Tag Archives: lara logan

New Details Emerge on Lara Logan Beating; Flag Poles Used in Attack

Lara Logan is resting at home and sources say the CBS reporter is in good spirits , following a savage attack at the hands of Egypt protesters. But a new report details just how brutal of a beating Logan suffered at the hands of these rioters on February 11. Sources tell The Sunday Times of London that attackers used fists and flag poles against Logan, while wounds that remained hours later were the result of “”aggressive pinching.” It all began around 1 a.m. local time, as a crowd of approximately 200 people shouted “Spy!” and “Israeli!,” surrounding Logan and her co-workers in the wake of President Hosni Mubarak’s resignation. One security guard had his hand broken. A group of women and soldiers eventually came to the aid of Logan and company. They pulled her away from the mob and back to the Four Seasons, where a hotel doctor treated her and gave her a sedative. “Lara is getting better daily,” a friend told the newspaper. “The psychological trauma is as bad as, if not worse than, the physical injuries. She might talk about it at some time in the future, but not now.”

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New Details Emerge on Lara Logan Beating; Flag Poles Used in Attack

F*ck A Thug: Obama Demands The Round Up Of The Goons Who Brutally Attacked Lara Logan

More info on this unfortunate story : The White House yesterday demanded the Egyptian government round up and bring to justice the thugs who brutalized CBS foreign correspondent Lara Logan in Cairo’s main square. “We believe that those responsible for these acts need to be held accountable,” White House Press Secretary Jay Carney said of the prolonged beating and sexual assault on Logan by members of a 200-strong mob. And a State Department spokeswoman said the United States expects an “investigation and accountability for anyone involved in violence during the demonstrations.””We’ve raised it publicly and privately,” spokeswoman Leslie Phillips said. The call for justice came as a concerned President Obama phoned the recuperating “60 Minutes” reporter. “The president called her at her home around midday,” a Logan family friend told The Post. Obama asked the veteran war reporter about her condition and expressed his concern, the friend said. In New York, a spokeswoman for the Egyptian Mission decried the attack and said the turmoil-wracked Arab state would investigate all attacks on journalists covering demonstrations before and after the fall of Hosni Mubarak last Friday. “What happened to Miss Logan is by all means unacceptable and shameful,” said spokeswoman Nihal Saad. Yesterday, Logan, 39, was home in Washington with her husband, Joseph Burkett, and two children. A deliveryman brought flowers to the couple’s fieldstone-and-brick Tudor-style home. Inside, Logan also huddled with a senior colleague and pal, Kelli Halyard, head of CBS communications. Halyard said neither Logan nor Burkett was ready to talk publicly. Friends said she wants to return to work, but won’t be coming back anytime soon after suffering what the network called “serious” internal injuries in the ugly Feb. 11 incident, which CBS revealed Tuesday. “She has no idea how long this is going to take,” a source said. Logan and her crew were near Tahrir Square Friday, the day Egyptian strongman Mubarak stepped down, when a mob of jeering, leering men surrounded them. Their cameras continued rolling, capturing a tense-looking Logan trying to move away before she was grabbed and dragged off. “She was surrounded and suffered a brutal and sustained sexual assault and beating before being saved by a group of women and an estimated 20 Egyptian soldiers,” CBS said in a statement. “She reconnected with the CBS team, returned to her hotel and returned to the United States on the first flight the next morning,” the network added. A CBS colleague told The Post, “Every day is a struggle [for her].” Meanwhile, left-wing journalist Nir Rosen resigned as a fellow at New York University in the wake of Twitter comments he made belittling Logan after learning of the attack. “Jesus Christ, at a moment when she is going to become a martyr and glorified we should at least remember her role as a major war monger,” Rosen tweeted Monday. In an e-mail exchange with The Post, Rosen apologized. “It is never OK for a man to mock the sexual abuse or humiliation of women,” he said. “If I saw her I would try to find a way to apologize.” A native of South Africa, Logan has been CBS’s chief foreign correspondent since 2006 and has regularly filed reports from Iraq, Afghanistan and other hot spots for “60 Minutes” and the “CBS Evening News.” The nightmarish attack occurred a week after she was detained by Egyptian police amid tensions over foreign coverage of the revolution. As part of the anti-media backlash, CNN’s Anderson Cooper had been beaten up and ABC correspondent Brian Hartman threatened with beheading. In Bahrain today, ABC News reporter Miguel Marquez was beaten during a military crackdown on deadly protests. Logan had taken precautions, bringing security with her, after her earlier troubles, “but it wasn’t enough,” a network source told The Post. We wish her a speedy recovery and hope those goons suffer… Source

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F*ck A Thug: Obama Demands The Round Up Of The Goons Who Brutally Attacked Lara Logan

CBS’s Logan Zings Hastings: He’s ‘Never Served His Country the Way McChrystal Has’

