British News papers hires Arnett to carry on telling the truth

Within hours of his dismissal, Arnett was hired by the mass circulation Daily Mirror newspaper.
The Mirror in its front page headline that Arnett had been "Fired by America for telling the truth" .
"I am still in shock and awe at being fired," Arnett is quoted as writing in the Mirror.
"I report the truth of what is happening here in Baghdad and will not apologise for it."
Arnett, a naturalised American, was in Baghdad for NBC and MSNBC’s National Geographic Explorer.
Iraqi television broadcast him saying "the first war plan has just failed because of Iraqi resistance. Clearly the American war planners misjudged the determination of the Iraqi forces".
NBC had initially defended him on Sunday, saying he had given the interview as a professional courtesy and that his remarks were analytical in nature.
But by Monday morning, after Arnett had spoken to NBC news president Neal Shapiro, the broadcaster said it would no longer work with him.
During the television interview, broadcast in English and translated by an Iraqi anchor, Arnett said: "Our reports about civilian casualties here, about the resistance of the Iraqi forces, are going back to the United States.
Arnett fell foul of the US military for his 1991 Gulf War reports "It helps those who oppose the war, when you challenge the policy, to develop their arguments."
Arnett’s comments drew criticism from US lawmakers.
Former New York senator Alfonse D’Amato said they gave "aid and comfort to the enemy".
Republican congresswoman Ileana Ros-Lehtinen called them "just crazy" and Democrat Brad Sherman labelled them "absurd".
Arnett won a Pulitzer Prize reporting in Vietnam for the Associated Press before making his name on television with CNN in Baghdad.
His reporting of an allied bombing of a baby milk factory there in 1991 drew criticism from the US military, which said it was a biological weapons plant.
Arnett stood by his report.
He was later the on-air reporter in the 1998 CNN report who accused American forces of using sarin gas on a Laotian village in 1970 to kill US defectors.
Two CNN employees were sacked and Arnett was reprimanded, later leaving the network.