 You have to remember, 15 years before during World War II, there was a national censorship board. Journalists did not cover conflict independently. It was a concept that really basically didn't exist. If you were covering a military conflict as an American journalist, you wore the uniform of the military and the Geneva Conventions, which were ratified after the First World War, codified that relationship. They basically said that journalists who were accompanying military forces and wore the uniform of that military force would be treated, if they were captured, as prisoners of war. This was considered a great protection for journalists because prior to the development of this specific aspect of the Geneva Conventions, journalists could be executed as spies. This was a protection. Then you look at Vietnam, and that was really the transition there. You see that when the journalists are out there covering conflict, they're often wearing uniforms. Neil Sheehan was talking about picking up a weapon to defend himself. They went out and they had a certain identification with the military. The reality that they encountered caused them to redefine their own relationship.