Lara Logan, CBS’s chief foreign affairs correspondent, took to CNN’s Reliable Sources on Sunday to accuse Michael Hastings, who was interviewed by Howard Kurtz in the preceding segment, of using subterfuge and Rolling Stone of pushing an agenda in their hit piece on General Stanley McChrystal, both of which unfairly tarnished McCrystal and will lead to more military wariness toward the journalists. Logan castigated Hastings: The question is, really, is what General McChrystal and his aides are doing so egregious, that they deserved to end a career like McChrystal’s? Michael Hastings has never served his country the way McChrystal has. As for Hastings’ insistence he didn’t break any “off the record” ground rules, Logan declared: “Something doesn’t add up here. I just — I don’t believe it.” The subterfuge really infuriated Logan: “What I find is the most telling thing about what Michael Hastings said in your interview is that he talked about his manner as pretending to build an illusion of trust and, you know, he’s laid out there what his game is. That is exactly the kind of damaging type of attitude that makes it difficult for reporters who are genuine about what they do….Clearly, you’ve got someone who is making friends with you, pretending to be sympathetic, pretending to be something that they’re not…” Taking on Rolling Stone, Logan charged the “magazine put their own spin on this. They said that the greatest enemy for McChrystal is the wimps in Washington. Nowhere in the article does McChrystal refer to ‘the wimps in Washington.’ That’s Rolling Stone magazine, how they chose to cast this, to make it as sensational as possible. And that was with intent.” In the pevious segment, Hastings insisted to Kurtz that he doesn’t have a political agenda: “If Bill O’Reilly is calling you a far-left critic, in my book, no matter what your political persuasion is, that probably means you’re doing a good job.” (A couple of tweets I sent a few days ago about the political persuasions of McChrystal and Petraeus, starting with banning the wrong outlet: > Marc Ambinder on McChrystal: A liberal, voted for Obama, “he banned Fox News from the TV sets in his headquarters.” http://bit.ly/cx1t8i > Petraeus has home in NH where “his personal vehicle sports ‘Live Free or Die’ license plates.” Union Leader story: http://shar.es/mIeUw ) From the Sunday, June 27 Reliable Sources on CNN: HOWARD KURTZ: If you had been traveling with General McChrystal and heard these comments about Barack Obama, Joe Biden, Jim Jones, Richard Holbrooke, would you have reported them? LARA LOGAN, CBS CHIEF FOREIGN CORRESPONDENT: Well, it really depends on the circumstances. It’s hard to know — Michael Hastings, if you believe him, says that there were no ground rules laid out. And, I mean, that just doesn’t really make a lot of sense to me, because if you look at the people around General McChrystal, if you look at his history, he was the Joint Special Operations commander. He has a history of not interacting with the media at all. And his chief of intelligence, Mike Flynn, is the same. I mean, I know these people. They never let their guard down like that. To me, something doesn’t add up here. I just — I don’t believe it. KURTZ: When you are out with the troops and you’re living together and sleeping together, is there an unspoken agreement- LOGAN: Absolutely. KURTZ: -that you’re not going to embarrass them by reporting insults and banter? LOGAN: Yes. KURTZ: Tell me about that. LOGAN: Yes, absolutely. There is an element of trust. And what I find is the most telling thing about what Michael Hastings said in your interview is that he talked about his manner as pretending to build an illusion of trust and, you know, he’s laid out there what his game is. That is exactly the kind of damaging type of attitude that makes it difficult for reporters who are genuine about what they do, who don’t — I don’t go around in my personal life pretending to be one thing and then being something else. I mean, I find it egregious that anyone would do that in their professional life. And, I mean, I take that to the point of, even when I apply to interview someone about something difficult, and they want to know the areas of the interview, I might not say, well, we’re going to spend the whole interview on this, but I will list that. I will list that controversial issue. KURTZ: Because you don’t want to blindside them. LOGAN: Because I don’t believe in that. KURTZ: But don’t beat reporters — aren’t they nice to people to gain their confidence, and sometimes they have to write things that are not flattering? LOGAN: Of course. I mean, the military is a good example. I have never been — they never know what to do with me because I’ve never been accused of being right wing. And they want to paint me as left wing because they expect the media to be that way. But, if you look at my body of work, it’s been always been accurate and fair. Now, Michael Hastings might look at my body of work and say, well, there’s an example of another one of those reporters, unlike me, that didn’t go and tell the truth because they wanted to come back. That’s not the case at all. KURTZ: He says that all of the things that have been written about Stanley McChrystal have been these glowing profiles. He’s suggesting that he did a job that the regular beat journalists have not done. LOGAN: I think that’s insulting and arrogant, myself. I really do, because there are very good beat reporters who have been covering these wars for years, year after year. Michael Hastings appeared in Baghdad fairly late on the scene, and he was there for a significant period of time. He has his credentials, but he’s not the only one. There are a lot of very good reporters out there. And to be fair to the military, if they believe that a piece is balanced, they will let you back. They may not have loved it. They didn’t love the piece I did about hand grenades being thrown in Iraq that were killing troops. They didn’t love that piece, it made a lot of people very angry. They didn’t block me from coming back. KURTZ: The Washington Post quoted an unnamed senior military official as saying that Michael Hastings broke the off-the-record ground rules. But the person who said this was on background and wouldn’t allow his name to be used. Is that fair? LOGAN: Well, it’s Kryptonite right now. I mean, do you blame them? The commanding general in Afghanistan just lost his job. Who else is going to lose his job? Believe me, all the senior leadership in Afghanistan are waiting for the ax to fall. I’ve been speaking to some of them. They don’t know who’s going to stay and who’s going to go. I mean, the question is, really, is what General McChrystal and his aides are doing so egregious, that they deserved to end a career like McChrystal’s? Michael Hastings has never served his country the way McChrystal has. KURTZ: Is this going to prompt the military, in general, the commanders in Afghanistan in particular, to be more wary of journalists? LOGAN: Of course, because what you see is not what you get. Clearly, you’ve got someone who is making friends with you, pretending to be sympathetic, pretending to be something that they’re not, and then they’re taking what you say — when you start an article with General McChrystal making obscene gestures, you’re not even using something that he said. And Rolling Stone magazine put their own spin on this. They said that the greatest enemy for McChrystal is the wimps in Washington. Nowhere in the article does McChrystal refer to “the wimps in Washington.” That’s Rolling Stone magazine, how they chose to cast this, to make it as sensational as possible. And that was with intent.

