February 11, 2009 6:49 PM
- Text
ABC's Bob Woodruff Wounded In Iraq
(CBS)
Weekly commentary by CBS Evening News anchor and Face the Nation host Bob Schieffer.
We're dispensing with our commentary this morning to bring you the latest news on our ABC News colleagues Bob Woodruff and cameraman Doug Vogt. As we reported earlier Bob and Doug were injured this morning while traveling with troops of the 4th Infantry Division near Taji--about 12 miles north of Baghdad. As happens so often in Iraq, their vehicle was hit by a land mine--what the military calls an IED--improvised explosive device. About all we know is that both are in serious condition.
Bob is a lawyer who spoke Chinese. He got his first taste of news working as a translater for Dan Rather and the CBS News team during the Tianamen Square crisis in Beijing. He said later that when he realized there was a job that existed in this world where he could be in the middle of world events and actually get paid for it, he decided to change careers. He abandoned his law practice, moved his family to a small town to learn his craft and eventually made his way to the top rungs of journalism.
In this electronic age war has become so familiar that it is easy to forget that it is more than just pictures on television. But the soldiers who fight it and the correspondents who cover it do not forget. They know it is a dangerous business, and yet they are willing to risk that danger.
Wars are not fought on the training ground, nor can they be covered from a TV studio. They are not reality shows, they are reality. Young men and women have to fight them, and correspondents have to cover them if we are to understand what they are about. Our thoughts and prayers are with the families of both these brave men.
E-mail Face the Nation.
We're dispensing with our commentary this morning to bring you the latest news on our ABC News colleagues Bob Woodruff and cameraman Doug Vogt. As we reported earlier Bob and Doug were injured this morning while traveling with troops of the 4th Infantry Division near Taji--about 12 miles north of Baghdad. As happens so often in Iraq, their vehicle was hit by a land mine--what the military calls an IED--improvised explosive device. About all we know is that both are in serious condition.
Bob is a lawyer who spoke Chinese. He got his first taste of news working as a translater for Dan Rather and the CBS News team during the Tianamen Square crisis in Beijing. He said later that when he realized there was a job that existed in this world where he could be in the middle of world events and actually get paid for it, he decided to change careers. He abandoned his law practice, moved his family to a small town to learn his craft and eventually made his way to the top rungs of journalism.
In this electronic age war has become so familiar that it is easy to forget that it is more than just pictures on television. But the soldiers who fight it and the correspondents who cover it do not forget. They know it is a dangerous business, and yet they are willing to risk that danger.
Wars are not fought on the training ground, nor can they be covered from a TV studio. They are not reality shows, they are reality. Young men and women have to fight them, and correspondents have to cover them if we are to understand what they are about. Our thoughts and prayers are with the families of both these brave men.
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