Archive for the 'media' Category

Introducing The Photo Gallery

The Photo Gallery

Taking photographs in Paktika Province, Afghanistan, 2004

I’ve snapped over a thousand images in hostile environments over the past decade, some of which I’ve used as visuals in talks for my books. Many people who’ve attended those presentations have suggested afterward that I post my photographs online. Well, at long last, I’m acting on their advice and launching an online  Photo Gallery.

I’m kicking off with a selection of images that have influenced my fiction books including my debut novel, The Infidel, a modern day military thriller inspired by Rudyard Kipling’s The Man Who Would Be King, and my forthcoming novel, The Good Jihadist, an action thriller set against the duplicitous landscape of modern-day Pakistan that follows ex-SAS Sergeant Matt Logan’s hunt for a Pakistani Taliban leader.

My subject matter is as diverse as the places I’ve operated in.  This first batch of images includes an Apache helicopter, Russian attack helis, a US artillery gun, US army operating on the ground in Afghanistan, Afghan security forces training at the KMTC, children’s war art, Pakistani jihadists, riot police in Islamabad, a tank graveyard,  landscapes, villages and a winding mountain pass just to name a few.

I’m not a professional photographer.  All of my photographs were taken either on the move or during time outs whilst looking after clients in hostile environments (my camera allowed me to maintain a lower profile with media clients and not stick out as “the security man”.  It also served as an ice breaker in tense situations).

I hope you enjoy the Photo Gallery. For those of you who have read The Infidel and who plan to read The Good Jihadist when it is released this August, I hope it enhances your enjoyment of both novels.  If you like the gallery, please do check back, as I will be adding to it regularly. Next up is a selection of photographs from The Circuit, my non-fiction account of the private security industry.

The Collateral Damage of WikiLeaks’ Collateral Murder

Fog of War?

Millions of people have viewed the now infamous classified video leaked earlier this week by whistleblower website WikiLeaks.org.  Collateral Murder shows an incident in Baghdad in 2007 in which two US Apache helicopters fired on a group of civilians, including two Reuters employees.  The video is highly disturbing and has sparked a valid debate about the Rules of Engagement. It also serves as a cautionary tale for any journalist operating in a hostile environment.  These are important topics that deserve serious discussion. Still, I fear that the way in which they were raised has handed jihadists a major propaganda victory. Continue reading ‘The Collateral Damage of WikiLeaks’ Collateral Murder’

PMJs: Private Military Journalists?

The headline in Sunday’s New York Times sent chills down my spine.  Contractors Tied to Efforts to Track and Kill Militants. Sadly, the story that followed justified my reaction.  In a nutshell, the New York Times reported that a US Defense Department official, Michael D. Furlong, established a network of private contractors in Afghanistan and Pakistan to gather intelligence on suspected insurgents — intelligence which may have been used to track and kill them.

As the New York Times pointed out, it is ‘generally considered illegal’ for the military to hire private contractors as spies.  If it were up to me, it would be expressly outlawed.    Continue reading ‘PMJs: Private Military Journalists?’

A Dangerous Decade for Journalists

In The Line of Fire

The latest World Press Freedom Review from the International Press Institute contained some sobering figures: 735 journalists died between 2000 and 2009 in conflicts– 110 last year alone.  Not surprisingly, the country which proved most hazardous last decade was Iraq where 170 journalists lost their lives. 

Journalists working in their own countries were most at risk.  But the IPI did hone in on a disturbing trend; namely ‘the deliberate targeting’ of journalists in conflict areas such as Iraq, Afghanistan, Somalia, and Pakistan. Having advised journalists in hostile environments since 2002, I have gained the utmost respect for them. To venture into war zones unarmed and unable to defend against attack takes incredible courage and commitment.  Yet too often journalists fail to fully appreciate the hazards they face in conflict areas.  I believe more can be done to improve their security.   Continue reading ‘A Dangerous Decade for Journalists’



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