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CBS’s Logan Zings Hastings: He’s ‘Never Served His Country the Way McChrystal Has’

CNN’s Kurtz & CBS’s Logan Miss the Point of MRC/NewsBusters Clip of Media Touting Obama’s ‘Brilliant’ Choice of Petraeus

On Sunday’s Reliable Sources on CNN, host Howard Kurtz played a clip that was posted both on NewsBusters and on NB’s parent organization the Media Research Center’s Web site showing that correspondents on several broadcast and news networks lavished excessive praise on President Obama by calling his decision to replace General Stanley McChrystal with General David Petraeus a “brilliant” decision. The CNN host played a portion of the clip which was played on Thursday’s The O’Reilly Factor on FNC. But, as he brought up the clip with guest Lara Logan of CBS News, Kurtz missed the point as he suggested that the MRC/NewsBusters was somehow complaining that the “liberal media are in love with David Petraeus and they’re falling into line,” when, in reality, the point was that since Petraeus is so obviously well qualified for the position, it hardly takes genius or “brilliance” to name him to the post. Logan, accepting Kurtz’s flawed premise, responded: “Well, if they had said it was a bad decision, then it would be ‘the liberal media hate David Petraeus and they’re not falling into line.’” She later concluded that the decision was, in fact, “brilliant” on Obama’s part: “The only way he had to ensure, to silence the critics and really to move on, this reassured the troops, this reassured the commanders, this reassured people who were in favor of it – the Afghans, the allies. That’s why people are calling it brilliant, maybe because it ‘was’ brilliant.” Below is a transcript of the relevant portion of the June 27 Reliable Sources on CNN: HOWARD KURTZ: Bill O’Reilly, on his Fox News show, played a clip – some clips had been put together by the conservative Media Research Center, the Newsbusters site. I want to show that to you now. CHIP REID, CBS NEWS : Sounds like a pretty brilliant decision really. JIM MIKLASZEWSKI. NBC NEWS : This is nothing less than a stunning development, Brian, and, quite frankly, at a quick glance, almost brilliant. CHUCK TODD, NBC NEWS : Politically, in this town, it’s going to be seen as a brilliant choice by the President- WOLF BLITZER, CNN: -a very brilliant move to tap General Petraeus- KURTZ: So the suggestion is that the liberal media are in love with David Petraeus and they’re falling into line. LARA LOGAN, CBS NEWS: Well, if they had said it was a bad decision, then it would be “the liberal media hate David Petraeus and they’re not falling into line.” The one line is it’s very hard to find something wrong with this decision by the President because there was only one general in the United States Army who has the political weight and influence in Washington to survive this. Anyone else going into that position who wasn’t tested, who wasn’t proven, who didn’t have political connections, would have been a lame duck. They would have been able to do nothing. President Obama faced a serious choice here. Was his strategy going to die with General McChrystal? Because there’s a lot of opposition from very powerful people in Washington who want to move to a very different model of counterterrorism and not counterinsurgency. The only way he had to ensure, to silence the critics and really to move on, this reassured the troops, this reassured the commanders, this reassured people who were in favor of it – the Afghans, the allies. That’s why people are calling it brilliant, maybe because it “was” brilliant.

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CNN’s Kurtz & CBS’s Logan Miss the Point of MRC/NewsBusters Clip of Media Touting Obama’s ‘Brilliant’ Choice of Petraeus