NEW YORK, Aug. 29, 2007

Katie Couric To Anchor From Iraq, Syria

First Trip To War Zone For CBS News Anchor

  • Katie Couric

    Katie Couric  (CBS)

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(AP)  Katie Couric plans to leave Wednesday for an ambitious reporting trip to Iraq and Syria - the CBS anchor's first time in the war zone - in anticipation of a crucial military report on progress of the American effort.

Couric will anchor the "CBS Evening News" from Baghdad next Tuesday and Wednesday, then from Damascus on Thursday and Friday.

Couric will travel throughout Iraq to talk to military and civilian leaders, soldiers and average Iraqis, spending most of her time outside of Baghdad. CBS News would not reveal many specifics of her plans in advance because of competitive and safety concerns. The trip, in the works for six weeks, anticipates the surge progress report by Gen. David Petraeus that is expected the second week of September.

"You can't help but get a very detached perspective when you're not there and you're not witnessing things firsthand," Couric told The Associated Press on Tuesday. "I'm curious about very basic questions regarding living conditions, about how much fear there is in the street, about how the soldiers really are doing."

Couric and her traveling partner, evening news executive producer Rick Kaplan, were fitted with 30-pound body armor vests in Kaplan's office on Tuesday. Both needed to send theirs back to add extra protection to the sides.

To break the tension as Couric's armor was pulled tightly around her, Kaplan smacked her on the shoulder.

Safety is a sobering concern for all reporters in Iraq. The Committee to Protect Journalists said 112 journalists have been killed in Iraq since March 2003. An additional 41 media workers have been killed, the latest being CBS News Iraqi translator Anwar Abbas Lafta, whose body was found over the weekend in Sadr City.

Couric is the second major network anchor to travel to Iraq since ABC News' Bob Woodruff was nearly killed by a roadside bomb. NBC's Brian Williams went to Iraq in March; Woodruff's successor Charles Gibson has not been there.

CBS News cameraman Paul Douglas and sound-man James Brolan were both killed by a bomb while on assignment in Iraq in May 2006. Correspondent Kimberly Dozier, who was with them, survived but has endured 25 operations in her recovery; Couric anchored a special this spring on the bombing's aftermath.

"Obviously, it's a concern," said Couric, 50, who had suggested last year that being a widowed mother of two might make her think twice about such trips. "I'm not being cavalier about it. I think I feel comfortable with the measures that are being taken."

As they map out stories, Kaplan said they've been relying on safety advice from the military and CBS' bureau in Iraq.

Kaplan and Couric were talking earlier this summer about how to prepare for the Petraeus report when Kaplan said, "Why don't we go to the region," Couric said. She's spent the past several weeks interviewing experts about what is happening there - getting a different perspective from just about everybody.

"I felt it would be really important for the American people to get a big picture of what is going on, in terms of northern Iraq, in terms of Sadr City (and) the Anbar province," she said. "People hear all these things and I think it's really hard - as some people get Iraq fatigue - to keep a healthy and understandable perspective of what is going on. My goal is to provide that."

Done well, a series of reports from the war zone could serve as a second launch for Couric's "CBS Evening News." The broadcast has taken a more traditional, hard-news approach since Kaplan began last spring, although it hasn't budged from third place in the ratings behind ABC's Gibson and NBC's Williams.

Couric said the trip is about important journalism. "Obviously, if people are interested in what we are doing, that's great, too," she said.

The trip also takes Couric out of the country for her first anniversary as "CBS Evening News" anchor - not a milestone CBS is eager to mark given the poor ratings. Kaplan said that had nothing to do with planning for the trip, which was timed to precede Petraeus' report.

"I don't do anniversaries," he said.



© MMVII The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Add a Comment
by oakishpines August 31, 2007 2:43 AM EDT
'' ... putting women in mens armys did not turn men into gardenets, it turned women into rapists of husbands and children ... putting children into armys does not turn women and men into gardenets, it turns children into parent rapists ... if men are to treat children with respect, then men are to start acting like children ... and are to start treating two year olds like two year olds ... ''

'' ... all the front pages would have been covered in photos of local children dancing get well feed world songs rallied around the sick beds drifting the farm trails, except a terrorist warned against it ... ''
Reply to this comment
by mb3001 August 30, 2007 7:24 PM EDT
I hope you get out of Iraq in one piece. Announcing up front, when you are going is gutsy, but not very clever. You are America''s sweetheart, and this trip has to be the most insane stunt,I can imagine.
Even the president was clever enough not to publicise his trip, before he was out of Iraq.
Reply to this comment
by donsass August 30, 2007 12:52 AM EDT
I will pray for you everyday and for your daughters, too.
Always a fan
Don Sass
Reply to this comment
by why_not_nar August 29, 2007 10:19 PM EDT
Katie,
Being there is certainly going to give you and us a perspective that is hard to go 1/2 around the world.
Good luck. God Speed.

And be safe.
Reply to this comment
by haley04062 August 29, 2007 8:01 PM EDT
Katie,

I can''t wait to see you reporting from there! But please be safe!!! Keep up the amazing work good luck!!

Haley
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by dkkalblove August 29, 2007 4:10 PM EDT
You have a knack for getting right down deep inside any situation and seeking the truth, Katie. I look forward to your broadcasts from Iraq. Please, on behalf of all families of our soldiers, give them our love and assure them we haven''t forgotten them. Tell them they are in our prayers every single day. Tell them we are proud of their personal sacrifice to keep us safe. And of course, give them our love.
Thank you so much.
Reply to this comment
by bethwatson-2009 August 29, 2007 2:54 PM EDT
Be safe. Keep your head down. Work like a dog. Deliver important messages to your viewers. Expose the war to the Americans paying for it. And for God''s sake, be careful. I totally support your decision to go but I am also looking forward to many more years of the CBS Evening News WITH Katie Couric.
Reply to this comment
by joelatuna99-2009 August 29, 2007 2:32 PM EDT
good luck and Godspeed in iraq katie. i hope that you will tell it like it is. that is to say expose the carnage, the dead and dying, the people with no homes and hopefully you will interview our soldiers.
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