The 'Outside the Wire' series of four
documentaries about Iraq started when JD Johannes went to Iraq with
his old Marine Corps unit in 2005 to produce syndicated television news
reports.
Johannes returned to Iraq in 2007 to
see 'The Surge' and the 'Anbar Awakening' first hand.
The 2005 trip resulted in the the release
of the original 'Outside the Wire: Call Sign Vengeance' which
follows one Marine infantry platoon through their deployment to the
Fallujah area in 2005.
The 2007 trip resulted in three documentaries:
'Danger Close', 'Anbar Awakens' and 'Baghdad Surge'.
'Danger Close' is an up-close, in-depth
look at a complex attack by Al Qaida on small, distant U.S. Army outpost
on the edge of the Euphrates river valley. JD Johannes was the
only reporter to witness the attack and followed the US Army paratroopers
into combat--nearly getting himself killed.
'Anbar Awkens' shows the greatest turn-around
of the Iraq War--the tribes of Al Anbar province joining with the coalition
to fight Al Qaida--from the perspective of the Jumayli tribe.
The Jumayli tribe--with no prompting from the Coalition--turned on Al
Qaida and engaged in a serious gun-battle with Al Qaida before formally
joining with the coalition.
'Baghdad Surge' is a look at the surge
from asphalt level. This episode follows a U.S. Army infantry
Captain through a 'day-of-the-surge' and the modern three-block-war.
The interviews with Soldiers and Marines
were conducted at the Combat Outposts they lived and worked at by JD
Johannes.
With the exception of digital animations
and brief clips of insurgent video--everything was shot by JD Johannes.
Nothing was staged, recreated or rehearsed.
The bullets, bombs, blood and bad guys are all real.