briefing this plan through the leadership at the Pentagon, across the river at the White House and other places, there were quite a few people who raised that and said -- you know, and one person across the river as we called it, said to me, "Are you out of your mind? There is the possibility that people, Americans will see their soldiers injured or perhaps killed on live television."And I said, you know, there is that possibility. But it also happens to be the truth. And if we're going to ask young men and women to put their lives at risk and to go over there and die for a cause that we think is important, then I think we have a responsibility to step up to that kind of truth. So we were fully aware of it. And we knew that was one of the things that could happen. 

BROWN: And as I look back on all of this honestly, it's the one fear I had that wasn't realized, that this horrible possibility -- I remember saying to viewers, you know, this isn't "Survivor Iraq," a reality show. This is the real deal. 

CLARK: Right. 

BROWN: Did you at the -- how early in the process did you think and did your boss think, this is working? 

CLARK: Very early on, in different ways. Right in the first few days of the war, for instance, I was up on Capitol Hill to do a -- get ready for a briefing. And a woman comes up to me and she grabs me. And she says, "I want to thank you for this embedding. My son's in the 101st and I think I saw him last night on CNN. And I know I saw his friend, Jeff. And it's so great to know that we can keep up with what they're doing. And my friends and I have viewing parties very night."So you say to yourself, okay, she's a mom. She's got a vested interest. Maybe we haven't really reached out to the wide swathe of the American people. The next day I'm walking down "K" street and these two women walking ahead of me, they don't look like anybody's mom. And this was the time when we had the third ID headed toward Baghdad. We had the Marine Expeditionary Force, the first MEF coming up this way.And the two women were talking to one other. And the woman says, "Did you see what the 1st MEF did last night?

BROWN: Yes.

CLARK: Here, your average Americans, like a lot of people, watching their military, caring about the military. So we knew that was working. We knew we were demonstrating to people how phenomenal our fighting forces were. And then very early on, I will never forget front page of "The New York Times," top half of the fold was a picture of some Iraqi soldiers in civilian garb. And they were being led away. And the caption said "Iraqi soldiers disguised as civilians being taken away by coalition forces." And I took it into Secretary Rumsfeld. And I said, "look at that." I said, "I could stand at that podium until I was blue in the face saying the Iraqi regime was doing this, putting their soldiers in civilian clothing so they could ambush our coalition forces. Some people would have believed me. There are plenty of places around the world where they might not have believed it. The Iraqi regime clearly could have used it for propaganda, but there was the (unintelligible) media saying this is what the Iraqis were doing. Two examples of our big objectives. 

BROWN: Every now and then, it works out great for everybody. For my money, this was one of those times. It's good to talk to you. Thank you.

CLARK: Good to see you. Take care.

BROWN: And that's it for this special edition of NEWSNIGHT. We hope you enjoyed the program. We'll see you soon. Good-night for all of us. 

TO ORDER A VIDEO OF THIS TRANSCRIPT, PLEASE CALL 800-CNN-NEWS OR USE OUR SECURE ONLINE ORDER FORM LOCATED AT www.fdch.com

Tuesday, December 30, 2003

Cities Beef Up Security for New Year's Eve; Ashcroft Recuses Himself from Leak Probe; Bam Death Toll Revised to 50,000

Cities Beef Up Security for New Year's Eve; Ashcroft Recuses Himself From Leak Probe; Bam Death Toll Revised to 50,000
Aired December 30, 2003 - 22:00 ET

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

AARON BROWN, CNN ANCHOR: Good evening again everyone.We have talked before about that most basic rule of journalism. The more we talk about something happening the less likely it is to actually happen. With that in mind and with New Year's Eve a night away, terror in all its forms is on our minds tonight. We hope the rule holds.We begin the whip in Times Square. Jason Carroll is there, one of many places beefing up security for New Year's Eve, so Jason start us off with a headline.

JASON CARROLL, CNN CORRESPONDENT: And, Aaron, according to the Department of Homeland Security those beefed up security measures should remain in effect throughout the week. Some parts of these measures will be obvious such as our restricted air space over particular cities. Other security measures not meant to be so obvious to the public -- Aaron.

BROWN: Jason, thank you. We'll get back to you at the top tonight.Next to Kelli Arena in Washington who is keeping an eye on the attorney general's decision to recuse himself today from the leak investigation, Kelli a headline from you.

KELLI ARENA, CNN JUSTICE CORRESPONDENT: Aaron, the decision follows months of criticism alleging the attorney general's ties to the White House were too close for him to conduct a fair investigation into who leaked the name of an undercover CIA operative but some critics today praised his decision to hand over the reigns to someone else.

BROWN: Kelli, thank you.On to Frank Buckley in Santa Barbara, California, trying to make some sense of the relationship between Michael Jackson and the Nation of Islam so, Frank, a headline from you.

FRANK BUCKLEY, CNN NATIONAL CORRESPONDENT: Well, Aaron, it isn't clear what role the Nation of Islam will play but sources tell us that members of Jackson's management team are concerned. Meanwhile, separately the Santa Barbara County Sheriff's Department here says it has a videotape that it says will refute Jackson's claims that he was mistreated while in custody -- Aaron. 

BROWN: Frank, thank you.And finally to Kasra Naji in Iran where the usually less than pro-American Iranian government is welcoming American help with open arms, Kasra a headline from you please.

KASRA NAJI, CNN CORRESPONDENT: Tens of thousands of survivors of the earthquake have been spending their fifth night in freezing temperatures out in the open as President Khatami revises up the biggest of casualties and he now says up to 50,000 people may have been killed. Also, the U.S. government has joined the efforts to help the victims of the earthquake and 83 government officials, U.S. government officials are here for the first time in more than 20 years -- Aaron.

