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January 28, 2008 3:59 PM

Traveling Iraq: <br>Genius On The Tarmac

Mark Strassmann is a CBS News correspondent stationed in Iraq.
(CBS)
Business travelers griping about flight delays should try getting around Iraq.

To get around this country as an American civilian, you often have to improvise. Travel here is a nightmare. Driving any distance is still too risky. Commercial aviation is non-existent. So any chance at flying means asking the U.S. military for an open seat on one of their helicopters, usually a cramped, noisy Blackhawk. Often you’re grateful to wedge into a middle seat.

Over the weekend, we were stuck at a military airstrip in Mosul, in northern Iraq. That's not a good situation for anyone with someplace to go. Our trip up to Mosul from Baghdad had involved three separate Blackhawks, 11 hours of travel, and a good bit of luck just to make it that far, that fast.

Everything about our chances of returning to Baghdad looked grim. Our four-man CBS News team of travelers was way low on the military’s waiting list to fly. Not that it mattered. Storm clouds had moved in, so nothing was moving out. And in Iraq, bad weather can mean delays of days, not hours.

Most of the other glum-faced passengers, mostly U.S. soldiers and contractors, filed inside the makeshift terminal. Some of them began long naps. Why not?

But outside, sitting on the otherwise empty tarmac was a C-130, a military cargo plane. This one belonged to the Iraqi Air Force, and was carrying some of the Prime Minister’s staff. And standing just off the tarmac, smoking and scheming between long drags of his Marlboro Lights, was Larry Doyle. No one else knew it. But a genius idea was hatching.

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mark strassmann ,
iraq ,
mosul
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Field Notes
March 23, 2007 10:51 AM

"Uncovered": The Seeds Of Destruction In Iraq

(Getty Images/Mujahed Mohammed)
Mary Walsh is a producer for CBS News based at the Pentagon.
In May 2003 CBS National Security Correspondent David Martin and I were supposed to board a Chinook helicopter for a flight from Baghdad to Mosul to spend some time with the 101st Airborne Division in northern Iraq. But the weather socked in and the flight cancelled.

So we drove to Mosul -- on our own. Accompanied by security guards on contract to CBS News, we formed our own little convoy and hit the highway. It was a memorable journey -- not just because it would be unthinkably risky today. What I remember most is the roadside littered with scud missiles, artillery shells and rockets.

Four years later the General Accounting office has released a report detailing the US military’s failure to secure Iraqi weapons during the invasion. The artillery shells I was seeing on the highway to Mosul were future improvised explosive devices, the roadside bombs that have killed and maimed so many Americans and Iraqis...

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mosul ,
iraq
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Field Notes

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