In News Coverage and
Editorials on Syria, How Much Skepticism in The
Times?
By MARGARET SULLIVAN – The New York
Times Public Editor
Many Times readers are
looking at recent news coverage of Syria, and editorials on the same subject,
through the lens of another international conflict: the United States invasion
of Iraq.
In many comments on articles
and e-mails to the public editor, that theme emerges clearly. Readers do not
want the drumbeat of war echoing from their newspaper or its online equivalent;
in fact, they are highly sensitive to any hint of that, and want to see The
Times be as skeptical and questioning as possible as the nation moves closer to
military action.
Marc Kagan of Manhattan is
one reader who is watching closely. He wrote to me several times this week with
specific observations about the news and opinion offerings. On Wednesday, he
complained that The Times’s coverage the last few days had been ‘like déjà vu
all over again,” rife with “implicit justifications” for going to war. Among the
assumptions: “That the administration is telling the truth. … That the U.S. (and
perhaps a handful of allies) has the moral right to intervene and to decide when
and how to intervene. …That the U.S. is the ‘city on the hill,’ with higher
moral standards than other nations.”
He
added:
There is no particular
reason to assume any of these ideas (Iraq, N.S.A., drones, etc.) but they are
embedded in the very essence of the reportage; as Gramsci might have said, they
are the ‘common sense‘ within which the Times reporters operate. Past wars, past
lies? Just aberrations, surely, with no consequence for today’s
policies.
Has The Times learned its
much-needed lesson from the run-up to the Iraq war? Is there a conscious effort
not to contribute to the drumbeat?
I talked with the managing
editor Dean Baquet about this on Thursday, and to Andrew Rosenthal, the
editorial page editor, on Friday. I asked both to what extent the work they are
supervising – respectively, news stories and opinion pieces, including Times
editorials – is influenced by an expressed desire to avoid past mistakes.
Mr. Baquet told me that the
specter of Iraq is not something that has come up explicitly for discussion in
meetings he has held among editors and reporters on the Syria
coverage.
“I’ve never said, ‘Let’s
remember what happened with Iraq,’” he told me. “I don’t think it’s necessary. I
haven’t had to instruct the staff to ask hard questions. They are doing
that.”
He added: “The press’s
coverage of Iraq always lurks in the background. But it was a long, long time
ago.”
Syria is not another Iraq,
he said – one of the major differences, he said, is that the Obama
administration has no enthusiasm for this conflict in the way that President
George W. Bush’s administration did a decade ago.
“Nobody could read our
coverage and say that The New York Times is trumpeting war,” Mr. Baquet
added.
Some readers, though, are
saying something close to that. Andrew Cholakian is one of those readers, who
put it this way: “Given how deeply unpopular this conflict is among the people
of this country, I find it remarkable that The Times has chosen to be little
more than an administration mouthpiece. There has been no room for dissenting
opinions on The Times’s home page, though the comments on articles are full of
them. Another Middle Eastern nation, another unsubstantiated intelligence claim,
and The Times, parroting the executive branch. History repeats
itself.”
Also, some commenters are
making the same case, including the former International Herald Tribune reporter
Patrick L. Smith in Salon.
When I asked Mr. Baquet to
address this point of view, he said, “The readers are holding us to a standard,
and that’s good, but we’ve more than met that.”
Mr. Rosenthal described a
different approach. When I asked him if The Times editorial board had expressly
grappled with the specter of Iraq as it writes about Syria, he answered:
“Absolutely. No question.”
After the falsification of
intelligence leading up to Iraq, he said, “We can’t ever accept at face value
what we’re being told.”
He said that, in editorial
board meetings “we’ve had direct discussions about this, where we’ve said,
‘We’re back in Iraq.’”
The sentiment, he said, was
essentially this: “We gave far too much credence to the government. Let’s not do
that again.”
Here’s my take: I’ve been
observing The Times’s Syria coverage and its editorials for many weeks, with an
eye to this question. While The Times has offered deep and rich coverage from
both Washington and the Syrian region, the tone cannot be described as
consistently skeptical. I have noticed in recent weeks the ways that other major
newspapers have signaled to their readers that they mean to question the
government’s assertions. For example, although it may seem superficial, The
Washington Post has sent a strong message when it has repeatedly used the word
“alleged” in its main headlines to describe the chemical weapons
attacks.
I have also found that The
Times sometimes writes about the administration’s point of view in The Times’s
own voice rather than providing distance through clear attribution. This is a
subtle thing, and individual examples are bound to seem unimportant, but
consider, for example, the second paragraph of Friday’s lead story. (The
boldface emphasis is mine.)
The negative vote in
Britain’s Parliament was a heavy blow to Prime Minister David Cameron, who had
pledged his support to Mr. Obama and called on lawmakers to endorse Britain’s
involvement in a brief operation to punish the government of President Bashar
al-Assad for apparently launching a deadly chemical weapons attack last week
that killed hundreds.
With the use of the word
“apparently” – rather than directly attributing the administration, The Times
seems to take the government’s position at face value. It’s a tiny example, of
course, but in the aggregate it’s the kind of thing the readers I’ve quoted here
are frustrated about.
When The Times’s news
coverage does take a more distanced approach, it does so extremely well –
perhaps nowhere better than in Thursday’s front-page lead article on the
administration’s intelligence challenges by Mark Mazzetti and Mark Landler, with
the headline “U.S. Facing Test on Data to Back Action on Syria.” That article
acknowledged the influence of “botched intelligence” about Iraq and a “deeply
skeptical” public, and referred to “bellicose talk” from the administration and
pushback from some members of Congress.
On the opinion side, I have
found The Times’s editorials – the opinions of the editorial board —
appropriately cautious. While the Op-Ed views on Syria might be faulted for not
including many strong outside voices clearly making the argument against the
conflict, The Times’s own editorials have had a questioning tone. (Thursday’s
lead editorial began, “Despite the pumped-up threats and quickening military
preparations, President Obama has yet to make a convincing legal or strategic
case for military action against Syria.”)
The editorials have
maintained a tough-minded tone in recent days, even as a United States attack on
Syria seems inevitable.
Article: Courtesy of THE OTHER NEWS INITIATIVES
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