BROWN: Kasra, thank you. We'll get back to you and the rest shortly. Also coming up on NEWSNIGHT tonight from Jerusalem a familiar scene, protests and soldiers and gunfire but this time it was different. This time it was an Israeli protester who was shot and the nation is looking inward.We'll take a look back at those who died in 2003 from legendary movie stars to cartoonists to all manner of people who changed our lives more often than not for the better.And one more time this year morning papers coming up at the end, all that and more in the hour ahead.We begin with a countdown to the New Year in the age of orange alert. Across the country security is being tightened in the air and on the ground but more than any other holiday New Year's Eve means crowds, lots of people in public places keeping them safe from terrorists. Identifying the terrorists from the tourists will be the major challenge tomorrow.We begin with CNN's Jason Carroll.

(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)

CARROLL (voice-over): A favorable weather forecast and an increase in the number of tourists in New York City could mean record turnout for the annual Times Square celebration.

MAYOR MICHAEL BLOOMBERG, NEW YORK: I'm going to be there. I'm going to be safe and so are you.

CARROLL: Police will use Magnetometers to search bags and backpacks of everyone entering the area. Anti-terrorism helicopters will be patrolling the skies. On the ground, police will deploy radiation detectors in sensitive areas. Officers will monitor landmarks and transportation sites.

RAY KELLY, NEW YORK POLICE CHIEF: We have to do things that act as a deterrent to some of the obvious threats and then we have to think about things that may be somewhat unconventional.

CARROLL: Homeland Security Secretary Tom Ridge says look for increased security measures nationwide.

TOM RIDGE, SECRETARY OF HOMELAND SECURITY: We think that the level of threat is appropriately at orange and we have ramped up in an unprecedented way levels of security around the country and I think you're going to see it remain there through the balance of the week.

CARROLL: In Los Angeles, the Pasadena Police Department stepped up its efforts in preparation for the Rose Bowl. In Boston, authorities will be removing or welding shut trash cans for its annual First Night party, while in Las Vegas air space will be restricted over the Strip.

BILL YOUNG, LAS VEGAS SHERIFF: There's been some concern obviously about airliners in large, high profile cities and we're one of those cities and we take every threat with concern.

CARROLL: During the holiday much is suspect. Law enforcement officials tell CNN in New Jersey police were directed to randomly check IDs of EMS workers. While there have been no specific threats New Jersey officials want to make sure emergency vehicles are accounted for and not used to carry out a terrorist attack.

GOV. JIM MCGREEVY, NEW JERSEY: I think 9/11 as painful of an episode forced basic fundamental changes in America and we're still yielding those dividends but we still have to continue to work more to reduce the vulnerabilities present in our society.

(END VIDEOTAPE)

CARROLL: Law enforcement officials are also expecting the public to do its part. They're asking that any suspicious activity be reported to local authorities -- Aaron.

BROWN: Jason, thank you, Jason Carroll in Times Square tonight. It will be quite a different scene down there tomorrow.If you believe in chatter and the Department of Homeland Security does and Las Vegas is a place that terrorists have set in their sights. Not everyone though believes in chatter and that apparently includes the mayor of Las Vegas who says business in his town is pretty much as usual. It is a city getting ready for a very big party tomorrow night and we talked with Mayor Oscar Goodman earlier today.

(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)

BROWN: Mr. Mayor as I was coming up I saw a news article that said cancellations in Las Vegas are running higher than normal; a) do you agree with that, and, b) I gather you would assume that that's because of the terrorist threat?

MAYOR OSCAR GOODMAN, LAS VEGAS: A, let me put it this way, I spoke to my office and one of my staff has family that were coming up from Southern California and they said that the line of cars is just remarkable, so I'm not sure who's canceling if anybody is canceling. If they are canceling I would assume that the story in the "Washington Post" may have gotten their attention, a story which I believe was based on holed cloth and certainly nobody should change their mind about coming to Las Vegas because of an article that doesn't have any corroboration.

BROWN: What was it about the article that you found made out of holed cloth?

GOODMAN: I found it very disturbing that there was a giant leap of inferences where because a plane is flying from France over to Los Angeles and would fly over Las Vegas without having any credible basis the reporter indicated that an undisclosed source, which I've never cared for, an undisclosed source indicated that Las Vegas may be a target. Well that isn't news. That's speculation and that's totally inappropriate for journalism.

BROWN: Let's go about this somewhat differently. Have you had contact with the Department of Homeland Security that suggests they have concern about Las Vegas as a target?

GOODMAN: I met with homeland security yesterday. I was with our homeland security staff from Nevada today with our governor, with the sheriff and the special agent in charge of the FBI and they indicate that Las Vegas is being discussed on the chatter. I've never been told what chatter means really but Las Vegas was being discussed and generally there was an indication that any kind of danger would come from the air but as far as a specific that Las Vegas is going to be a target we have nothing to that effect. If we did, we would tell the folks don't come here. But I'm going to be down there. I'm going to be having a revelry tomorrow night. I'm going to party and I'm no fool. If I thought that I was in danger or my family was in danger I wouldn't be out there.

BROWN: Will there be unusually high security for New Year's Eve in Las Vegas tomorrow?

GOODMAN: Not unusually high security, a different kind of security. In the past we've always made sure. We've never had an incident, thank God, as far as our New Year's occasions are concerned. They're always safe and everybody has a good time but there will be added security. There is a ten mile fly zone that's been created where private planes and helicopters won't be able to go through and that will be extended over to Hoover Dam where the same rules will be in place and that's going to be for a six hour time period. Other than that there will be helicopters that are being provided not unlike other cities. It's the same. They'll be up in the air and have a presence and folks will know that we're serious to make sure that everybody here is protected. But as far as having a meaningful corroborated, credible threat, I haven't heard it yet and if I do I'd do something about it.

