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CNN pulls out all stops in Iraq attack coverage

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MUMBAI: CNN International has doubled its staff in West Asia including Iraq (northern Iraq and Baghdad), Jordan, Kuwait, Qatar and Israel to provide a live coverage of the ongoing US invasion of Iraq.
The news schedule would be presented from CNN’s main production centres in Atlanta, London and Hong Kong together with round-the-clock anchoring from the CNN broadcasting facility in Kuwait, a company statement has said.
CNN currently has over 150 staff deployed across the middle east. Some CNN correspondents reporting from the middle east include Nic Robertson and Rym Brahimi in Baghdad, plus Christiane Amanpour, Jim Clancy and John Vause, Sanjay Gupta, Brent Sadler, Jane Arraf, Ben Wedeman and Alessio Vinci.
As the Iraqi conflict escalates, CNN’s Kuwait studios will link to studio programming from Hong Kong, London and Atlanta, as the network broadcasts a live rolling news schedule.
As events unfold special editions of programmes will be introduced to the schedule to allow for greater discussion of events. These will include Q&A, CNN’s daily interactive programme where CNN anchors question experts on the day’s key issues; Insight, a half hour in-depth analysis of the issues behind the news, and International Correspondents, a forum for the world’s journalists to discuss the events affecting the news agenda.
While CNN has refused to quantify the amount that would be spent to cover the war, the talk doing the rounds is that it has pumped $35 million into bringing the war coverage live.
The words that CNN president Chris Cramer used in his speech on 15 March at the FRAMES 2003 in Mumbai come to mind here. “Broadcast journalism around the world is at cross-roads but the integrity of the profession has never been in more danger than we find it!”
Highlighting that healthy scepticism is the need of the hour, Cramer stated: “Diverse opinion – unpopular opinion, sometimes-unpalatable opinion. I have told CNN staff to dig deeper into this series of events as is intellectually and practically possible. If we drilled to a thousand feet into issues in the past I want now to drill to 10,000 feet. And deeper. To be sceptical at all times-of politicians, or lobby groups or military minds.”
“CNN is not a mouthpiece for any government – The US government, the British government or any other government for that matter. Healthy scepticism will be necessary for all our journalists, especially those reporters-thought to be over 500-who will be working with us and British military units,” Cramer added.
Cramer recalled an article written by Harold Evans, former editor of Britain’s Sunday Times, recently in which he says that “without the cooperation of the armed services, the press cannot hope to cover a war. The trade-off is a measure of access for a measure of official control.” Cramer wondered as to how much control will there be.
Just how much control should be clearer from the type of media coverage that will be dished out as this conflict heads towards its logical conclusion.

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News Broadcasting

Rising Bharat Summit 2026 to spotlight India’s global rise

PM Modi keynotes two-day event on 27–28 February in New Delhi with ministers, diplomats and icons.

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MUMBAI: India’s rise isn’t just making headlines, it’s headlining its own summit, and this time the guest list reads like a global power playlist. News18 Network will host the Rising Bharat Summit 2026, a high-powered thought-leadership forum anchored around the theme “Spotlighting Bharat’s Rise: Driven by Strength Within.” The two-day event kicks off on 27 February 2026 at 10:00 AM in New Delhi, bringing together policymakers, diplomats, business leaders, strategists, innovators, and cultural icons for conversations that aim to define India’s confident, self-assured role on the world stage.

Prime minister Narendra Modi will deliver the keynote address, setting the tone for discussions on economic momentum, geopolitical positioning, and long-term aspirations for the decade ahead.

The ministerial lineup includes Piyush Goyal (Commerce and Industry), Ashwini Vaishnaw (Railways, Information & Broadcasting, Electronics & IT), Jyotiraditya M. Scindia (Communications & Development of North Eastern Region), and Delhi chief minister Rekha Gupta.

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Global diplomacy and strategic voices feature former Singapore foreign minister George Yeo, ex-UK Chief of defence staff general Sir Nick Carter, former US commerce secretary Carlos M. Gutierrez, and ambassadors from Norway (May-Elin Stener), Germany (Philipp Ackermann), and Sweden (Jan Thesleff).

Industry, innovation, and economic perspectives come from veteran investor Ramesh Damani, World Gold Council CEO David Tait, Vianai Systems Founder & CEO Dr Vishal Sikka, and Deeptech Bharat Foundation co-founder Shashi Shekhar Vempati.

Defence, technology, and thought leadership include Defence Secretary Rajesh Kumar Singh, RSS Akhil Bharatiya Prachar Pramukh Sunil Ambekar, Apple expert Patrick McGee, military aviation historian Tom Cooper, and defence scholar Adrian Fontanellaz.

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Culture, sports, and popular influence bring actor-MP Kangana Ranaut, Olympic medallists Saina Nehwal and PR Sreejesh, cricketers Mohammed Shami, Yuzvendra Chahal, and Mithali Raj, plus film stars Anil Kapoor and Yami Gautam.

Broadcast live across News18 Network channels, CNBC-TV18, CNBC Awaaz, and streaming platforms from 10:00 am on both days, the summit aims to move beyond headlines and shape deeper narratives around policy, leadership, and innovation at a decisive moment for India’s global trajectory.

In a world watching Bharat’s next moves, this gathering isn’t just talk, it’s the opening scene of a story that’s already rewriting the script.

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