The 20 Award-Winning Photos From The War In Syria Everyone Should See
AP Photo/Manu Brabo The prospect of American intervention in Syria brings perhaps the first breaking point in a war that has stretched into its 30th month. More than 100,o00 people are dead, and more than two million displaced - surpassing the number in the Rwanda genocide.
With the President Barack Obama appealing to Congress and the nation to support a military intervention, now seems an appropriate time to look at the 2013 recipient of the Pulitzer Prize for breaking news photography, a gripping series of 20 photos from Rodrigo Abd, Manu Brabo, Narciso Contreras, Khalil Hamra, and Muhammed Muheisen with the Associated Press.
Relatively few journalists have covered the conflict in Syria, and among those who have, there are those who are missing or dead.
"Bringing news of this full-blown civil war to the world required repeated trips into the war zone, without government permission or protection," wrote AP's Director of Photography Santiago Lyon in his cover letter to the Pulitzer judges; "it demanded sensitive negotiations with shadowy groups of fighters. And always, there were the dangers of shelling, bombardment and errant bullets, the risk of abduction or capture."
These photographers risked everything to shed light on the situation in Syria.
Warning: Some of the images are disturbing.