BROWN: Sometimes with these things I suppose it's hard to get the kind of hard information that someone in your position would like but there obviously is concern at the federal level. I think we can -- we both acknowledge that. Do you -- where does the money come to pay for the additional security or the different security that will be in place tomorrow?

GOODMAN: Well, we're not doing anything different as far as the city and the county are concerned here. It's business as usual, the same kind of security that we've had in the past. Homeland security has made these other kind of arrangements with the FAA as far as the air space is concerned and the helicopter assistance but basically we're doing things just the way we did it before 9/11 as well as after 9/11. We want to make sure that everybody who comes here can have a party and have a good time.

BROWN: Do you think this notion that Las Vegas is somehow on a target list is bogus?

GOODMAN: No, I'm not saying it's bogus but I haven't heard that it's on a target list. What I have heard is very, very specific. The information I have is that there's chatter, whatever that means. As I say, I'm not sure what chatter means discussing Las Vegas.Las Vegas is the entertainment capital of the world. It's the resort destination of the world. Of course Las Vegas is going to be mentioned by anybody having a discussion about a major metropolitan area but as far as a specific that Las Vegas has been threatened, no. I haven't seen one thing like that and if I did, as I said, we would be acting differently and I would not be putting myself at risk. Until I hear something like that, and I don't believe I ever will, but until I hear something like that I'm going to be out there having a party.

BROWN: Well and I assume many thousands of others will be too. I hope it's a safe New Year's Eve in Las Vegas. Thanks for your time today.

GOODMAN: Thanks a million.

(END VIDEOTAPE)

BROWN: The mayor of Las Vegas Oscar Goodman.On to national security of a different sort and the politics of it, when columnist and CNN commentator Robert Novak revealed the name of a CIA operative months ago an outcry followed and an investigation into who leaked the name was launched.Today the Attorney General John Ashcroft removed himself from that investigation. His decision follows months of criticism that his ties to the White House were so close it would compromise the process.Here's CNN's Kelli Arena.

(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)

ARENA (voice-over): Attorney General John Ashcroft won't be overseeing the politically sensitive investigation into who leaked the name of Valerie Plame, a former undercover CIA operative.

JAMES COMEY, DEPUTY ATTORNEY GENERAL: It's just that we reached a point in the investigation where the attorney general and I thought it was appropriate to make the judgment that's been made.ARENA: Instead, out of a "abundance of caution" Justice officials say the investigation will be led by a special prosecutor Patrick Fitzgerald, the U.S. Attorney out of Chicago.

COMEY: We thought it prudent to have the matter handled by someone who is not in regular contact with the agencies and entities affected by this investigation.

ARENA: Plame is married to former Ambassador Joe Wilson. He and several Democrats had charged the attorney general was too chummy with the White House to conduct an impartial probe.

SEN. CHARLES SCHUMER (D), NEW YORK: It gives me some faith that we will get to the bottom of this dastardly act and prosecute the people who did it.

ARENA: Wilson, who praised this latest decision, alleged the Bush administration last July leaked his wife's name to a newspaper columnist to retaliate against him. He was very vocal in saying the administration exaggerated Iraq's nuclear capabilities heading into the war.

JOE WILSON, FORMER U.S. AMBASSADOR TO NIGER: The crime that was committed was a crime that was committed against the country.

ARENA: While most leak investigations are closed without any resolution the deputy attorney general says this probe is moving along at a fast pace.

(END VIDEOTAPE)

ARENA: Sources say that a fourth prosecutor was recently added to the investigation team and that a grand jury may soon be impaneled to take testimony -- Aaron.BROWN: Take a stab at this. What has changed from when this investigation was launched and the attorney general said, no, it's fine I can handle this to today?

ARENA: Wouldn't we all like to know, Aaron. 

BROWN: Well, yes.

ARENA: Jim Comey was asked that very specifically today several times by several different reporters and basically he said that the information that they've gathered thus far led them to the conclusion that this was a good time for the attorney general to recuse himself.Now, of course, the speculation is that the circle, the focus of this investigation has gotten to a point where there could be the appearance of a conflict of interest in terms of the people that they're honing in on but, again, that's speculation. There has been an iron clamp on this administration in terms of this leak investigation. It's very, very difficult to get any information or guidance out of anyone at this point and nothing changed today on that front.

BROWN: Kelli, thank you, have a good New Year's.

ARENA: You too.

BROWN: Kelli Arena, thank you.Imagine for a moment being arrested in a foreign country and branded a terrorist. It's happening in the Philippines tonight. Two men have been arrested, paraded in front of the media, said to have links to al Qaeda and that they are Jordanian.Well, in fact, they are two Americans from Northern California. As to the rest of the charges, here's CNN's Rusty Dornin.

(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)

RUSTY DORNIN, CNN CORRESPONDENT (voice-over): In a circus-like atmosphere, two American brothers, Michael Stubbs and Jamil Mujahid, arrested in the Philippines three weeks ago are paraded before reporters.

UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: (Unintelligible.)

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: These are all fabricated lies.

DORNIN: The Philippine government claims the two have ties to terrorists. CNN spoke with Mujahid on his cell phone from jail in Manila.(via telephone): They say they had you followed and that you met with members of an al Qaeda cell is that true.

JAMIL MUJAHID, ARRESTED IN THE PHILIPPINES (via telephone): Well, not of my knowledge. The people that I met since I've been here they were really of the Christian faith and the majority of them were (unintelligible) and I had no way of really communicating with them.

