5 Questions for… CNN’s Fred Pleitgen on High-Risk Iran Assignment

  Rassegna Stampa, Social
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Fred Pleitgen, CNN senior international correspondent, alongside Claudia Otto, CNN senior producer and photojournalist, were the first Western journalists to report inside Iran at the height of the nation’s conflict with Israel in June. 

The crew, while on the ground, visited and reported from multiple locations, including the Iranian State Broadcasting Company (IRIB) television station, which was hit by an Israeli airstrike. They were also in the Iranian capital, Tehran, when the U.S. military struck three nuclear facilities inside the country on the orders of President Donald Trump.

Now, out of Iran, Pleitgen shared with TVNewser his experiences in the country, both official and unofficial. He also details what it took to get there and the unexpected car trouble they had en route to Tehran.

TVNewser: How did you land the Tehran assignment—was it voluntary?

Pleitgen: Claudia Otto and I have been going to Iran for more than 10 years. When the Israeli attacks started, we immediately filled out a visa application. The visa was granted quickly–about three days–and we left right after getting it stamped at the embassy. We believed it was extremely important to report from the Iranian side, and so we did everything that we could to get there as fast as possible.

How long did it take to get in and out of Iran?

Iran’s airspace was closed due to Israel’s bombing campaign, so we had to fly to eastern Turkey and then drive across the border. The journey was long. We first flew from Berlin to Diyarbakir, Turkey, then drove eight hours to the border—where we spent almost three hours doing paperwork—and then had a 14-hour drive to Tehran. The drive was prolonged because our car broke down somewhere in the mountains between Tabriz and Zanjan. And the journey out of Tehran was the same, minus the broken car, thankfully.

Several things were remarkable about the journey into Iran. Crossing the border itself took a while as those manning it don’t often see foreign TV crews crossing, and it was a high security situation because of the ongoing conflict. Our car then broke down on a mountain highway many miles from the next settlement. We stopped on the side of the road, hoping the engine would cool down, and then kept driving only for it to break down again. Luckily, the first car that stopped was a tow truck, sort of like Iran’s version of AAA. The driver tried to repair the car but said a cylinder was probably broken. So, we just stood there with no working car and no means of communication, as our Western phones had stopped working. The next stroke of luck came when another car stopped, and it was a driver who had just dropped someone off at the Turkish-Iranian border. He was headed back to the capital, so we asked him to take us to Tehran. In total, our travel time from Berlin to Tehran was around 32 hours. 

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