Tue, 7 October 2008 ![]() Major General Timothy M. Haake retired from the United States
Army Reserve on May 11, 2006 after more than 35 years of service. He formerly
served as the Deputy Commander, Mobilization and Reserve Affairs, United States
Special Operations Command, MacDill Air Force Base, Florida. Prior to that
assignment, he served as Director of Legislative Affairs, United States Special
Operations Command, Washington, D.C.
Mr. Haake is a legislative consultant and lawyer and the owner
of Haake & Associates. His specialties include tax, energy, trade, health, and
defense issues. He held several administrative, legal, and Congressional
positions prior to starting his own firm. Sciutto won the 2007 George Polk Award for television for his undercover reporting in Myanmar during the military regime’s brutal crackdown on peaceful demonstrations in October 2007. He won Emmy awards in 2004 and 2005 for best story in a regularly scheduled newscast, covering northern Iraq for “Iraq: Where Things Stand.” He was nominated for other Emmys in 2005 for outstanding coverage of a breaking news story for “Crisis in Beslan” and in 2007 for his contribution from Cambodia for Good Morning America’s “Around the World” series. Sciutto was the only western reporter to make his way inside Myanmar during the 2007 crackdown, the first television reporter to interview Saudi Arabia’s King Abdullah and one of a handful of journalists allowed inside an Iranian nuclear plant in 2005. During the Iraq war, Sciutto was the only reporter embedded with the U.S. Special Forces. Prior to joining ABC News in 1998, Sciutto was Hong Kong correspondent for Asia Business News, an Asia-wide TV network owned by Dow Jones. For ABN, he covered Hong Kong’s return to China in 1997, and reported on every country in the region, including assignments to China, Mongolia, Laos, Vietnam, Singapore and South Korea. Sciutto’s first job in television was as moderator and producer of “The Student Press,” a weekly public affairs talk show for U.S. and Canadian college students broadcast on PBS. Sciutto earned a degree in history from Yale University in 1992. He was a Fulbright Fellow in Hong Kong from 1993 to 1994. In 2008, he was selected as a lifetime member of the Council of Foreign Relations. In 2002, he was appointed Associate Fellow of Pierson College at Yale. He lives in London with his wife, Gloria Riviera, also a London-based correspondent for ABC News. A foreign correspondent for ABC News, Sciutto examines and explains the increasingly negative attitudes toward the United States among citizens of Muslim and Arab countries in this deeply insightful book. Structured around interviews conducted in the Middle East and the U.K., the book offers ample anecdotal evidence to suggest that anti-American sentiment—once the province of fringe groups—has gone mainstream, becoming in effect, a form of Middle Eastern nationalism, uniting moderates and radicals, Muslims and Christians for whom freedom implies the freedom from American interference. Sciutto weaves together interviews with historical background, poll data and personal experience in this consistently informative and captivating account. In the strongest interviews, including one with a young, reform-minded Iranian activist and another with an Iraqi doctor, the book sets intense, sometimes horrifying experiences against a complicated and changing political backdrop. The author makes a few amorphous foreign policy recommendations on the basis of his research, but the book is less interesting for what it reveals about American policy than for its empathetic and candid depiction of its subjects and their lives. Direct download: Third_Rail_-_General_Timothy_Haake__ABC_Senior_Foreign_Correspondent_Jim_Sciutto_10.1.08.mp3 Category: podcasts -- posted at: 11:17 PM Comments[0] |