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: I know. They're not listening to me or anything.

DORNIN: Mujahid claims he has been in the Philippines since last February living with his Filipino wife. When he was arrested December 13, he thought he was being kidnapped.

MUJAHID (via telephone): I was tortured for almost three days where I was handcuffed in front of me where I wasn't able to use the bathroom.

RASHEEDA STUBBS, DAUGHTER: This is happening to my father.

DORNIN: Mujahid's daughter Rasheeda saw the pictures of her father for the first time with us.

STUBBS: He looks like he's lost a lot of weight. My heart dropped when I seen the pictures that we looked at in there. My heart dropped because I know that he's an innocent man. I know that he would never hurt anyone.

DORNIN: Stubbs says her father is a Vietnam vet, is patriotic and has no ties to terrorist organizations.(via telephone): Why are they making these accusations?

MUJAHID (via telephone): Again, political, number two I can only say financial extortion and, number three religious persecution. That's the only things I can see.

DORNIN: Mujahid says he has converted to Islam but his brother Michael did not. The State Department won't comment and says the brothers asked them not to talk with any third parties including the media. The FBI says they did not ask to have the brothers arrested. The Philippine government says they will deport them. When? Mujahid says he has no idea.Rusty Dornin, CNN, San Francisco.

(END VIDEOTAPE)

BROWN: Still ahead on NEWSNIGHT, Michael Jackson and are they his new best friends? The Nation of Islam is somehow involved in the pop star's life and problems.And with the death toll still rising the Iranian government reaches out for help from almost anywhere.This is NEWSNIGHT from New York.

(COMMERCIAL BREAK)

BROWN: In geopolitics it might be called a strategic alliance. In business it might be called a marriage of convenience. In Santa Barbara, California it's called Michael Jackson and the Nation of Islam.Here's CNN's Frank Buckley.

(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)

BUCKLEY (voice-over): CNN has confirmed that the Nation of Islam has become involved in Jackson's affairs and that it is causing concern among some of Jackson's long time management team.Sources say access to Jackson is being limited by Leonard Mohammed, son-in-law of this man, Nation of Islam leader Louis Farrakhan. This week, Stuart Backerman, Jackson's spokesman resigned from Jackson's management team citing strategic differences and sources say at least two Jackson business partners have been unable to get to Jackson for two weeks.Mark Geragos did not return our calls but the Nation of Islam issued a statement denying the claim saying: "The Nation of Islam has no official business or professional relationship with Mr. Jackson. The Nation of Islam joins thousands of other people in wishing him well."Separately, CNN is being told that the Santa Barbara County Sheriff's Department has a videotape that will, according to officials, refute claims by Michael Jackson that he was mistreated when he turned himself in to authorities last month."They manhandled me roughly" Jackson told "60 Minutes." "My shoulder is dislocated, literally." Jackson said swelling on his arm, shown on this photo obtained by CNN, was caused by sheriff's deputies and Jackson claimed he could barely raise his arms now, despite video shot immediately after his booking that shows Jackson waving to cameras and onlookers.(Unintelligible) he asked to use the restroom (unintelligible) for 45 minutes. Jermaine Jackson touched on the allegation during an appearance on "LARRY KING LIVE" (unintelligible).

JERMAINE JACKSON, BROTHER OF MICHAEL JACKSON: He asked to use the restroom and they locked him in there for 30 minutes and said how do you like the way it smells in there, the smell? And that's ridiculous. I mean this is how they conducted themselves.

BUCKLEY: Santa Barbara County sheriff's officials deny the allegations of mistreatment and the jail's Chief Deputy Fred Olguin (ph) tells CNN that while Jackson was placed in a holding cell to use the bathroom, jail procedure, it was for 15 minutes not 45 and the walls were not covered in feces. He conceded, however, that the door was locked. "It's a jail" Olguin told CNN.

(END VIDEOTAPE)

BUCKLEY: Meanwhile, we are told that this evening Santa Barbara County sheriff's officials are discussing whether or not to release that videotape we talked about. Tomorrow there is a news conference here in Santa Barbara with the Santa Barbara County Sheriff's Department. That's scheduled for 11:00 a.m. local time -- Aaron.

BROWN: I want to go back to the beginning of this and the Nation of Islam because to me, with all due respect, that is what we call a non-denial denial. What they say is we have no official relationship. They don't say they don't have a relationship, correct?

BUCKLEY: That's correct. They don't say that affirmatively and our sources tell us that clearly there is a relationship and it's a curious association for Michael Jackson given the fact that he has been a person who has made his living on the fact that he's a multicultural person, has reached across racial lines and the Nation of Islam is a black separatist group.

BROWN: Frank, thank you, Frank Buckley out in California tonight.On that theme, the Nation of Islam and Michael Jackson is not necessarily a partnership any of us would have predicted. We suspect we're not alone. How and why the two have come together therefore is a reasonable question to put on the table.Michael Eric Dyson is a professor of humanities at the University of Pennsylvania. His research focuses on race, religion, and pop culture. We're pleased to have him with us tonight, good to see you professor.While there is a fair amount of irony in all of this given that Mr. Jackson, many would argue, has gone to some considerable lengths to be less black but this isn't the first time he has sought out black activists either.

