[Media-watch] How the [NY] Times leaped for lies - Solomon/Counter Punch - 28/05/2004

Julie-ann Davies jadavies2004 at yahoo.co.uk
Fri May 28 19:47:36 BST 2004


http://www.counterpunch.org/solomon05282004.html

May 28, 2004
How the Times Leaped for Lies
Major "Liberal" Outlets Clog Media Diets
By NORMAN SOLOMON

For many years, health-conscious Americans avidly consumed margarine as a
wholesome substitute for artery-clogging butter. Only later did research
shed light on grim effects of the partially hydrogenated oil in margarine,
with results such as higher incidences of heart disease.

Putting our trust in bogus alternatives can be dangerous for our bodies. And
for the body politic.

For many years, staples of the highbrow American media diet have included
NPR News and the New York Times. Both outlets are copious and seem erudite,
in contrast to abbreviated forms of news. And with conservative spin
widespread in news media, NPR and the Times appeal to listeners and readers
who prefer journalism without a rightward slant.

Recent developments, however, add weight to evidence that it would be unwise
to have faith in news coverage from NPR or the New York Times.

The myth of "liberal" National Public Radio has suffered a big blow. Days
ago, the media watch group FAIR (where I'm an associate) released a detailed
study of NPR indicating that the network's overall news coverage leans to
the right. The documentation is extensive and devastating.

Consider a key aspect of the research:

  * "FAIR's study recorded every on-air source quoted in June 2003 on four
National Public Radio news shows: 'All Things Considered,' 'Morning
Edition,' 'Weekend Edition Saturday' and 'Weekend Edition Sunday.' ...
Altogether, the study counted 2,334 quoted sources, featured in 804
stories."

  * The findings on news coverage debunk the persistent claims that NPR is a
liberal network. "Despite the commonness of such claims, little evidence has
ever been presented for a left bias at NPR, and FAIR's latest study gives it
no support. Looking at partisan sources -- including government officials,
party officials, campaign workers and consultants -- Republicans outnumbered
Democrats by more than 3 to 2 (61 percent to 38 percent)."

  * The new results are in line with a previous FAIR study, released in
1993. Back then, the Republican tilt in sourcing was also pronounced: "A
majority of Republican sources when the GOP controls the White House and
Congress may not be surprising, but Republicans held a similar though
slightly smaller edge (57 percent to 42 percent) in 1993, when Clinton was
president and Democrats controlled both houses of Congress."

Every day, millions of Americans listen to NPR News -- and many presumably
trust it as a balanced source of information and analysis. Likewise,
millions of people are in the habit of relying on the New York Times each
day, whether they're reading the newspaper itself or Times news service
articles that appear in daily papers around the country.

On May 26 -- a year and a half after publishing front-page articles that
boosted the momentum toward an invasion of Iraq -- the New York Times
printed a 14-paragraph "From the Editors" note that finally acknowledged
there was something wrong with the coverage. But the unusual new article,
appearing under the headline "The Times and Iraq," indicated that top
editors at the newspaper still refuse to face up to its pivotal role in
moving the war agenda.

The Times semi-apology is more self-justifying than self-critical. Assessing
a page-one December 2001 article that promulgated a bogus tale about
biological, chemical and nuclear weapons facilities in Iraq, the editors'
note says that "in this case it looks as if we, along with the
administration, were taken in." The same tone echoes through an internal
memo to the Times newsroom from the paper's executive editor, Bill Keller,
on May 26: "The purpose of the [published] note is to acknowledge that we,
like many of our competitors and many officials in Washington, were misled
on a number of stories by Iraqi informants dealing in misinformation."

But in many respects the Times editors were no more "taken in" or "misled"
than Bush administration officials were. They wanted to trumpet what they
were told by certain dubious sources, and they proceeded accordingly. For
the readers of the Times, that meant disinformation -- on behalf of a war
agenda -- was served up on the front page, time after time, in the guise of
journalism.

Keller's internal memo explains that the editors' public article "is not an
attempt to find a scapegoat or to blame reporters for not knowing then what
we know now." The phrasing was seriously evasive. A comment from FAIR,
posted in the "Media Views" section of its website, pointed out: "If Keller
thinks the problem with Judith Miller's reporting was her lack of
clairvoyance rather than her failure to exercise basic journalistic
skepticism, then it's clear that he didn't learn much from this fiasco. He
describes the publication of the editor's note as 'a point of journalistic
pride' -- as if a publication should be proud of acknowledging egregious
errors that other people have been pointing out for more than a year."

Unnamed in the Times editors' note was Judith Miller, the reporter who wrote
or co-wrote four of the six articles singled out as flawed. Miller often
didn't let her readers know that she was relying on the Pentagon's pet Iraqi
exile, Ahmad Chalabi.

Tardy by more than a year, the semi-mea-culpa article by the Times
editors -- while failing to provide any forthright explanation of Chalabi's
role as a chronic source for Miller's prewar stories -- appeared a week
after the U.S. government turned definitively and publicly against its exile
ally Chalabi. Only then were the top New York Times editors willing to turn
definitively and publicly against key Times stories spun by the
Chalabi-Miller duo.

More revealing than they evidently intended, the editors' article repeatedly
lumped together two institutions -- the New York Times and the U.S.
government -- as though they were somehow in comparable situations during
the lead-up to the war. The excuses for both were sounding remarkably
similar. So, the Times editors insinuated that they, along with top
officials in Washington, were victims rather than perpetrators:
"Administration officials now acknowledge that they sometimes fell for
misinformation from these exile sources. So did many news organizations -- 
in particular, this one."

While the May 26 article "From the Editors" took a step toward setting the
record straight, it did so while sidestepping responsibility. There's some
symbolism in the fact that -- unlike the indefensible front-page Times
stories it belatedly critiqued -- the editors' note appeared back on page
A-10.

A terrible truth, still unacknowledged by the New York Times, is that the
newspaper did not "fall for misinformation" as much as eagerly jump for it.
And no amount of self-examination, genuine or otherwise, can possibly make
up for the carnage in Iraq that the Times facilitated.

Norman Solomon is co-author, with foreign correspondent Reese Erlich, of
"Target Iraq: What the News Media Didn't Tell You."





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