Time
Names U.S.
Soldier as 'Person of the Year'
Sun December
21, 2003
11:07 AM ET
By Hugh
Bronstein for
Reuters
News Service
NEW
YORK (Reuters) - "The American Soldier" was named on Sunday as Time
magazine
Person of the Year, giving credit not to those who formulate the
foreign
policies of the United States but those who face bullets and grenades
as
they execute those policies.
There was
little disagreement
in Time's newsroom that the U.S.-led war in Iraq was 2003's top story,
Time Managing Editor Jim Kelly told Reuters. But he said there was a
spirited
debate about who would best represent that story as Person of the Year.
The American
solider was
represented on the cover of Time by three helmeted and uniformed
soldiers
from an artillery survey unit of the US. Army's 1st Armored Division
nicknamed
the "Tomb Raiders" after being assigned the task of searching for
weapons
in a Baghdad cemetery.
The three
were named as
Sgt. Marquette Whiteside, 24 from Pine Bluff, Arkansas, SPC. Billie
Grimes,
26, from Lebanon, Indiana, a medic and the only female soldier in the
unit,
and Sgt. Ronald Buxton, 32, from Lake Ozark, Missouri.
President
Bush and Defense
Secretary Donald Rumsfeld were candidates, but "the very messy
aftermath
of the war has made it clear that Washington's policy was going to have
to be carried out day by day by the soldiers on the ground," Kelly said.
"We thought
the title
belonged to those people."
Time made a
similar decision
in 1950 when "The American Fighting-Man" got the title as the U.S.
waged
war in Korea.

In
Washington, Gen. Richard
Myers, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said the selection was
"just
exactly right."
Myers last
week visited
U.S. troops in Iraq, Kuwait, Afghanistan and Bahrain. "These folks look
terrific. They understand the mission. They're confident in the
mission,"
Myers told the "Fox News Sunday" program. "In many cases, it's the
military
that stands between the terrorists and their goal and they are doing a
terrific job."
Kelly said
Rumsfeld, in
a November interview, made the unsolicited suggestion that this year's
honor go to all men and women who wear the U.S. uniform.
"It was the
first time
that I had ever interviewed a contender for Person of the Year who
actually
suggested someone else," Kelly said.
Veterna Time
War photographer
James Nachtwey, who took Time's front cover picture, was wounded
shortly
after taking the shot when a grenade was thrown into the Humvee he was
traveling in. He is recovering from his injuries.
Internationally,
the U.S.
war in Iraq has been criticized as unilateral aggression. France,
Germany
and other traditional U.S. allies have refused to participate in the
war
or the conflict that has continued since President Saddam Hussein fell.
Bush calls
the war part
of a move toward democracy in the Middle East. But many Arabs view the
Iraq invasion as carried out to serve the interests of Washington's
ally
Israel.
In agreement
with the
Bush administration, Time's cover story says: "To have pulled Saddam
Hussein
from his hole in the ground brings the possibility of pulling an entire
country out of the dark."