MICHAEL ERIC DYSON, PROFESSOR OF HUMANITIES, UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA: No, not at all, he's been associated in the past, of course, with Reverend Al Sharpton when he made claims against Mr. Tommy Mottola the former head of Sony that he was being treated in a racist fashion and he spoke out against him. He was associated with him.Reverend Jesse Jackson, of course, has reached out to Mr. Jackson during this and other public foibles and, of course, his recent association with the Nation of Islam or Minister Louis Farrakhan and others indicates that he's got a trifecta of black leadership so to speak.But I think that what's interesting is that there are other factors that might suggest this is not as curious as people might suggest. On the one hand, Mr. Jackson was reared as a Jehovah's Witness, a marginal within the context of American religious landscape, a religious group in that sense.And also, the Nation of Islam has made a history of reaching out to battered and brutalized black men, black men who have made mistakes in their lives. They're not as famous usually as Michael Jackson, although we do recall Minister Benjamin Chavis (ph) who became Minister Benjamin Mohammed when he was cast out of the NAACP was embraced by the Nation of Islam but on the ground, the Nation of Islam has majored in rehabilitating the image and identify of black men.

BROWN: Let's see if we can get to a couple things here. Why now? Why do you think now?

DYSON: Well, Michael Jackson is in trouble, in huge trouble. His perception in the culture has been deeply and profoundly damaged by these allegations. Also, perhaps he's rethinking through his own crisis what his identity is about.You mentioned earlier that Michael Jackson, and your reporter, has distanced himself in one sense from African American culture but he's had a huge hand that has helped him in terms of the broader society seducing him in one sense, the broader (unintelligible) of a culture that says that white is better than black and certain values and visions are better than others.And so, Michael Jackson has in one sense internalized those to what some consider an atrocious degree so he's, you know, not darkened his face. He's lightened it. He says it doesn't make a difference if you're black and white as he gets whiter and whiter and whiter but that's responding to a broader culture of white supremacy that seduces him into believing that's the truth.So right now he's in huge trouble. The Nation of Islam is a group that gives a steady message that one ought to, I don't think the notion of them being a black separatist group holds now, they're certainly a pro-black group that wants to focus on rehabilitating black men and in this case of making sure that one's own cultural roots are not obscured by one's own practices.

BROWN: Do you think there is a risk to Mr. Jackson in this association, whatever the association precisely is?

DYSON: Well, there's a risk in a culture that sees any kind of black association as curious, especially one with a leader who has been demonized to the degree that Mr. Louis Farrakhan has number one.Number two what does Michael Jackson have to lose on the other hand? Here he has already been demonized by the broader society, black and white, so his association with Minister Farrakhan cannot in any way, you know, undercut his standing in the culture because that's been so severely thrashed by these allegations.

BROWN: Does it make white jurors less comfortable? I'm sorry, let me try that again.

DYSON: OK.

BROWN: Does it make white jurors less comfortable?

DYSON: Well, it may indeed.

BROWN: OK.

DYSON: Because Minister Farrakhan himself in the presence of the Nation of Islam...

BROWN: That would be a risk.

DYSON: ...makes white people, you know, feel a bit more nervous so there's no question then in that sense if it's a calculated move strategically for Michael Jackson to figure out how he can win over white jurors that's one thing. But on the other hand I think it's fairly clear to say that if you've already been dissed by the culture that you've embraced maybe he's rethinking his own relationship to white America.

BROWN: Good to have you with us, interesting thoughts. Thank you, professor.

DYSON: Thanks for having me.

BROWN: Thank you, sir. Have a good New Year.One story in the roundup tonight, we just had to show this to you. We talked about Las Vegas earlier. There's the orange alert and all of that. Well, it got a bit of white alert today, a storm brought snow to the Las Vegas Strip. An estimated 300,000 people expected to gather there tomorrow on New Year's Eve and every one of them will claim they won, by the way. It's just one of those things. That was Las Vegas today.Coming up on NEWSNIGHT, Israeli soldiers open fire on an Israeli citizen and now the soldiers themselves are under fire and the nation is asking itself questions, a break first.On CNN this is NEWSNIGHT.

(COMMERCIAL BREAK)

BROWN: Sometimes, I wonder how long that will go on. In southeastern Iran, the death toll from last week's earthquake continues to rise, as I'm sure you know. Iranian officials are telling Reuters, the news service, that the number dead might eventually reach 50,000 people. As the mass graves fill up, a global exercise in first aid is under way to treat the tens of thousands who were hurt in the quake. This morning, a U.S. team of surgeons and pediatricians and obstetricians and gynecologists and paramedics all arrived to help. CNN's Kasra Naji is in Bam with the latest. 

(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE) 

KASRA NAJI, CNN CORRESPONDENT (voice-over): The catastrophe here is bringing old adversaries together, American doctors, nurses and aide workers in Bam today, first American officials here in Iran after more than 20 years. 

BILL GARVELINK, U.S. AID OFFICIAL: The government has gone out of its way to be very helpful. One example is, flying up in the plane just a couple of hours ago, the pilot made a special effort to thank us all and thank us for coming. Everyone has been very warm toward us. NAJI: American aide officials are here to assess the medical needs of the survivors. Those needs are huge. Hospitals throughout the country are inundated with tens of thousands of those injured. This is what's left of the main hospital here. On Monday, an American military transport plane brought tons of much-needed medical supplies. American soldiers checking into a hotel in the Iranian town of Kerman. They were warmly received, an American flag on the hotel desk, a scene not seen here since before the hostage-taking of U.S. diplomats led to a break in relations. It has taken this tragedy for both sides to put the past behind them. But will this lead to better relations? 

GARVELINK: Well, I hope so. I think our primary concern is dealing with the victims here in town and helping with the recovery. 

NAJI: But from Iranian officials and leaders, a cool response to any suggestion of a departure in the relations. President Khatami said there will not be any improvement until the Bush administration changes its policies towards Iran. And his minister says he cannot trust George W. Bush. 

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: I believe there are very nice people in America. And everybody should believe them right now. But we never can believe to the Bush government, because of their activity here. 

