How do you feel about what is effectively a journalist going out with soldiers into the front lines a recording it? I think it's great that he wants to show people back home what it's like, but if he gets in the way and leads to someone's death there's going to be an uproar.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/arts/main.jh … feat19.xml
It's on Mondays at 9PM. He arrived in Afghanistan in last nights episode.
He also raises a very good point. Which needs to get big publicity.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/arts/main.jh … feat19.xml
It's on Mondays at 9PM. He arrived in Afghanistan in last nights episode.
He also raises a very good point. Which needs to get big publicity.
It is just money. I'm not sure about anyone else but soldiers lives rank above money for me... Maybe that's why I'll never be in a position of power.Ross Kemp wrote:
Conditions away from the battlefield are often shocking, too, says Kemp. Rations were built for war in a cold climate, so chocolate bars melted to sauce; a pair of trousers became rags within a week because of the constant getting wet with sweat and then drying out in the heat. ‘We’ve been seduced into thinking that we’re fighting an electronic war,’ says Kemp, ‘but we’re not, it’s won on the ground by fighting men. And there is a shortage of helicopters, which I think is despicable. It’s just money, and they are the most important thing that’s needed out there.’