By Timour Azhari, Maher Nazeh and Ahmed Saeed BAGHDAD (Reuters) - When Jacob Nemec's family heard he was planning to go on holiday in Iraq, they plead.
By Timour Azhari, Maher Nazeh and Ahmed Saeed BAGHDAD (Reuters) - When Jacob Nemec's family heard he was planning to go on holiday in Iraq, they plead.
By Timour Azhari, Maher Nazeh and Ahmed Saeed BAGHDAD (Reuters) - When Jacob Nemec's family heard he was planning to go on holiday in Iraq, they plead.
By Timour Azhari, Maher Nazeh and Ahmed Saeed BAGHDAD (Reuters) - When Jacob Nemec's family heard he was planning to go on holiday in Iraq, they plead.
When Jacob Nemec's family heard he was planning to go on holiday in Iraq, they pleaded with the 28-year-old American to reconsider. "I got a text from my grandma for the first time in five years saying - being your grandmother and to respect me - I would appreciate if you don't go. I got crying phone calls from my mum," said Nemec, a warehouse supervisor from Reno, Nevada. He decided to go anyway, but understood his family's concerns.