(END VIDEOTAPE) 

NAJI: American aid workers here have spent the night in an overcrowded hotel here. I've been told six to a room, they're sleeping there. But they are expected to set up a camp near here and start work in the afternoon -- Aaron. 

BROWN: Does this effort seem organized or is it sort of helter- skelter? 

NAJI: It's very disorganized. The whole thing has been chaotic, the management of this crisis. And all these international teams that have been coming in, even the Iranian workers. There was no coherent management. Everyone did their best. And it's getting a little better, but, as I said, chaotic -- Aaron. 

BROWN: Kasra, thank you -- Kasra Naji in Bam, Iran. Tonight, Israel finds itself bracing for what might become and likely will become a nasty time. The government says it will force some settlers from a few small West Bank settlements, for them to leave. Settlers say they will not go, at least not easily. This continues to be a source of much debate in Israel, but it's not the only issue that people there are fighting about. The country finds itself in the midst of one of those painful moments when it seems to be asking itself what it has become. It is a moment brought on by a protest and a gunshot. Here is CNN's John Vause. 

(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE) 

JOHN VAUSE, CNN CORRESPONDENT (voice-over): The protest was loud and angry and has been seen many times before, except, this time, some of the demonstrators were Israelis and one of them was shot. Gil Naamati, just a month out of national service and at his first protest, was shot in both legs. He's now in stable condition, but the next day, his shooting sparked angry protests in Tel Aviv and left many asking, why did Israeli soldiers fire at unarmed demonstrators? From his father...

URI NAAMATI, FATHER: Something break, break down in the Israeli society when Jews shot Jews just because they are demonstrating. 

VAUSE: ... to politicians. 

YULI TAMIR, LABOR PARTY: Apparently, there is a very easy hand on the trigger. And it seems like they're using far too much force. 

VAUSE: To newspapers. "For a moment, we were given a glimpse of what we have become," wrote one commentator. For Israeli-Arab leaders, there is a simple explanation for so much national angst.

AZMI BESHARA, KNESSET MEMBER: Because the one who was shot is a Jew. That's all. We don't have any other explanation.VAUSE: Even in Israel's Parliament, the Knesset. 

YISRAEL EICHLER, UNITED TORAH PARTY (through translator): At a place where there is no danger to soldiers, firing at human beings is an unforgivable crime. 

VAUSE: Israel's highest ranking soldier was summoned to a government committee. And a full investigation is now under way. The soldiers say they did not know Israelis were among the demonstrators. 

RA'ANAN GISSIN, SENIOR SHARON ADVISER: The soldiers who are guarding the fence and are following certain orders have been facing a variety of threats, some of them which they could have misconstrued. 

VAUSE (on camera): Gil Naamati is now under investigation for allegedly damaging the fence. While many Israelis are outraged that a peaceful demonstrator was shot, many others are critical that he was at the protest in the first place. John Vause, CNN, Jerusalem. 

(END VIDEOTAPE) 

BROWN: Still to come on NEWSNIGHT tonight, 800 new allegations against the Catholic Church, this time from out West in California. Around the world, this is NEWSNIGHT. 

(COMMERCIAL BREAK) 

BROWN: More fallout on the mad cow front today. The government announced new steps to keep the U.S. food supply safe, including a ban on the slaughter of downer cattle, which get their name because they can't walk or move without assistance. This might seem obvious to us, not sending animals that are clearly sick to the slaughterhouse, but that's exactly what happened to the mad cow discovered in Washington state last week. The Agriculture Department says as many as 200,000 downer cattle are slaughtered each year. The ban is effective immediately. From the food chain to dietary supplements, it's the FDA's job to regulate food and drugs, but not dietary supplements, not until today, at least. Today, the FDA set a precedent by announcing a ban on the popular diet supplement ephedra. Millions use the herbal product to lose weight. But 155 deaths have been associated with it. And the FDA said today it is simply too dangerous to lose. The ban will be published formally in a few weeks and then will take effect 60 days later. New Year's Eve is normally for celebrations, of course. But the end of the year is often a deadline as well. And, in California, the Roman Catholic Church and, in particular, the Archdiocese of Los Angeles has an enormous deadline looming tomorrow. It's the last day in which attorneys can file lawsuits on behalf of those who have molestation claims against individual priests and against the church as a whole. The final dollar figure is expected to dwarf the record-breaking $85 million settlement reached in Boston. Reporting the story for us tonight, CNN's Charles Feldman. 

(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE) 

CHARLES FELDMAN, CNN CORRESPONDENT (voice-over): The number of cases filed is staggering, 800 cases statewide, involving as many as 300 current and former Catholic priests, say lawyers involved in the litigation. A special California law that allowed for a one-year period the filing of civil cases involving old allegations of priest molestation opened a floodgate. And, by the end of Wednesday's deadline, more cases of alleged priest abuse will have been filed in California than anywhere else in the nation. Paul Kiesel law firm alone represents some 300 individuals, men and women suing the Archdiocese of Los Angeles. 

PAUL KIESEL, PLAINTIFF'S ATTORNEY: I would say that it's possible that the total exposure could well be $1 billion. 

FELDMAN (on camera): A billion with a B? 

KIESEL: Yes.

FELDMAN: That's an enormous amount of money. 

KIESEL: There is an enormous amount of damage that has taken place here. 

FELDMAN (voice-over): Although about 90 percent of the cases involve boys and young men, Nancy Sloan is one of the 10 percent of cases involving girls. She is now 39, with a teenage daughter of her own. She says she was sexually abused by a priest in Northern California when she was 9. He even sent this letter, she says, apologizing. But only now is she taking legal action, she says, after years of struggle. 

NANCY SLOAN, ALLEGED ABUSE VICTIM: As an abuse survivor, there is a sense of betrayal that you are robbed of your church, of your spirituality, of your dignity. It's not about the money. This decision did not come about lightly. It's about justice. It's about accountability. 

FELDMAN: A spokesman for the Archdiocese of Los Angeles acknowledges that some priests abused young children, but says, so many old cases present a problem. 

TOD TANDBERG, LOS ANGELES ARCHDIOCESE: The vast majority of these claims predate the 1980s. And we even have claims back to the 1930s. So it makes it almost impossible to verify, beyond a shadow of a doubt, each one of these claims. 

FELDMAN: But alleged victims of priest abuse such as Nancy Sloan say it can take decades to muster enough courage to go public and are urging other alleged victims in California to come forward. Charles Feldman, CNN, Los Angeles. 

(END VIDEOTAPE) 

BROWN: A few business stories tonight before we go to break. The shipping giant is swallowing the copy king. FedEx said today it will buy Kinko's for $2.4 billion cash. The deal will allow FedEx to offer shipping services at 1,200 Kinko's stores worldwide. New high in the Big Apple. For the first time, Manhattan movie tickets have crossed the $10 mark, edging up to $10.25 at some theaters. Loews Cineplex, one of those chains that raised prices, say the increase reflects the cost of doing business here in New York. But don't worry. Popcorn still is only $35. And on to the markets. The Nasdaq hit -- I made that up -- a two-year high today. The other major stock indices had their first annual gain since 1999. Those were the good days, weren't they? Ahead on NEWSNIGHT: Johnny Cash, Bob Hope, John Ritter, just to name a few. We look back at those who left us this year.This is NEWSNIGHT. 

(COMMERCIAL BREAK) 

BROWN: Well, 2004 is almost visible out there. Even so, neither we, nor anyone else can tell you much about what sort of year it's going to be, except to say that absent from it will be a great many people we know very well for a very long time, so well, some of them, that their first names were entirely enough to identify them. They will miss 2004. And we will miss them. 

(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE) 

KATHARINE HEPBURN, ACTRESS: I don't want to be molded. I believe in acting with my brains. 

BROWN (voice-over): Kate, for instance. You really didn't have to say any more than that. There was only one. 

HEPBURN: I like knowing more about what goes on than most people. 

BROWN: In an age of curves, Katharine Hepburn was sharp. 

UNIDENTIFIED ACTOR: Not much meat on her, but what's there is choice. 

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Let's hear it for him, Bob Hope! BROWN: Bob Hope was sharp, too. Whoever cracked wise over his many decades as he did? No matter what the medium, Vaudeville, radio, film, TV, there he was, pretending to be tough. 

BOB HOPE, COMEDIAN: I'll take a lemon-aid in a dirty glass. 

BROWN: He'd puff himself up, then provide his own pin, thereby teaching a couple, three generations how not to be taken in by the pretensions of others. HOPE: Where are we, Diego Garcia, huh? That's a little embarrassing, because we started out for Honolulu?

(LAUGHTER) 

DAVID BRINKLEY, NEWS ANCHOR: The news has just got here.BROWN: David Brinkley demolished pretensions as well as an exemplary newsman. If you wanted it straight and smart and well put, you turned to him. And, for a very long time, that is exactly what much of the country did, turn to him. 

BRINKLEY: Because I thought we should say good night to the audience, not to each other. Good night, Chet.

CHET HUNTLEY, NEWS ANCHOR: Good night, David.

GREGORY PECK, ACTOR: Pleased to meet you, Pearl. BROWN: The wonderful actor Gregory Peck is gone as well. He was regularly able to turn a rumpled jacket and a pair of pants into something very like a suit of shining armor. PECK: You never really understand a person until you consider things from his point of view, until you climb inside of his skin and walk around in it. 

BROWN: Gregory Peck had gravity.To which, gravity, we mean, Donald O'Connor paid no attention. To a dancer like him -- not that there were many dancers like him -- gravity was not a law at all, merely a suggestion. Al Hirschfeld spent more years sketching the stars than Galileo. The rest of us say, when things go wrong, well, back to the old drawing board. But that's where Al Hirschfeld was happy to be every day of his long life, including the last. Who could do as much with black and white as Hirschfeld did? Maybe Elia Kazan, the director. On film and on stage, he brought gritty dramas to life, then played a part himself in a gritty drama of a different time in Washington, when he told the commie hunters of the House Un-American Activities Committee what they wanted to know about his friends in Hollywood. To this day, in that drama, even those who admire his other dramas say he played the part of a villain. 

MARLON BRANDO, ACTOR: Hey, Stella!ART 

CARNEY, ACTOR: What did you call the doctor for? All I got is a little bump on the head. 

BROWN: It's hard to believe that Art Carney is gone. He may have been the best right-hand man in all of comedy. 

CARNEY: Ninety-eight, 97, 96, three. 

BROWN: Just as Warren Spahn was the best left-hand man in all of baseball, Warren Spahn of the Braves, the winningest southpaw ever. Man, the things they could do. On the tennis court, Althea Gibson was one of the greatest, as was Willie Shoemaker one of greatest at the track. Gertrude Ederle's element was water, the first woman to swim the English Channel. And she did it faster than any of the five men who went before her. As for Benny Carter, he was an air, man, blew it hot and sweet through his sax, sometimes a trumpet, a clarinet, a trombone as well. And he did it for decades. To Benny Carter, jazz was really the breath of life. We say goodbye, too, to Herbie Mann, the master of the flute and Gregory Hines, who was more eloquent with his feet than most of us are with our mouths, unless we're Paul Simon, the former senator from Illinois, who was as articulate as he was principled. 

SEN. PAUL SIMON (D), ILLINOIS: I will not be a candidate for reelection in 1996. 

BROWN: We lost a couple of really good buddies this year, Buddy Hackett, the consummate wise guy, and Buddy Ebsen. Long before he was head of the clan there on TV's "Beverly Hillbillies," he was a big star on stage as a rubber-legged dancer. John Ritter's star was on the screen. We watched him grow, grow from the guy next door to a family man. Charles Bronson died this year. If anybody could beat the mortality rap, we thought he could. Charles Bronson was that tough. 

JOHNNY CASH, MUSICIAN: I wear the black for the poor and the beaten down.

BROWN: But, then, so was Johnny Cash. And he's gone down, too. His wife, June Carter Cash, died in May. The man in black stayed behind until September and then followed along. You can't spend so many years singing two-part harmony and then give it up just like that. 

CASH (singing): I hear the train a-coming. It's rolling around the bend. And I ain't seen the sun shine since I don't know when.

BROWN: Hail to Celia Cruz, the queen of salsa, hail and farewell. 

(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP, "MISTER ROGERS' NEIGHBORHOOD")

FRED ROGERS, HOST: It's a beautiful day in this neighborhood.

(END VIDEO CLIP) 

BROWN: And farewell to Fred Rogers. He made a safe place on television for generations of children. A lot of them, all grown now with kids of their own will, always owe Fred Rogers a debt of gratitude. 

ROGERS (singing): Please, won't you be my neighbor?

(END VIDEOTAPE) 

BROWN: We'll check morning papers after the break. 

(COMMERCIAL BREAK) 

(ROOSTER CROWING) 

BROWN: Hard to believe, isn't it, that another year is going by for the morning papers segment? Well, we only started it this year, didn't we? OK, here we go, around the country and around the world. Is that what I normally say? Something like that. "The International Herald Tribune." If you're traveling overseas, you'll find this in your hotel. And you'll find a lot of stories which, if you left New York today, you read in today's "New York Times." I don't know why that happened that way. Anyway, "Pattern Suspected in Saudi Attacks. Al Qaeda Tries to Shake Up the State, U.S. Thinks." They put Michael Jackson and the Nation of Islam on the front page of "The International Herald Tribune." What I found interesting about that, I guess, is how big a deal it is, that it's a big deal no matter where in the world you are. So that's "The International Herald Tribune," which is read probably by millions of people every day, or hundreds of thousands.As opposed to "The Burt County Plaindealer," the weekly newspaper in Tekamah, Nebraska. That's, I think, the fourth way I've now pronounced that city, but I may have finally got it right. And the big story there in Burt County is: "A Rate Hike Approved." It will now cost you another quarter for every 1,000 of gallons you use. That could cost residents in that fine area up to another $2 a month. That's the big story in the "Plaindealer" this week. And I agree. I would put it on the front page, too."The Detroit Free Press." This is a good idea for a story. "Food's Larger Menace." A couple of stories. "Amid Mad Cow Fears, Other Illnesses Are Rampant, 5,000 Deaths, 76 Million Sick, 325,000 Hospitalized." Take a look at that. That's a pretty good story. And was there something else here? Not really. How are we doing on time? 

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: 1:05. 

BROWN: How much?

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: 1:04. 

BROWN: 1:04.I'll bet if I asked again, would you say a minute, huh? Yes."The Times Herald-Record." That's the Catskills edition up in Upstate New York. "Mr. and Mrs. America." I think they doctored this photo. This is not a real photo. But there was a poll done -- well, it says that right there. "National Survey Pairs Unlikely Duo as the Most Admired Man and Woman of 2003." Mrs. Clinton, Senator Clinton and President Bush. I would say an unlikely duo, indeed. "San Francisco Chronicle," out West we go. "Downer Animals Banned for Slaughter. Agriculture Chief Reacts to Mad Cow Disease." OK, this makes sense. Why do we wait for something bad to happen? Why is it now? OK, the idea these cows can't even stand up. How much time? Twenty. I was getting a little angry there. But I'll calm down. "The Chicago Sun-Times," last one of the year for us. "Chicago's Fitzgerald to Probe CIA Leak." He's the U.S. attorney there. And the weather tomorrow in Chicago will be "celebratory." That works for me. A high of 40. That's pretty warm there for Chicago. I have a good friend in Chicago. So have a good day. We'll update the day's top story and look ahead to programs over the holiday after the break.

(COMMERCIAL BREAK) 

BROWN: Before we go tonight, a recap of our top story. The threats are still vague, nothing specific. But on this night before New Year's Eve, cities around the country, around the world preparing for tomorrow's celebrations, which will bring thousands, in some cases, hundreds of thousands, of people together in public spaces, including Times Square, New York, crowds that could be seen as targets or just as easily hide terrorists. That is the challenge that government's face this year.Tomorrow on NEWSNIGHT, a look back an experiment that changed the way the world saw war. We'll hear from CNN's embeds, including Walter Rodgers, who were on the front lines in the war with Iraq. They reflect on the experience. That's tomorrow night, a special edition of NEWSNIGHT. We hope you'll join us. I'll be there watching it right along with you.For most of you, "LOU DOBBS TONIGHT" is next.Have a great New Year's Eve. And good night for all of us at NEWSNIGHT. 

TO ORDER A VIDEO OF THIS TRANSCRIPT, PLEASE CALL 800-CNN-NEWS OR USE OUR SECURE ONLINE ORDER FORM LOCATED AT www.fdch.comRecuses Himself From Leak Probe; Bam Death Toll Revised to 50,000>